What is No Such Agency - Q group?
(media.greatawakening.win)
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For a long time I thought it was the NSA because of the letters and because it's pretty well known that the NSA and the Clowns (C_A) have been fighting each other for a long time. Snowden was a C_A asset working in the NSA as a contractor. His mission was to sow distrust of the NSA in the citizens. But now I think Q was referring to Space Force when he said No Such Agency. At the time he posted this Space Force was not yet an official agency. Although I firmly believe it was already active long before it was commissioned.
But Space Force is an entire branch of the military. It seems inappropriate to call it an agency. At the same time, I think could be right, and it was presented this was just to cloud things up. Seems like many Q post can be interpreted multiple ways, likely intentionally to keep the deep state guessing. Just my $0.02
Valid point.
Agreed
This ^^^
NSA
Risk this week. God and Country.
Disney is a distraction... Pretty Relevant at the moment?
KIll Box message [US RISK THIS WEEK] [GOD AND COUNTRY]
Square brackets read: US risk this week. God & country.
IMO, No such Agency = NSA; National Security Agency.
No said agency = NSA Clowns In America = CIA SIS = MI6
You have your acronyms all out of order and unrelated.
NSA is MIL
CIA is CIV
SIS = Senior Intelligence Service aka SES aka Keystone
MI6 is British intel
https://www.sis.gov.uk/
I’m embarrassed for you…
I completely misinterpreted your post. A couple of semicolons or a a carriage return would've fixed it - easier to read.
I hit return for each so they were all on a separate line but they were all jumbled together once I posted. My bad
And I had a couple drinks and no readers on, LOL.
No worries homie. ;) Cheers
Back in the day, the NSA was referred to as No Such Agency because the government denied its existence. I don't know when or how it happened but almost overnight everyone was talking about the NSA as if it had always been a thing.
I met a guy in the mid '90s who worked at the NSA previously in his younger days. All he said was they could be polygraphed anytime after retirement if investigated for leaking anything, etc. He didn't have any cool stories and I bet the majority of them don't.
Sure, some elite teams working for them probably are into some incredible stuff but they recruit a lot of ex-military people with existing clearances and experience to do even the most basic of tasks for them - which all requires legit secrecy even if their little slice of work it isn't very cool.
Another friend worked in a very sensitive area (no NSA but top secret clearance for general government/military installation), varying levels of secret clearances, etc where there was overwatch of military assets and livestream data of troop movements, fleet movements, etc. He said it sounded real James Bond to say he was actively using his top secret clearance for the government but in reality the secret stuff he was privy to (underwater topography, tide levels, perhaps where detailed reports were being made to identify shorelines that would make landing points, etc) was only important to the country that was being monitored. Even that information wasn't necessarily being acted on in real time - just needed for calculations and simulations for things like 'what if we were to insert this team - what beach would be ideal on this date, etc'.