DeepState: Patrick Byrne Quits OverStock to Hunt Skunks, Avoid Capture, and Drop More Crypto, Again

2019-08-22 Thread grarpamp
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VgUjecJtcOY


https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2019-08-22/overstock-ceo-patrick-byrne-quits-over-uproar-following-deep-state-remarks
https://saraacarter.com/russia-probe-twist-a-billion-dollar-ceo-a-convicted-russian-agent-and-the-fbi/
https://www.reddit.com/r/conspiracy/comments/cu5jbh/what_is_going_on_with_the_former_overstock_ceo/
http://www.deepcapture.com/
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CX3K3zjtlH0

“Starting in 2015 I (operating under the belief that I was helping
legitimate law enforcement efforts) assisted in what are now known as
the ‘Clinton Investigation’ and the ‘Russian Investigation’ (in fact,
I am the notorious ‘missing Chapter 1’ of the Russian investigation),”
he wrote, going on to say that this was “the third time in my life I
helped the Men in Black.”

Overstock CEO was ordered by Peter Strzok, senior level Bureau
Officials, and other higher up Senior Officials to engage in political
espionage, political blackmail, and an affair with Maria Butina

“I have all the answers. I have been sitting on them waiting for
America to get there. Last summer I figured out… what they all are is
all about political espionage. It had nothing to do with law
enforcement, it was all political espionage. Here’s the bottom line.
There is a deep state like a submarine lurking just beneath the waves
of the periscope depth watching our shipping lanes. And a nuclear ice
breaker called the USS Bill Barr has snuck up on them and is about to
ram midship.”

“That’s about to happen and I think we’re about to see the biggest
scandal in American history as a result. But it was all political.
Everything you think you know about Russia and Clinton investigations
is a lie,” Byrne told Atman.


I think the blockchain revolution will reshape key social
institutions. We have designed and breathed life into perhaps the most
significant blockchain keiretsu in the world, a network of blockchain
firms seeking to revolutionize identity, land governance (= rule of
law = potential = capital), central banking, capital markets, supply
chains, and voting. In three of those fields (land governance, central
banking, and capital markets) the word “trillions” comes up when
calculating the disruptive opportunity of blockchain. In those three
fields, our blockchain progeny (Medici Land Governance, Bitt, and
tZERO, respectively) are arguably the leading blockchain disruptors in
existence.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NREbyB6UUu0
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CU4hwxm-w7E


https://overstock.com/
First, and still accepts, Bitcoin.


Re: [MEMES I TELL YA] - was Re: Trump tweets "Kangz" meme, implies (finally) that it's "OK to be White" - [PEACE]

2019-08-22 Thread Ryan Carboni
The US political system is completely rotten, and Trump knows it.

He can tweet pictures of a Trump tower in Greenland, as long the moderate right 
isn’t convinced, no republican congressman could vote for impeachment without 
being removed themselves.

The US may as well have elected a horse as President, the ruling elite has no 
capacity to govern, or to even persuade (why bring up impeachment if you know 
it isn’t possible?). Maybe democracy has failed. Maybe the elite has failed. It 
is a mystery at this point, but from any perspective, betting on the Ivy League 
educated elites is a bad bet.

Sent from ProtonMail Mobile

[MEMES I TELL YA] - was Re: Trump tweets "Kangz" meme, implies (finally) that it's "OK to be White" - [PEACE]

2019-08-22 Thread Zenaan Harkness
Memes 'ave RETURNED, though sadly without the cracka commentary.

Some o them a sorta OK... enjoy muh grits :)

  http://dstormer6em3i4km.onion/revenge-of-memetic-monday/

Even has some literal gun crime facts for the nerdy types.

And from the tweet o' the week dept:

  Matt
  @Gregor2919
  If Jews are white, then the holocaust was a white genocide.
  Checkmate, morons


Ouch!

Meme on, muffas!


On Tue, Jul 30, 2019 at 03:38:26PM +1000, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> Beast mode: Unleashed.
> 
> Trump be fist-bumping the Huwaite heavens.  Never mind that he gets
> nothing done except for Israh-ell, reminding us it's OK to be white
> men of good character is a step in the right direction.
> 
> Peace yo!
> 
>   FINALLY: Trump Names the WHITE MAN! Calls Out Anti-White Hatred
>   and “King Elijah”!
>   
> http://dstormer6em3i4km.onion/finally-trump-names-the-white-man-calls-out-anti-white-hatred-and-king-elijah/
> 
> 
> The ackshuall Trump tweets:
> 
>   https://t.co/ZwPZa0FWfN
> 
>   
> https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1155796277248057345?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw
> 
> 
> Do NOT sing the celebration song in your head!
> 
> ...
> 
> Ce-le-brate good times, come on!
> 
> It's a cellarbration.
> 
> Yo!
> 


Epstein was a victim of a blue collar conspiracy

2019-08-22 Thread Ryan Carboni
Epstein was a victim of a blue collar conspiracy, all his employees, all the 
laborers at various airports [0], all his own bodyguards, they were all in on 
it. He was just a naive upstanding man who managed to previously get convicted 
for a sex crime. Billionaires are the gullible sort you see.

No one who met him will ever say they’ve seen any indication Epstein was an 
unhinged sex maniac, those sex toys just ended up in his bathroom, 
mysteriously. As well as the art he paid for. Maybe if there was evidence that 
he was some sort of cannibal or had some sort of dungeon full of sex slaves, 
that too just appeared mysteriously.

Naturally the US government is on the case. And these blue collar folks, they 
aren’t too smart, they may have tricked Epstein into hiring them and arranged 
everything to look like Epstein is a horrific monster, but the US government 
knows better. The Russians led them. The Russians led a multi-decade operation 
to frame Epstein as a sex criminal without the US government noticing until it 
was completed.

It would be quite the stunning operation, they may as well performed some sort 
of magic act stealing Fort Knox, but no one is as smart as the US government. 
So no one would expect that the US government would try to not act on any of 
the evidence.

Because this is what the US government does, it doesn’t do anything.

0. “Airport workers say they saw teens traveling with Jeffrey Epstein to and 
from his private island in the Caribbean”

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WIRED: To Power AI, This Startup Built a Really, Really Big Chip

2019-08-22 Thread jim bell
WIRED: To Power AI, This Startup Built a Really, Really Big Chip.
https://www.wired.com/story/power-ai-startup-built-really-big-chip


Re: PCR: “It's open season on ZenNazi”

2019-08-22 Thread Ryan Carboni
“A free enterprise system is a necessary but not a sufficient condition. There 
is only one economic system in the world, and that is capitalism. The 
difference lies in whether the capital is in the hands of the State or whether 
the greater part of it is in the hands of people outside of State control. 
Where there is State capitalism there will never be political freedom. Where 
there is private capitalism there may not be political freedom, but there 
cannot be political freedom without it. I am grateful to the hon. Member for 
allowing me to make that clear.”

- Prime Minister Thatcher

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Re: The cultural turn in intelligence studies

2019-08-22 Thread jim bell
 On Thursday, August 22, 2019, 12:45:11 PM PDT, Steve Kinney 
 wrote:
 

On 8/21/19 11:56 PM, Razer wrote:

>> You'll note the one recurring theme throughout the whole series. There was 
>> NO ONE #6 could trust. Ever. On reading Steve's details I've seen slightly 
>> different show creation narratives but one thing I know... McGoohan was 
>> DRIVEN to do this. He was willing to fund it out of his own pocket if 
>> necessary. Whatever that 'argument with the chief' was about in the last 
>> episode (all you hear is thunder) was in some way, irl, connected to his 
>> drive to get the prisoner on the air.

>During production of the Danger Man series, McGoohan demanded and got a
lot of creative control.  Drake's failure to adhere to prevailing
stereotypes was largely McGoohan's doing, as was the general trend
toward realism in Danger Man scripts, relative to other popular spy
fiction.

Even today, you probably can't register your car's vanity license plate in any 
of the 50 states as  "KAR 120C".I just checked for Washington state.  Nope.  
Taken.
         Jim Bell
  

EBooks: Interrogation, Sapiens, Brainwashing, Polygraph

2019-08-22 Thread grarpamp
Topic...
infohash:47AF54670C598E1108195860E2058469F2291CD8
infohash:707F1CA95EA4CB6CB427D8D6C1351DF56FEEEBDD
infohash:B883F86E1CD03C27A6DBD07B7C7E9A97796131A7
infohash:2DB677010775956B0B1E856CF0AB558CAD3155B8
https://antipolygraph.org/lie-behind-the-lie-detector.pdf
https://www.youtube.com/user/AntiPolygraph

Diversion...
infohash:FC6E069C5505FF929EB73325BC6C2B2603F50840
http://data.uis.unesco.org/?ReportId=5542


Re: The cultural turn in intelligence studies

2019-08-22 Thread grarpamp
> cool in a David Lynch sorta way...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bWr4JvAWF20
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jbZJ487oJlY
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eWPfoTH3iXc


Random cultural turns...
infohash:519C7A33678252D75BF05CCDCDE5AB3AF0DE621C
infohash:DAE3DED01A12A35DC6214D116C868EAD3DE01802


Re: The cultural turn in intelligence studies

2019-08-22 Thread Steve Kinney


On 8/21/19 11:56 PM, Razer wrote:

[...]

> You'll note the one recurring theme throughout the whole series. There was NO 
> ONE #6 could trust. Ever. On reading Steve's details I've seen slightly 
> different show creation narratives but one thing I know... McGoohan was 
> DRIVEN to do this. He was willing to fund it out of his own pocket if 
> necessary. Whatever that 'argument with the chief' was about in the last 
> episode (all you hear is thunder) was in some way, irl, connected to his 
> drive to get the prisoner on the air.

During production of the Danger Man series, McGoohan demanded and got a
lot of creative control.  Drake's failure to adhere to prevailing
stereotypes was largely McGoohan's doing, as was the general trend
toward realism in Danger Man scripts, relative to other popular spy
fiction.

McGoohan avoided personal publicity and his private life was anything
but an open book; but what he did say when he spoke as himself indicated
anarchist or at least libertarian leanings. As a consummate professional
McGoohan no doubt did his homework, learning as much as he could about
how real intelligence services do their business.  He obviously did not
like what he saw.

I view The Prisoner in part as a report on what MeGoohan learned about
the spy business and its role in society, and in part as anti-recruiting
propaganda targeting that industry.  My take-away from The Prisoner?
Cooperate with any intelligence service and:

1)  You will not know who your real employers are.

2)  You will not know your employers real intentions.

3)  Your contributions will always and only do harm.

4)  They will dispose of you when your usefulness to them ends.

The above may not apply so much to people from the "best families" who
serve managerial roles (back during WWII the initials 'OSS' were
sometimes said to stand for 'Oh So Social'), but rank and file
intelligence officers and agents (i.e. intelligence professionals and
witting or witless dupes under their direction) present as cheap,
expendable supply items.

Why did the closing credits of Fallout, the last Prisoner episode,
indicate that Number Six was played by The Prisoner?  Maybe just that
the series was a difficult and demanding project, and McGoohan felt like
celebrating getting it done and over with.

:o)







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Re: The cultural turn in intelligence studies

2019-08-22 Thread John Newman
Im not quite old enough for the Prisoner, or it's
precursor, but it sounds cool in a David Lynch sorta
way... 

The Americans is the only "spy show" I ever watched, it 
was kinda fucking silly, but still pretty good. Watching 
Soviet "illegals" trying to take down the odious American
Empire in Reagan years was a decent conceit ;)



On August 22, 2019 3:56:25 AM UTC, Razer  wrote:
>
>
>On August 21, 2019 7:51:43 PM PDT, rooty 
>wrote:
>>Are you really over 60. OMG that is flippen agent you could be my
>grate
>>grate grampa.
>>
>
>I'm older still and I remember the rollover from, in the US, "Secret
>Agent", to The Prisoner, which I thought was VERY excellent even when I
>was a kid.
>
>You'll note the one recurring theme throughout the whole series. There
>was NO ONE #6 could trust. Ever. On reading Steve's details I've seen
>slightly different show creation narratives but one thing I know...
>McGoohan was DRIVEN to do this. He was willing to fund it out of his
>own pocket if necessary. Whatever that 'argument with the chief' was
>about in the last episode (all you hear is thunder) was in some way,
>irl, connected to his drive to get the prisoner on the air.
>
>
>I believe all the prisoner episodes are on youtube. I torrented the
>collection a few years ago. There's also a number of interviews with
>McGoohan about it on Youtube and quite detailed sociological analyses
>of the overall show and episodes floating around the intertubz as well.
>
>Ps. The only spy show on the air at the time that was better? Get
>Smart... or maybe I just had the prepubescent hots for 99.
>
>Rr
>Har Har.
>
>
>> Original Message 
>>On Aug 21, 2019, 3:50 PM, jim bell wrote:
>>
>>> On Tuesday, August 20, 2019, 12:35:46 PM PDT, Steve Kinney
>> wrote:
>>>
>>> On 8/18/19 8:05 PM, coderman wrote:

  The cultural turn in intelligence studies

> Simon Willmetts
> correspondences.d.willme...@fgga.leidenuniv.nl
> View further author information
> Pages 800-817 | Published online: 23 May 2019
>>>
My small contribution comes in at only 1400 words:
>>>
The Prisoner: An Introduction
>>>
The Prisoner is one of the most iconic and surrealistic, if not
>>> psychedelic, products of the 1960s "golden age" of television.  An
>>angry
>>> secret agent returns home from hand delivering his letter of
>>> resignation, when he is immediately gassed by an undertaker in top
>>hat
>>> and tails.  He regains consciousness in his own bed but when he
>looks
>>> out his window he discovers that he is no longer home at all:  He is
>>in
>>> The Village, a deceptively idyllic holiday resort that is actually a
>>> high tech prison for spies.  At once the games begin.
>>>
>>> I am actually old enough (61) to remember watching The Prisoner
>>first-run.  It was clearly quite different than typical American fare.
>>>
>>> Jim Bell
>
>Rr
>Sent from my Androgyne dee-vice with K-9 Mail


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Shitstorm

2019-08-22 Thread Ivan Ivanov
What is your opinion on permissionless decentralized exchange for erc20 tokens? 
  Everyone can list any token in automized way.  
  Everyone is responsible for his own funds and tokens that he/she lists and 
trades.

It is p2p, permissionless, immutable, transparent, decentralized and semi 
anonymous.

If you are interested try this one https://shitcoin.market.

Write your comments in the troll box and let the shitstorm begin ;)