It is absolutely true that correlation does not prove causation, and we do not (yet?) have documentation that these official population control/depopulation policy items influenced COVIDcrisis public health policy - as many so-called “conspiracy theorists” have surmised. However, as far as I am concerned, one must recognize and acknowledge the amazing parallels between preceding population policy and many of the “public health” policies and actions which were implemented in USA and most western countries (particularly the “five eyes” nations). As previously covered in this Substack, Ernst Wolff has been one (of many) leading proponents of the theory that the COVIDcrisis was largely driven by an economic/financial agenda. It is always possible, and in this case probable, that many agendas were being advanced during this recent manufactured crisis.
After reading this essay and the supporting documentation, I suggest that each reader should make his/her (they/them?) assessment of the probability that the response to this “public health crisis” was influenced by US Federal population control policy as clearly outlined in the “Kissinger Report”. The report indicates that global population MUST not exceed 8 billion human beings. Is it a coincidence that in 2020 total global human inhabitants reached 7.84 billion?
At this point I'm pretty sure the vax program is a Useful Idiot purge.
Worst Hitler EVER.
Reminder that GOES-16 GLM can track ALL lightning strikes in CONUS so we know exactly which ones ARE caused by that type of weather.
We have really fucking good tracking now of other causes but this one is now in the 99.9% authoritative category, which is why the media has shut the fuck up about specifics of fire causes after it came online.
Honestly, I kinda wish the judge ruled the other way. Forcing people to accept satan before killing a child just might have gotten some women to ask themselves "are we the baddies?"
17 you say?
It can happen. The good guys have to have perfect defenses. The cyberattacker has to be right ONCE.
Man, I've known some folks that would have jumped at the opportunity to avoid certain deployments for the low low price of self-mutilation.
Which I think says more about the military and how they handle things than the people.
The house files impeachment proceedings. The senate tries the charges and chooses to convict or not. It's a trial.
New evidence doesn't Trump (hah!) an acquittal. That's the point of the double jeopardy rule.
So uh... not to belabor the obvious, but...
Isn't this double jeopardy? He's already been tried and found not guilty in the impeachment hearing.
Sorry dems, I don't make the rules, but you created this problem out of whole cloth when you decided to impeach him after he left office.
Ice Cube is a pragmatic realist and is well worth paying attention to.
"You don't have to believe anything about adrenochrome to understand that regardless of what it is, the powerful and elite believe in it the way a nun believes in God. That is what we are dealing with" -Something a retired LAPD cop once told me
Ask us anything?
Ask us why Joe removed child trafficking as an area of concern from the DOJ after this movie came out.
It's partially a shitpost, but really, what other fucking takeaway should we have from hearing of the monumental success of raising awareness of Trafficking of Minors and following that by removing from the DOJ's Areas of Concern?
Seriously?
WHAT OTHER FUCKING TAKEAWAY IS THERE?!
Reminder that Pornhub didn't put age verification in place until the Hunter Biden videos showed up on there and it turned out some participants might not be of age.
I'm not suggesting that it is now compromised, but that one should keep an eye on this development to make sure it doesn't get incorporated.
Tor is downstream of Firefox, which means that "features" get incorporated into it.
Eternal vigilance is the price of liberty.
Now imagine you've got a TOR extension running and Mozilla decides to silently uncloak all visitors to GAW. Similar malicious shenanigans can happen with other extensions engaged in privacy actions.
Correct. I'm a techie, as evidenced by many of my posts (including my very first post in GAW that I posted in T_D and everyone told me to post it here, a 17 page report and my analysis of it from CISA.)
I saw this on HN and it was one of those Holy Shit moments that I felt was worth posting here. I didn't feel I could add anything more than what the author did in his explanation and warning.
It's the article headline. But thanks for watching out for another anon's privacy.
You have to wonder why an open source project required confidentiality about this. Incidentally, neither Safari nor Chrome, or any other browser as far as I know, has such a remote domain-specific kill switch for extensions, so you have to wonder why it was necessary in Firefox.
I believe that Mozilla already had the capability to remotely disable an individual extension, if it turned out to be malware. After all, every Firefox extension needs to be uploaded to Mozilla for analysis and cryptographically code signed before it can be installed in Firefox. [Edit: I've now confirmed that Mozilla has an extensions blocklist.] Given this preexisting capability, it's unclear why there should be a list of domains where all except a lucky few chosen extensions are disabled, regardless of whether the disabled extensions have shown signs of misbehavior.
The Firefox quarantined domains list is currently empty. Mozilla hasn't said which domains it intends to add, or even why a domain-specific list is required. I find this troubling. It's a feature with no apparent motivation, supposedly for "security concerns"—among other "various reasons"—but what are the specific security concerns here, that would be addressed by a remotely controlled domain list? Mozilla's opacity and vagueness feels almost deliberate, undermining our trust.
Science teachers are shocked that an advance version of the draft school science curriculum contains no mention of physics, chemistry or biology.
The so-called “fast draft” said science would be taught through four contexts - the Earth system, biodiversity, food, energy and water, and infectious diseases.
It was sent to just a few teachers for their feedback ahead of its release for consultation next month, but some were so worried by the content they leaked it to their peers.
Teachers who had seen the document told RNZ they had grave concerns about it. It was embarrassing, and would lead to “appalling” declines in student achievement, they said.
Read the Heinlein scifi book "Citizen of the Galaxy" as it tells the story of a slave on a faraway world who eventually is freed and makes his way to earth and no one there believes slavery is real.
He tends to poke fun at the Alphabet Mafia these days. What are they gonna do, cancel him? OH WAIT