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User: MobSwatter

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  1. Re:What the fuck are you talking about? on Can High Intelligence Be a Burden Rather Than a Boon? · · Score: 1

    Actually, self employed for the last 5 1/2 years. I am however am putting that down now to continue what my family started here over in Germany as it looks as if the US is just grasping at pretty much anything it can just to keep itself running. There is better observed capabilities with engineering over there anyway.

  2. Re:What the fuck are you talking about? on Can High Intelligence Be a Burden Rather Than a Boon? · · Score: 1

    It is not respective to myself being a criminal, the family I married into works in blood money and this I have physical evidence of beyond being directly told of this, my family built aircraft in a program that was cancelled in 1964 and that was directly related to my grandfather being victim of a criminal act.

  3. Re:What the fuck are you talking about? on Can High Intelligence Be a Burden Rather Than a Boon? · · Score: 0

    I am not guilt ridden, not Catholic or religious for that matter, not owned and not for sale. Put that in your corrupt republican bong and smoke it...

    Furthermore if you didn't live in denial that recorded history has been shaped and taught to the liking of ruling partys such as corrupt king and cross, then you would be capable of better understanding and even potentially capable of higher learning, (not respective to dope).

    > Inca, Maya, Aztec, Toltec and many other pre-European civilizations in the Americas engaged in ritualistic human slaughter..

    Not unlike the Christian crusades? Spanish conquistadors? Catholic Church orders to destroy all written records of Mayan civilization to shape the memory of that civilization as desired? Current war between Christianity against Islam that functions in denial?

    Now I do hate my ex mother in-law dearly as a member of a crime family, however she did make a statement at one point that does make some sense. "We hate the most in others that which we see in ourselves".

  4. Can High Intelligence Be a Burden Rather Than ...? on Can High Intelligence Be a Burden Rather Than a Boon? · · Score: -1, Troll

    The answer is in the relationship between the mob and religion. High intelligence can result in blood money or rather human beings creating technology that will allow for them to make it out of reach which is considered a loss either way to both and could allow for happiness in the people that made it out of reach (what America was before being discovered by religion in 1492 but in reality likely discovered over 10K years ago). Very likely it was a happy place then with no king and no cross to complicate matters of life, probably considered on biblical terms to be heaven, not exactly what it is now huh?

  5. Re:But not to Nestle. on California Looks To the Sea For a Drink of Water · · Score: 1

    Meh... Offshore oil wells, oil spills, dead and dying sea life. How about them keys to the palace for Tahoe with enough fresh water to cover Cali a foot deep? I have them. Place is a shithole anyway.

  6. Re:Right up until... on The NSA Wants Tech Companies To Give It "Front Door" Access To Encrypted Data · · Score: 1

    You know the US did fair pretty well against the USSR on the cold war, but somehow failed to recognized the one with Italy that started after WWII, that one we've obviously lost.

  7. Re:First for Systemd!!! on The NSA Wants Tech Companies To Give It "Front Door" Access To Encrypted Data · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Hell, I gave up unencrypted evidence that was left on my pc for 10 years by my ex wife about a person that works in "Blood Money" before the pricks killed my father, and they did fuckall about it. They want access only to justify a budget, period, they don't really give a fuck about anything else.

  8. Re:Perspective on U.S. Gov't Grapples With Clash Between Privacy, Security · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You can't install a back door to anything without weakening the security for the less than lawful crowd, when taken into context it would appear that the entire surveillance thing is not only unconstitutional, unconstitutional is also unlawful beyond not being that smart. It also concludes that not only the NSA and the elite are above the law, but every other law enforcement agency is going make a play for it because the NSA got away with it. Now take all that and add the element of organized crime that we know has invaded every aspect of government and society today including national security, watch entire country fall down. Sometimes a new feature can be more of a bug.

  9. Re:And it's not even an election year on Ten US Senators Seek Investigation Into the Replacement of US Tech Workers · · Score: 1

    >You can't expect your programmers to live in a box out back of the office.

    That depends on how big of a champagne contribution they make.

  10. Re:everyone does this on The DEA Disinformation Campaign To Hide Surveillance Techniques · · Score: 1

    Say's the cash grabbing failure of the war on drugs.

    The government drug problem started with the 1971 bankruptcy of the U.S, but that was only a side effect of promoting corruption and demoting honesty, that started in the 50's.

  11. Re:"Reason" is a publisher of nonsense on Reason: How To Break the Internet (in a Bad Way) · · Score: 1

    Yep, cost of surveillance being shoveled down our throats through a double dipping process to make it profitable.

  12. Re:"Reason" is a publisher of nonsense on Reason: How To Break the Internet (in a Bad Way) · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Break the internet? Oh that's easy, just put a dysfunctional government in charge of it. Now let me see where to find one of those... or rather, where could one not find one today?

  13. Re:wildfires? on Obama Says Climate Change Is Harming Americans' Health · · Score: 1

    So it is bad form to play the terrorist card as uneducated? Maybe they should have thought of that in DC back in 2001 when they played it all the way through drafting the terrorist act being that they were all experts on the subject with that one experience, and of course changing our way of life to suit the existence of it (playing the wimp card and the cash grab card all in one play). Perhaps you are a politician and took it personal?

  14. Re:wildfires? on Obama Says Climate Change Is Harming Americans' Health · · Score: 1

    Deh climate change terrorrorists! Better sick gubbermint surveillance on them or put Bush back in orifice, he fix em good.

    How could this be played by big pharma through Obamacare? Are we going to have to watch a half hour long infomercial on a new pill that will fix the climate now?

    Realistically though, hasn't anyone noticed the decline of US west coast precipitation relational to the rise of industry in China? They are upstream on prevailing winds and jet stream and do lack emissions regulations. With all that acid rain they can sell new paint jobs on the cars almost weekly over there.

  15. Re:Educating Snowden on Snowden Demystified: Can the Government See My Junk? · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When one is taking on objectionable policy in the US and the ones that administered it, it would not be dumb to do in on the soil of US adversaries. The problems in the US are complicated, thus is why 'dumbing' down the public has been happening for decades for the simple purpose of a power grab at the cost of your rights and science programs under Bush and cancellation of the space program. When one observes policy being dictated by draconian hands obviously brain damaged by absolute power and what has been going on is contrary to the founding principles the US was established on, then I think Snowden's actions were justified. In short Snowden was in the position to see this and called bullshit on the contract of citizenship afforded by the Bill of Rights to the US. I highly doubt standing in front of the White House picketing would have gotten any response other than maybe a night in jail. He sparked the debate, and that was spoken as his intention. Understand it for what it is, your rights are being attacked, options for livelihood are being limited, entire industries are being strangled, we are having between the cheeks style surveillance shoved down our throats and at our own expense, and they have the FEMA camps already in place, the local boys are being militarized. These clowns are walking in Hitler's path, we all saw how that ended. It is this that I think Snowden has a problem with, and what you should as well.

  16. Re:Really? on Court Mulls Revealing Secret Government Plan To Cut Cell Phone Service · · Score: 2

    How about they 303 that stupid emergency broadcast system while their at it.

  17. Re:Snowden donations... on After Anti-Donation Executive Order, Bitcoin Donations For Snowden Jump · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah, mod me ZERO, fine. But I don't see a big stink made out of the F35 plans making it into the hands of China. Instead I see a bigger stink made out of someone trying to support the supreme law of the land. The very one that made the U.S. what, well what it was and certainly not what it is now.

  18. Snowden donations... on After Anti-Donation Executive Order, Bitcoin Donations For Snowden Jump · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So... Release information that will incriminate Uncle Sam in support of U.S. foundational principle and law of the land is taboo. They'll still attack out of spite and to starve you. Still they say freedom in the U.S. is a big seller and better than any place else in the world. Gotta call BULLSHIT on that one. I'm thinking the powers that be are bent on Hitler's ways, and in a both feet sort of way. Germany has all that shit behind them, I'm thinking that one of the two is perceptive enough to learn, and certainly not capable of learning from another's mistakes. So, Obummer, when do we all get bar codes, oh wait I forgot about the Obummercare thing, and the FEMA camps are looking a bit baron without barbeques. So tell us, which race will it be this time?

  19. Re:Coincidence or conspiracy? on Book Review: Future Crimes · · Score: 2

    Now this is what happens when the mob ends up running the place through arms length separation of church and state policy, cross dresser tranny's attacking the NSA... Go figure...

  20. Re:Optimist on FCC Chairman: Net Rules Will Withstand Court Challenge · · Score: 1

    Can we get over the penis envy of who's packet has priority? If you are a politician it is obvious the mob packets will always beat yours if this comes to fruition. -dorks.

  21. Re:You should title this "Patriot act to be repeal on New Bill Would Repeal Patriot Act · · Score: 1

    They are owned long before they make it to the ballot, no matter which party. The corporate principle of controlling both sides does apply. And very much so within the arms length separation of church and state policy, what was in safe hands pre 1947 definitely fell into the wrong ones.

  22. Re:You should title this "Patriot act to be repeal on New Bill Would Repeal Patriot Act · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The people of WWII Germany had the same opinion in terms of "I don't care as long as I am safe", look where it got them. In 1954 the US began playing with the same things that Hitler did, what you are seeing now are the side effects and obvious brain damage. Soviets played with the same thing and look where they are now. One cannot put the genie back in the bottle but the many could make that conscious choice, but the greed and lust for power will ultimately bring a biblical style ending to it before things will get better.

  23. Re:It's a joke. on UK Government Admits Intelligence Services Allowed To Break Into Any System · · Score: 2

    Well... They had the constitution thing a while back, but then I think they ran out of toilet paper. They didn't realize in 1954 exactly how powerful occult self destruction really is.

  24. Re:The downside? on How 'The Cloud' Eats Away at Your Online Privacy (Video) · · Score: 1

    Since the advent of Windows Server 10 which promotes use of cloud storage through integration there is some benefit to it in terms of redundancy, however there is a pretty nasty down side, the 'cloud' serves as an example of a high valued target for Tommy 10 year old script kiddy hidden behind likely only one layer of admin security. In essence the cloud violates the first rule of security, don't put all your eggs in one basket. Then there is the government that is walking the edge of going bankrupt since 1971 and floating on credit ever since that is always looking for ways to make money with hungry corporations looking for marketing data, then there is the aspect of corruption within government doing the same only with a bit more visibility than your average Joe to find targets and way more stingy about it.

    I never did like the idea of the cloud simply over rule number one, and there is no way in hell I'd point any type of authentication towards the cloud in hopes of maintaining security of the checkpoint.

  25. Re:freedom on Obama: Maybe It's Time For Mandatory Voting In US · · Score: 2

    Maybe there should be a three party system after all, repubs, dems, mafia, so red/blue/joker? After all they have been filling the gap between church and state long enough to be granted the appropriate recognition for this and the pledge updated to:

    "I pledge allegiance to our faded Flag of the Divided States of Amerika, and to the broken Republic for which it fell, one Nation under the mob, totally divided, with fascism and injustice for all."