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User: MobSwatter

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  1. Re:Back Doors Are Like Anal Sex on US Lawmakers Demand Federal Encryption Requirements After OPM Hack · · Score: 1

    Be easy to do, simply create a policy on the ISP level that if encryption is detected then deny service to the mac. End of story for encryption, and a lot of things. I say go right ahead if they have the balls to do it, pull the trigger, pink slip the NSA.

  2. Re:Back Doors Are Like Anal Sex on US Lawmakers Demand Federal Encryption Requirements After OPM Hack · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While true, many governments are coming together to say outlaw encryption. In the case that has already been proven that we can't use it responsibly (ie: back doors) I agree, then there really isn't a really expensive black budget allocation care of the NSA. Of course credit card fraud would go up, but then again, has the government itself been responsible with credit? Being that they are printing money every six months to keep the doors open and still attacking the people for money I'd say no and with the example provided by government to the people, then the people shouldn't have credit either so no credit card fraud. In the case the government tries to use encryption but denies it to the people, then I'd say they should probably do away with the other parts of the constitution they haven't yet wiped their ass with yet, that being taxation. The constitution is in whole a contract of citizenship to a government, it has to be taken as a whole or not at all, they can't pick and choose which rights they want to stomp on and keep the parts they like.

  3. Re:Burning people? on Journalist Burned Alive In India For Facebook Post Exposing Corruption · · Score: 1

    Ha ha, yeah what you need is another reason for the corrupt police to shoot you...

    That only goes so far, then it's Rodney King riots and everyone loses.

  4. Re:Burning people? on Journalist Burned Alive In India For Facebook Post Exposing Corruption · · Score: 1

    One should be very cautious of that because in some countries (India, for instance), it is a crime to incite or even support such revolutions, even online.

    Then perhaps they would like to come over here to the US and discuss this, while we're at it we could cover the subject of the H1B visa in regards to the concealed version of the US unemployment statistics.

    BTW, as a deterrent, what is prompted when the deterrent fails? -The definition of tyranny is confirmed, then the powder keg gets the fuse lit, think '91 Naples Italy. Either we learn from the experiences of others, or we can do it by our own. arms length separation of church and state didn't work out so well for those folks in Italy or Rome, is only a mater of time here. Not much advance can result from a broken record, then again we could all just be retards.

  5. Burning people? on Journalist Burned Alive In India For Facebook Post Exposing Corruption · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Perhaps India should look into the US 2nd amendment. Moral majority prefer better living conditions for everyone, corruption apposes that, be messy but the smart money is on the masses.

  6. Re:Proof on Report: Russia and China Crack Encrypted Snowden Files · · Score: 1

    Only if the SF-86 does in fact include 'dick picks' that could be traced back to the original 'dick picks' owner that are in fact shared internationally and completely discounting that identity is always a no-no to be made a note of by both CIA/MI6. Snowden went after information involving US constitutional violations and programs involving methods of surveillance involving the NSA, in fact it looked a lot like he got the training manuals for that crap. Now exactly how would MI6 obvious policy violations noting identities of operatives end up in Snowden's file? I think the drama is getting a bit thick now.

    -Snowden, if you come back here they might not 'accident' you, but if you are locked up or not they will massage your vagus nerve until you want to get a sex change like they did Bradley Manning.

  7. Re:Knowledge on US Teen Pleads Guilty To Teaching ISIS About Bitcoin Via Twitter · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The kid had to be put up to it, there is no anonymity involved when you have the entire blockchain with TX times and IP addys at your fingertips. I'd wager there is a bank in the wood pile. For anon, cash is the only option so screw the fed for promoting not only counterfeit money, but terrorism as well, and putting agents of the alphabet soup kind up to shit like this as a dig at crypto currency. As corrupt as the US has become, you pricks had to know a comment like this would come up.

  8. confidence? on Whitehouse Mandates HTTPS For Government Sites and Services · · Score: 1

    ... and may reduce their confidence in their government.

    I think we all have plenty of confidence, just not the kind they are looking for...

  9. Re:Also, grammar.... on Why Our Brains Can't Process the Gravest Threats To Humanity · · Score: 1

    ... Because implementation of mind control in the 50's laying waste to separation of church and state in '54, bridging the gap between church and state with the mob and keeping the people stupid since seemed like the right thing to do then -somehow. Absolute power has a real attraction to those in power, but it is what it is and is why we are where we are now.

  10. Re: Easier for US gov to call them ISPs? on US Tech Giants Ask Obama Not To Compromise Encryption · · Score: 1

    They should just be honest and ban all data storage except the one that the government provides. Because that is effectively what they want.

    Are you sure? I think people running around naked which will preclude 'dick pics' or junk pics in general with their credit card numbers tattooed to a visible part of their skin, and all industry in every sector in general dead is what they want. Then they could perhaps get what they really want; default and a global economic reset. Some call that collapse but I'm certain they will blur and fail to properly define that too, kind of like the words 'terrorist' and 'war'.

  11. Re:Whats so repugnant? on Feds Want To Unmask Internet Commenters Writing About the Silk Road Trial Judge · · Score: 1

    I think that the take down of silk road was not based on murder or drug sales -those are just the points to sell the action to the public, both of which the government seems to condone en mass by pleading ignorant to the mob and the government corruption it promotes. It might be a tax issue that prompted it, or perhaps the aspect of a dark market that bothered them or maybe there was a murder committed that wasn't 'on the books'. Regardless, it does however follow the theme of attacking US industry like the airlines post 9/11 or selling out manufacturing to China and jobs to India via H1B.

  12. Re:DON'T PUT PICTURES OF YOUR COCK ONLINE! on Report: Internet Users Feel Powerless To Protect Their Privacy From Corporations · · Score: 0

    If you want to preserve your privacy, then DON'T PUT PICTURES OF YOUR COCK ONLINE!

    Of course there is the other side of it, we could outlaw clothing. Then corps would lose money and we get to judge by direct sight if 'it' is out of the 5 years/50k miles warranty or not. Could be a win/win on the privacy security agenda for the NSA. ;)

  13. Re:So sorry... on NASA Drops $2.3M On Supersonic Aircraft Research · · Score: 1

    You read correctly, 'RADAR MAN' was my kin. What you read took place before the SR-71 was moved over to USAF who ultimately had to purchase the image sensors after the program that developed it had to be cancelled. The SR-71 was also a building block for the actual Kennedy space program, and providing recon data was the only ethical way that kids could be involved in defending the nation though they were not to know the details until OXCART produced aircraft access to space providing a platform for testing zero g propulsion systems eventually leading to something more efficient than rockets. JFK was just that kind of guy, and my grandfather was on his short list.

  14. Re:So sorry... on NASA Drops $2.3M On Supersonic Aircraft Research · · Score: 1

    To further add to my great uncles words: "If I had a chance to do it all again, I would have walked away". He also stated that he felt it was in the wrong hands, after seeing the SR-71 in the hands of NASA for two years from '97 after my great uncle died in '96 and getting mothballed, I believe he was right. Clinton did the right thing on that, but NASA did not see it for what it was in a navigation system that only needed correct time/date that predated GPS. Not sure if they saw the relationship between the JP-7/J-58 either but they should have gotten the documentation and do have a division with security clearances to get it.

  15. Re:So sorry... on NASA Drops $2.3M On Supersonic Aircraft Research · · Score: 1

    I know, "RADAR MAN" was my kin. I don't know why the Soviets were storing hydrogen, they had the same stratosphere data we had.

    Words of my great uncle Jack Branham in 1992 when I met him for the first and only time and for a meeting of the minds:
    My father enters the room and states "I have told him nothing". My great uncle Jack replies, "it is okay, they have already retracted det1". My great uncle Jack directs my father out of the room and then turns to me and states, "strategic reconnaissance was my baby, and it had to be cancelled, not because they cut funding, but because of the way that they did it, and that involved your grandfather".

    I was a bit floored that my family was involved in all that and I've just recently put a lot more together involving who my grandfather was, I asked my father what det1 was and he explained "detachment 1". My grandfather was a 33rd degree Mason that put Children's Hospital together along with Shriner's to earn the 33rd degree, he was on JFK's short list. He was on fund raiser up in Reno where he had asked to wire some money 'secretly' and was directed to north shore Lake Tahoe to do so. He wired the money and was involved in a fatal plane crash killing both my grandparents on my father's side in '64. The money he wired was for the SR-71 image sensors and when the money never made it my great uncle Jack knew it was not an ordinary plane crash and this is where 'absolute secrecy' was breached forcing cancellation of the program. He cancelled CIA SR and subsequently OXCART development. It gets worse now, the same pricks that ripped off and killed my grandfather setup the rest of my family and put three of their monkey's on the south shore to do that and even involved sheriff's officers here.

    The number three is oddly familiar as that was the number of shooters in the JFK assassination and the shooters were discovered in the investigation to have met in the Cal-Neva and the incident involving my grandfather was a year later. Looks a lot like they took out my grandfather in wheeling and dealing their way out of killing a president and screwed us all out of the actual JFK space program. They got at my father on one of their setups, and they are complicated in nature but my father got croaked after someone 'big' died up here so I would assume at that point that same person is the one responsible for the killing of JFK.

    They continued their pattern against my family after they had my fathers life up here to make good on for what they did to my grandparents so I am invoking hell to the power of three with octane boost on these pricks.

    I grew up in South Tahoe and know quite a bit about it, in fact enough to solve Cali's water problems, and SLT was built over a really big chunk of uranium which they drilled into back in the 80's and have been feeding uranium contaminated water diluted with lake water for like 35 years, pretty sure World Health Organization will enjoy hearing about that, (uranium is worth its weight in gold and there is gold down there with it). The lake itself is referred to as 'cold storage' by some of the locals as the mob has been running a blood money cash cow up here for around a 100 years and that is where they deposit the byproduct, so it is essentially full of concealed murder statistics that have not been applied to property values, then there is Jeffery Pine which most houses are built from. I am presently up here looking for more to take this place down, just like they did the JFK space program. Then I'm mashing all this in the gubbemints face by taking OXCART dev to Kosmos because they did fuckall about my warning to them on my father before those pricks croaked him. This place is turning communist anyway and if I have to put up with that I might as well do it where the local wise guys haven't adopted the pattern of ripping off and killing my family. Pretty sure the Russky's can come up with something a bit more attractive than being ripped off and killed, in fact, they might venture to appreciate what I can do for them.

  16. Re:People are claiming a victory where there is no on Edward Snowden: the World Says No To Surveillance · · Score: 1

    Actually, I have made Putin an offer to just that extent. It is for a multitude of reasons, mainly comparative observation between nations and curiosity of the culture behind the iron curtain, my family did happen to be a player in the cold war era. One nation appears to be digging a hole, while the other appears to be filling one in.

    I have heard Snowden wishes to return as I think he believes that things here can be corrected, but one cannot correct that which does not want to be and will certainly resort to a lie in a heartbeat. Better to rebuild after collapse provided someone trustworthy makes it to power, the problems in the US started in the 50's and have gained a lot of momentum to that end ever since.

  17. Re:That will only waste bandwidth on Governments of the World Agree: Encryption Must Die! · · Score: 1

    If encryption must die, then there is no more purpose for the NSA. Somehow I think this will increase automobile accident rates among politicians.

  18. The actual 'cost' of this report is 'classified' and could be a threat to national security if it ever 'leaked'.

  19. But I.E. can be configured to clear it's own browser cache upon being closed. What about in a corporate environment where one has the ability through policy to not replicate browser cache upon replication of user profile? Are we all obstructing justice? Is my configuration of I.E. obstructing justice? And how about that supreme law and the land thing, I'd say the white house, NSA, FBI and DC in general are obstructing justice by use of the national security apparatus to obscure the truth wouldn't you say there DOJ? Perhaps turning military force on the people was far more important, time to stop pulling wings off fly's, you are all grown up now but still acting like punks. Then again, the Pot/Kettle thing fully applies.

  20. Re:So sorry... on NASA Drops $2.3M On Supersonic Aircraft Research · · Score: 1

    Correction, the AQM-60 Kingfisher was capable of mach 4.3 and did it in 1951.

  21. Re:So sorry... on NASA Drops $2.3M On Supersonic Aircraft Research · · Score: 1

    Under OXCART, which is a program that was named conceptually after a bulldozer by the way and was shared between USAF/CIA but run within CIA SR, we had a mach 5 capable unmanned aircraft prior to the development of the SR-71 and even predated the U-2/A-12. But that was my father's side of the family, my mother's side was with the North American X-15 gig.

  22. Re:So sorry... on NASA Drops $2.3M On Supersonic Aircraft Research · · Score: 1

    If you have efficient and reliable aircraft style access to space, then you have a platform to test zero G propulsion systems.

  23. Re:So sorry... on NASA Drops $2.3M On Supersonic Aircraft Research · · Score: 2

    Not that expensive at cruise above 80k feet. I have intimate knowledge of that craft because my family was involved in that and it was my great uncle Jack that cancelled CIA SR in 1964 on account what happened to my grandfather on north shore Tahoe back then. The program had an ultimate goal of escape velocity and a goal of mach 10 for 1970. Kelly Johnson was behind the JP-7 fuel and J-58 mods. That plane was a building block to the actual JFK space program, the one we never got and yes my grandfather was a short list guy.

  24. Re:So sorry... on NASA Drops $2.3M On Supersonic Aircraft Research · · Score: 1

    Would have been different if supersonic/hypersonic were adopted mainstream as commercial flights could have broken through the 50k foot flight ceiling and this would have prompted aircraft style access to space. A lot changed in 1963-4, and that left us behind like ~50 years in aerospace/aviation. The Concorde would have been way better price wise to run if it could have broken through the 50k foot flight ceiling and that would have greatly changed ticket cost, but it was actually cancelled over a blown tire and obviously a design flaw as that is what caused the engine failure.

  25. Re:So sorry... on NASA Drops $2.3M On Supersonic Aircraft Research · · Score: 1

    There is very little (none, really) demand for supersonic passenger transport, and in any case this kind of research has been going on for 30+ years now.

    Yes, that is likely due to the lack of available brain trust of the CIA SR and subsequently the OXCART program(s) and this relates exactly to why the programs were cancelled. Living down around Palmdale for the last 10 years I get the feeling as to why they mothballed the SR-71 in 1999: They didn't spend enough time on it to pick it apart, gain understanding behind the creation of JP7 and the relationship to the modified J-58 ramjet. The trouble with US aerospace is aerospace is more about money than aerospace but I see that Putin is a bit pissed about that last rocket and fixing to clean house in Kosmos. This is a good sign for aerospace in Russia but they are post collapse and on the mend, the US looks to be heading into that so I doubt I'd get on a craft headed for Mars at gunpoint.