Another example would be Warren Buffett at Offut AFB. He lives, he
knows 3000 people died including children, he gives his fortune away
in his will to buy back his soul from Porter Mephistopheles Goss and
Richard Armitage and the Bush family. "Shared knowledge of horrors", a
contract written in blood, he can't give back stolen lives.

Pedophilia on video, warned to stay away from 911, McVeigh's first
judge warned to stay home when the OKC daycare center was blown away
across the street.

-Bob

--- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, "muckblit" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> --- In cia-drugs@yahoogroups.com, palcat <palcat@> wrote:
> >
> > Can anyone please enlighten me as to how something like goes on?
> > How can ANYone do these things to children?  I just cannot get
> > my brain around it.  It makes me physically ill, and very sad.. 
> > 
> > I don't need a lengthy explanation, just a clue.  Point me in the
> > right direction, I'll do the work.  What's the starting point?
> > What entitles people to do this?  Why do they want to?
> > Are they, demonic beings or something?  I don't know,
> > I'm not into religious stuff but if there were such things
> > as demons, this would seem like proof IMHO.
> > 
> > Angie
> 
> Think of a contract written in the blood and dna of the partners and a
> murder victim. "Shared knowledge of horrors", it's a contract written
> in blood to incriminate the partners, then kept secret, the secrecy of
> which is all they EVER mean when they use the euphemism "national
> security". The partners need ink drawn from the veins of babies---
> 
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cia-drugs/msearch?query=apec+fbi
> http://www.google.com/search?q=seattle+apec+fbi
> 
> In November 2006, right after I made a hundred "Macacas 4 George
> Allen" signs read "Macacas 411 George Allen", a "tramp" who said his
> name was John Sherman said,"I am just a parrot. We tried to give you a
> job but you are not gay or a thief". That was at IHOP, and all the
> signs were between there and the old(not now) ONI heroin and cocaine
> sandbox and blackmail shop across the street from Flint Hill Prep,
> which at that time in the 1970's was owned by a CIA man. Around the
> corner, and a few years prior, ANDCO's CEO, source of South American
> hallucinogens for CIA brats. Interesting neighborhood.
> 
> "Gay or a thief" means the equivalent of either videotaped in
> pedophile acts with kidnapped children, or, on probation for crimes
> such as embezzling, drugs, dumping toxic waste, tax evasion, i.e. a
> thief. No job for Bob, because I was not Max Well "smart" enough to
> get caught. John Sherman wanted George Allen to win, but I said James
> Webb went to Annapolis, like it. John said Webb was "smart", as in Max
> Well "smart", but I didn't care because I just wanted people to "throw
> the bums out", the APEC pedos and Auschwitz Sax Goatburgermeisters.
> It's a why not.
> 
> 
> > Vigilius Haufniensis wrote:
> > 
> > >----- Original Message ----- 
> > >From: "Judith.Hawkins" <judith.hawkins@>
> > >To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > >Sent: Sunday, February 11, 2007 2:37 PM
> > >Subject: [RM-COUNSEL] Global child porn ring uncovered in Austria
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >Global child porn ring uncovered in Austria
> > >8th February 2007, 12:15 WST
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >At least 2360 people in 77 countries are suspected of trying to
> download
> > >videos of young children being sexually abused and even raped,
> according to
> > >authorities who intercepted the illicit material on a web server in
> Austria.
> > >The FBI was investigating about 600 of the suspects in the United
> States,
> > >Austrian Interior Minister Guenther Platter said.
> > >German authorities were following leads on another 400 people,
> France was
> > >looking into more than 100 others, and 23 suspects were Austrians,
> he said.
> > >Platter said the videos included images that showed "the worst kind
> of child
> > >sexual abuse".
> > >"Girls could be seen being raped, and you could also hear screams,"
> said
> > >Harald Gremel, an Austrian police expert on Internet crime who
> headed the
> > >investigation, adding that the children were aged 14 and under.
> > >"One can explicitly see sexual acts with children," Gremel said.
> > >No Austrian suspects were yet in custody, authorities said, adding
> that they
> > >shared their information with law enforcement agencies in other
> countries in
> > >the hope suspects could be investigated.
> > >Gremel said he could not provide details about investigations outside
> > >Austria, but noted that cooperation with Russian authorities had
> intensified
> > >over the past two weeks.
> > >He said the investigation began in July, when a man working for a
> > >Vienna-based Internet file hosting service approached authorities
> at the
> > >Interior Ministry to say he noticed the pornographic material
during a
> > >routine check.
> > >Gremel said the link to the videos was posted on a Russian website,
> which is
> > >no longer in operation. The videos, hosted on the Austrian
server, were
> > >freely accessible, but users had to pay $US89 ($115) by credit
card to
> > >access more pornographic material in a "members only" area on the
> Russian
> > >website.
> > >Within 24 hours, the man recorded more than 8000 hits from 2361
> computer IP
> > >addresses in 77 countries, ranging from Algeria to South Africa,
> Gremel told
> > >reporters. He said the man blocked access to the videos while
> recording the
> > >IP addresses of people who continued to try to download the
> material, and
> > >gave the details to authorities.
> > >In Austria, the possession of pornographic material showing
> children 14 and
> > >under is punishable by up to two years in prison. Possession of
> material
> > >showing children aged 14-18 carries a maximum one-year sentence.
> > >"I believe an increase in penalties is necessary," Platter said.
> > >Germany's Federal Criminal Office said about 200 suspects linked to
> the case
> > >in Germany had been identified and were facing prosecution.
> > >Gremel said that in Austria, the youngest person implicated was 17
> and the
> > >oldest was 69, with the suspects ranging from students to retirees.
> > >He said investigators believed the videos - which included images
> of girls
> > >and boys up to age 14 - were made in Eastern Europe and uploaded to
> the site
> > >from somewhere in Britain. However, Gremel noted that one girl also
> looked
> > >Asian.
> > >The large amount of video material available on the Internet made
> it more
> > >difficult for authorities to track it down, Gremel said.
> > >In Austria, authorities seized 31 PCs, seven laptops, 1232 DVDs and
> CDs,
> > >1428 diskettes and 213 video cassettes, Gremel said.
> > >Police displayed some of the seized material at yesterday's news
> conference.
> > >Austrian authorities have yet to evaluate a total of about 8
> terabytes (8000
> > >gigabytes) of space on hard disks, DVDs, CDs and diskettes seized
> in Austria
> > > Gremel said.
> > >Of the Austrian suspects, 14 allegedly have admitted they
> downloaded the
> > >videos, Gremel said.
> > >Finding and stamping out such content "is needle-in-a-haystack
> work", said
> > >Carole Theriault, a security consultant with Sophos in London.
> > >Theriault noted that the perpetrators could send footage over
> peer-to-peer
> > >networks or computers that had been surreptitiously coopted by
Internet
> > >worms.
> > >"You could have this stuff on innocent machines and the owner
> wouldn't even
> > >know it," Theriault said. "It can get ugly and complicated,
> absolutely."
> > >Even the fact that viewers had to pay for some material would not
> > >necessarily increase the chances of detection.
> > >While the major credit card carriers have programs to verify the
> validity of
> > >merchants in their networks, dozens of Internet payment processors
> use other
> > >methods to discreetly ferry money around, said Mike Petitti, senior
> > >vice-president of marketing at AmbironTrustWave, a data security
> company.
> > >One way involves automated cheque-clearing services that route
> money from
> > >chequing accounts and avoid the credit card networks, he said.
> > >"There are a number of payment processors out there that have a
> 'Don't look
> > >and don't ask' policy," Petitti said.
> > >VIENNA 
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >Complete archives at http://www.sitbot.net/
> > >
> > >Please let us stay on topic and be civil. 
> > >
> > >OM
> > > 
> > >Yahoo! Groups Links
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > >  
> > >
> >
>


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