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1NUGIWLAJ4A 5 points ago +5 / -0

Good question. I don't know how much hands on ability a senior officer in any Military Intelligence role would need to have in the actual jobs of specialists under them. As officers I think they would have enough working knowledge to understand what the people under them are capable of, but not necessarily the same level of talent or specialization. They would think in terms of capabilities applied towards their mission. Units with this kind of mission are like special forces. They're hand selected, they have a lot of freedom of movement in how to achieve objectives and plan their own operations.

When you're talking about officers like Nakasone and Rogers though, its even harder to estimate these guys. What kind of officer would they put in place as the Director of the NSA? We're not talking just signals intelligence (hacking) there. The Director of the NSA basically leads an entire ghost army of research, intelligence, and operations capabilities. None of which you could open source the information to even estimate what that ghost army consists of accurately. I would say an NSA director would have the talent to know how to destroy (and so also defend) entire nations with weaponized information or lack of information and an NSA Director would have a good understanding of how to apply and withhold force (information/operations.)

Rogers' background started from cryptology. From there his entire career progressed in the direction of military intelligence. He was selected for transfer to cryptology in the 80s, but his career disappears for 20 years and re-emerges in Iraq with him being assigned to work with top brass (JCOS) as the HNIC officer specializing in computer network defense/vulnerabilities. (Basically, he set the objectives of any and all cyber/sigint work for the entire theater based on his own assessment of the information on the entire geopolitical landscape and potential threats relevant to and within Iraq.)

I would wager he was a very talented "hacker" himself.

If Rogers is on the Board of Advisors (he's the entire board of advisors) of 1 company, that company would have to be a pretty big deal for some reason. He's not there to troubleshoot their routers.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 2 points ago +2 / -0

Just keep knocking on all the doors, and walk away if the vaccine is the price of admission. The door that will open will be the one that sees you don't want the vaccine, and the guy signing off on it will be another doctor that doesn't want that shit any more than you do.

You should still consider the naturopathy but as a doctor. You could afford a farm to grow medicines that way, do some science shit, develop your own data and treatment regimes. Market your own work. After a decade+ or whatever it is of ER and other experience you could open your own GP practice (or something with low risk of being sued) and be on-call ER surgeon, or fill a shift at the closest hospital or something.

Just keep knocking on the doors, stay calm, always be ready to walk away, and don't get discouraged.

And do not poison yourself for it. No point being a doctor for a couple years only to have turbo cancer end your life's work early.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 15 points ago +15 / -0

He was the replacement for Adm. Rogers during Trump's Presidency. (2018)

Adm. Rogers retired in 2018, and according to his wiki page, a year later, became the Chief of the Board of Advisors at Claroty (a cyber security firm).

Don't know much about Claroty, but looking at their job openings locations: Claroty has offices in New York City, Tel Aviv-Yafo, London, Munich, Singapore, South Korea, and Melbourne with the majority of open positions being in Tel Aviv and New York City. Comparing the job titles, the Tel Aviv office is the headquarters (US highest titles "Regional VP of blahblah", while Tel Aviv "Global VP of blahblah")

Claroty is partnered with CrowdStrike, the cybersecurity firm that investigated the hack of the DNC in 2016.

Why is this important? Because if Rogers was sidelined and put to pasture he wouldn't be neck deep in the same spooky shit he retired from. He'd be fly fishing in Alaska and gluing together model ships inside of big glass bottles in his garage.

I would assume Nakasone was Roger's protege for the position, not just his replacement.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 2 points ago +2 / -0

Also, you can't work on them yourself -- you need to take them to the dealership mechanic or it voids the warranty -- not that you'll need the warranty, because everything is designed to fail right after the warranty expires. The extended warranty is the one you would need, but that one usually comes with reduced coverage, to exclude the components that would have you to breaking even on the cost of the warranty versus the cost of repairs.

Learning how to fix your fix your own vehicles and choosing the right (old) vehicles was the right move all along. Technologism is something of a new age religion too if you think about t. It makes promises of paradise, it has scripture, it has organization. In the end though paradise is always a tomorrow away while the organizations grow exponentially in power and influence with every passing day.

If everything collapsed you would have blacksmiths, carpenters, and horse drawn wagons -- and people would be fine with that.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 2 points ago +2 / -0

The flat earthers are better off than you think. The burden of proof required to convince them they're not being lied to is impossible. They're ungovernable. No compromise can be made.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 1 point ago +1 / -0

Option A, It would make sense if the agenda is mass depopulation that CBDCs wouldn't actually be a real priority. Useful for short term political optics to give their minions are a paper dragon to fight and look heroic though.

Or option B, he had to because people wrote him some strongly worded letters on this issue. He is half-ass campaigning for president after all.

Option C, his strings are showing.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 5 points ago +5 / -0

If we're still in bizarro psyops world in 10 years then the revolution wasn't televised and we lost.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 3 points ago +3 / -0

Thanks for the kind words. Like with all things these days, take it with a grain of salt.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 3 points ago +3 / -0

I escaped lowlander CA to highlander CA. If I move again it will be farther into the wilderness and higher up the mountain and farther from town.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 2 points ago +2 / -0

You can actually fabricate this into the fire wall and hood of the vehicle and add a layer of sound dampener (cork material, or rubberized black matting) and it could be a fairly clean looking install and upgrade.

Same thing for building hardened enclosures (boxes) around some of the control electronic components (it might seem daunting, especially with modern cars, but there really aren't that many).

Also for EMP protection you can get an aluminum cable that reaches the actual ground and aluminum spike and ground the chassis to the ground itself. Functional cheap EMP protection. When the vehicle is not moving.

Works for generators too.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 4 points ago +4 / -0

Cybersecurity yes, definitely a warning against putting all your eggs in one basket, or centralizing functions. That's a lesson that applies to most systems, and systems of systems. Civilization being a system of systems. But it was really difficult to overlook that the movie was also a movie about mind viruses that infect young people and turn them into Borgish collectivist hive mind zombies that try to murder the humans that still have free will. That's interesting.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 2 points ago +2 / -0

I wonder if the reason for this is optics. If the Hollywood cult was taken down, but that was hidden from the public they would still notice a lack of content being produced. There's a lot that can be done with CGI, green screen, and deep fake technology, but a lot can also be done simply by keeping enough of the bastards around to keep a believable stream of content being made, pre-record a decades worth of movies and shows in advance, or just long enough to maintain the optics, a few years maybe. 2020's lockdowns gave them a break in expectations, that easily could have been the time to seize Hollywood and set the stage for 2021 onward. With everyone focused on Floyd and the manufactured political upheaval and elections, no one would have thought anything of movies and TV shows being in a slump, the theaters were all closed.

As to why they would have a writers strike now? Maybe it just kicks the can down the road, they need more time to make more content otherwise people start to notice one of the biggest industries in the US, the entertainment industry, is actually producing way less than it used to.

Its a theory.

I don't think they are actually on strike. To a normie that makes sense, but if your aluminum hat is worth its weight you could reasonably suspect the writers are the CIA or work for the CIA. They don't go on strike.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 2 points ago +2 / -0

Best way to bring veterans back into society is with militias.

Not because we need them for warfare skillsets. Every American citizen should be in a militia. The militia as a cultural entity is the PTA, the neighborhood watch, the neighborhood pub, the policy watchdog, the first responders to disasters, the organization that recovers displaced people and people that have lost employment, the organization that protects the people from bank overreach, government overreach, gangster overreach, etc etc -- a militia can be anything the people need it to be. A militia is just a word to describe a popular union or club. It is the exoteric answer to the esoteric lodge system that hides the fact that there are other people creating popular unions and clubs. It is the lawful answer to unlawful unions like Antifa or organized crime. Militias are slandered because they are absurdly effective in civilization building. The warfare skillsets are a peace through strength bonus and a source for esprit de corps and self-respect more than they are the primary or sole function.

Want to save America? Create a motorcycle gang, get a clubhouse, build your civilization with your own people, your own neighbors. Invest in yourselves. You build a good house on a good foundation from the ground up. Rebuilding a shitty house from the top down on an eroded foundation is not working. Be unapologetically militant and zealous about it. We're Americans we build strong things.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 1 point ago +1 / -0

If hospital waiting rooms and nursing homes didn't hide the remote or give it to the resident geriatric Cat Lady, CNN would have no ratings at all. The average Democrat watches Telemundo if they're a news watcher these days.

Millennial liberals get their news from Reddit and Z gets theirs from TikTok and YT feeds in between 7 second videos of girls doing squats and guys lighting their farts on fire.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 1 point ago +1 / -0

Damn that is a dry sense of humor.

I'm impressed.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 3 points ago +3 / -0

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linda_Yaccarino

Her wiki page was started 11 May 2023. Yesterday, though it likely published some time today. (not sure how that works). Before that searching for her name redirected to:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NBCUniversal#Notable_people

Where her name occupied the CEO slot on the list which is now listed as Vacant at this time.

Wikipedia is an amazing toolkit for opensource information.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 2 points ago +2 / -0

I don't think it was the FBI, I think it was the CIA.

It was an attempted color revolution op and the CIA does the color revolutions. It is their thing. I don't think it went according to plan though. When the news was reporting it as worse than 9/11 it means they intended for it to be worse than 9/11. Wish I had archived the talking heads, politician statements, and the twitter reaction marketing propaganda (the real fearmonger shill farm soros antifa psyop shit) in the immediate afterwards of it. The reaction was insane. People forget. Some libs are still fucked up off the fumes of that early newsfed manufactured trauma show.

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1NUGIWLAJ4A 2 points ago +2 / -0

Yeah, looks like the name is old too, the Celt's name for the river, deouan (Celts really like their vowels) but the prefix Aber is interesting because there's a note in there that says someone named Boxhorn thought it could be Phoenician, but the wiki calls this unlikely, so with anything Phoenician, there's a definite historical pattern of erasing them from history, so I checked the citation and its not about Phoenicians, the wikipedia writer wrote that as an opinion based on nothing but their own belief that Phoenicians were never there. Boxhorn apparently thought they were, so now I gotta look up this guy Boxhorn. Also the citation leads to a scanned copy of a book printed in 1859 about etymology in named places. (Fuckin SCORE). Check this shit out:

AFFGHANISTAN the stan or country of the Affghans, who claim to be descendants of the Jews of the Babylonish captivity.

Babylonish Affghans. Doesn't get better than the 1800s, earlier than that and shit can get difficult to read.

This book predates all the historical censorship that happened post WW1.

https://archive.org/details/localetymologya01chargoog/page/n12/mode/2up

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