Nazis were still killing Americans after WWII
https://www.voltairenet.org/article167692.html Marvin Washington Brooks had been terribly ill for nearly three months. A year prior in early-1952, he had been diagnosed with cancer and had been admitted as “a patient for treatment” to the University of Texas Medical School’s M.D. Anderson Hospital. Brooks had served as an infantryman in the Army during World War II. He had received a Purple Heart for being wounded during the Battle of the Bulge. Not long after he was admitted to the M.D. Anderson Hospital, Brooks began to receive weekly treatment from a team of physicians led by an older doctor with a heavy German accent and three distinctive scars across his face. Brooks was told the treatment could significantly affect his cancer in positive ways. But Brooks had become increasingly ill, with constant vomiting, weight and hair loss, and patchy skin with large areas appearing as if severely sunburned. Within about six months of the weekly treatment, Brooks was in constant pain. He died the first month of 1955, two days before what would have turned 47 years old. Brooks was never informed that he was one of 263 cancer patients who were secretly being experimented upon with “whole body irradiation.” Brooks, nor his wife or family, had ever been consulted about the experiments. Nor had Brooks, or anyone else, given the hospital permission to experiment on him. Nobody ever told Brooks, or anyone in his family, that the German physician who saw him weekly was Dr. Herbert Bruno Gerstner, a former Nazi doctor who had been secretly brought to the United States in 1949. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pedro_Albizu_Campos Dr. Orlando Daumy, a radiologist and president of the Cuban Cancer Association, traveled to Puerto Rico to examine him. From his direct physical examination of Albizu Campos, Dr. Daumy reached three specific conclusions: 1) that the sores on Albizu Campos were produced by radiation burns 2) that his symptoms corresponded to those of a person who had received intense radiation, 3) that wrapping himself in wet towels was the best way to diminish the intensity of the rays.
Re: Silence is Deadly
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA256 On 1/17/20 6:25 PM, Ryan Carboni wrote: > Silence is Deadly > > Too many are harmed by criminal syndicates because people refuse to speak up. You're speaking of governments like the US who kill millions of people indiscriminately, right? Rr -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v2 iQIcBAEBCAAGBQJeIm3GAAoJEMrkfKGMjKozNCEP/1NeDv9M68127TVeWVSlc2wt aBDjHbN2mi0ZJDYiRLz2H4m0HDXXPBb7PSZweZAk8px3Ar2fGYBBY+sDo1qZD/DU ZgNExyVtxtyychA9wthFkWryasydcEUGL5eM75T0vFvIpXpJIl7Y3kFtjmhC1e6W 3qGK9fkDUcx+oJEKGUwQxRrKdiwDfjPv7BEL/NSg/ucrIefaxNW3ChMWx1Tm/isP F8NLzDCNS6SzYDXXp4Vm0AFiRpFhvzTc/uO3cFPYJhAX1vMsRJOGpQkRUclVmjBg y9X+HlXSF+hUByBYxGrqt+QyzUei2i5L2YVsDiN+X8dEPne+xJFVAMLhgLuVunFX 7NiXiBMz2+Vc72SBk6lT51y8uBfRS2rfOkxqAF2rysWsYC9vKwpPwyyzPF1sNx7u SzJHatuDYl0bBhyrzRXIQJh7jEPGCx+CN69q0GmNPapYke8ZjUGyV70oQ0l+2UdQ VvUSeBMhmY85rSGlyDrPEhtwazYyeFZe+LvmJDJ+K7KcGvU236if8fzUXZCrviJt mw6MW4w0t8mwe6djhdl3t8zBVXquNcEsvDBk30UfmFmaPQzar8RR3kYVGEe0SosW 7+D+NOyZfL1x8fKVq3Bqr3lvcnTy5fYgSMzz8kNo0AqOuPu5jw/ni5gjTFwLSGYn 0IpR1sf8sIDjvrnT5yDd =cC0g -END PGP SIGNATURE-
Silence is Deadly
Silence is Deadly Too many are harmed by criminal syndicates because people refuse to speak up.
Re: The Irish Times: Could constellations of mini-satellites prevent the splintering of the internet?
Ha ha, quite appropriate. Although, just within the last couple of days I saw an article which argued that these satellites should be painted flat black to avoid reflection of sunlight. Sounds like an excellent idea. And, over the last few years, I've occasionally read of producing the "blackest blacks" by growing a forest of carbon nanotubes on a surface. This recent record, http://news.mit.edu/2019/blackest-black-material-cnt-0913 refers to the surface absorbing 99.995 of incident light. And, what isn't absorbed will probably be reflected in a Lambertian pattern. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lambertian_reflectance Further, I wonder if the problem of satellites producing images on astronomers' telescopes is a genuine problem. On the rare occasions that I have seen satellites with my eyeball, it is very close to (after) dusk, when my piece of the earth is in the dark, and the satellite I am looking at is exposed to the Sun. That's easy if the satellites are at geosynchronous altitudes, but if these SpaceX satellites are at LEO (low earth orbit), then they cannot reflect much light during times when they are in the shadow provided by earth. The reason I posted the link to this article https://www.irishtimes.com/business/innovation/could-constellations-of-mini-satellites-prevent-the-splintering-of-the-internet-1.4138431?localLinksEnabled=false is that the existence of this kind of communication has some cypherpunks-relevance, in addition to the more mundane concept of a cheap, universally-available satphone replacement, internet service from space, and a cheaper form of ELT https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergency_position-indicating_radiobeacon_station (EPIRB, PLB). Currently, sending information on the internet to a target that wants to remain anonymous is difficult, mostly because you have to send data "to" something, which ultimately will include an IP address. The current way, using TOR, suffers from the difficulties we already know of. But what if, someday, part of the routing for a one-way packet is to "have a satellite close to 45.5 degrees North, 123.5 degrees West transmit it, towards earth.". (Between East Portland Oregon to Gresham Oregon.) At the altitude of 710 miles, that's probably sending to a circular target at least 200 miles in diameter. Who received that packet? Nobody knows. Transmitting to such a satellite would be relatively anonymous. Jim Bell On Friday, January 17, 2020, 06:29:02 AM PST, Steven Schear wrote: Since SpaceX and these other services will essentially be replacing the stars in many areas night sky why not charge people to name them? On Fri, Jan 17, 2020, 8:15 AM jim bell wrote: The Irish Times: Could constellations of mini-satellites prevent the splintering of the internet?. Could constellations of mini-satellites prevent the splintering of the internet? | | | | | | | | | | | Could constellations of mini-satellites prevent the splintering of the i... The concept of a constellation of low Earth orbit satellites to provide for a global communications system is no... | | |
ExtremeTech: Scientists May Have Discovered Universal Memory, DRAM Replacement
ExtremeTech: Scientists May Have Discovered Universal Memory, DRAM Replacement. https://www.extremetech.com/computing/304980-scientists-may-have-discovered-universal-memory-dram-replacement?source=Computing
A Graduate Course in Applied Cryprography (book)
https://toc.cryptobook.us/ e-book: https://toc.cryptobook.us/book.pdf A Graduate Course in Applied Cryptography By [Dan Boneh](https://crypto.stanford.edu/~dabo) and [Victor Shoup](https://shoup.net) (latest version, Jan. 2020) Table of contents at a glance Part I: Secret key cryptography - 1: Introduction - 2: Encryption - 3: Stream ciphers - 4: Block ciphers - 5: Chosen plaintext attacks - 6: Message integrity - 7: Message integrity from universal hashing - 8: Message integrity from collision resistant hashing - 9: Authenticated encryption Part II: Public key cryptography - 10: Public key tools - 11: Public key encryption - 12: Chosen ciphertext secure public-key encryption - 13: Digital signatures - 14: Fast signatures from one-way functions - 15: Elliptic curve cryptography and pairings - 16: Post-quantum cryptography: lattices and isogenies - 17: Analysis of number theoretic assumptions Part III: Protocols - 18: Protocols for identification and login - 19: Identification and signatures from sigma protocols - 20: Proving properties in zero-knowledge - 21: Modern proof systems - 22: Authenticated key exchange - 23: Two-party and multi-party secure computation Appendices - A: Basic number theory - B: Basic probability theory - C: Basic complexity theory - D: Probabilistic algorithms
Re: My Demands
My demands are small. My own freedom. My suggestions are big, but they do not need to be heard. What is the price everyone is willing to pay? Billions? Tens of Billions? Hundreds of Billions? Trillions? "Hurr durr, we're going to have an orgy" is not a valid response. It is self-validating and extremely discrediting, if the elite is willing to lose enormous sums of money refusing to meet minor demands, they are also willing to lose enormous sums of money not to prevent the effects of climate change.
Re: [OT] Is Putin gay?
On Fri, Jan 17, 2020, 12:12 rooty wrote: > I don't no if Putan is gay but he sure has a nice body. Can you imagine > you, zig and putan in a 3 some. Now that's steamy. Nah, sorry. I do like men. And, apparently, "Zig" (Zenaan) and Putin don't appreciate cis women like me. You, instead, have more chances with the bald couple. You should try a hot threesome with them. Good luck, wish you much happiness and sex, little bot! :D >
Re: The FBI Got Data From A Locked iPhone 11 Pro Max—So Why Is It Demanding Apple Unlock Older Phones?
On 1/16/20 9:43 PM, jim bell wrote: > https://www.forbes.com/sites/thomasbrewster/2020/01/15/the-fbi-got-data-from-a-locked-iphone-11-pro-max--so-why-is-it-demanding-apple-unlock-older-phones/ > https://www.lawfareblog.com/apple-vs-fbi-pensacola-isnt-san-bernardino
Re: [OT] Is Putin gay?
I don't no if Putan is gay but he sure has a nice body. Can you imagine you, zig and putan in a 3 some. Now that's steamy. Original Message On Jan 17, 2020, 5:13 AM, Cecilia Tanaka wrote: > Hmm... Someone, help me here please. > > If Putin persecutes homosexuals in his own country, then goes and enters > another country always through the *back door*... > > Very mixed messages from Russia, wow!!! :D > > I see strange signals in the last times... Could Putin be gay? It would be > great! Always thought he never smiles because his happiness was hidden > inside a closet... :D > > Being gay is so "gay"!!! => in the old sense of word, you know, "joyfully", > "happy"... He would finally smile in public and let the lies in the past! :D > > (And finally stops the cruel persecution to homosexual e trans people. Well, > stops killing all the colors of the rainbow... Bastard nazi.)
Re: The Irish Times: Could constellations of mini-satellites prevent the splintering of the internet?
Since SpaceX and these other services will essentially be replacing the stars in many areas night sky why not charge people to name them? On Fri, Jan 17, 2020, 8:15 AM jim bell wrote: > The Irish Times: Could constellations of mini-satellites prevent the > splintering of the > internet?.https://www.irishtimes.com/business/innovation/could-constellations-of-mini-satellites-prevent-the-splintering-of-the-internet-1.4138431?localLinksEnabled=false > > >
[OT] Is Putin gay?
Hmm... Someone, help me here please. If Putin persecutes homosexuals in his own country, then goes and enters another country always through the *back door*... Very mixed messages from Russia, wow!!! :D I see strange signals in the last times... Could Putin be gay? It would be great! Always thought he never smiles because his happiness was hidden inside a closet... :D Being gay is so "gay"!!! => in the old sense of word, you know, "joyfully", "happy"... He would finally smile in public and let the lies in the past! :D (And finally stops the cruel persecution to homosexual e trans people. Well, stops killing all the colors of the rainbow... Bastard nazi.)
Re: WIRED: Dirty Money and Bad Science at MIT's Media Lab
Money can no more be dirty than a flower growing on a murderer's grave. On Fri, Jan 17, 2020, 5:25 AM jim bell wrote: > WIRED: Dirty Money and Bad Science at MIT's Media > Lab.https://www.wired.com/story/dirty-money-and-bad-science-at-mits-media-lab > > > Jim Bell, MIT, Class of 1980. >
Re: "If only we had half a Putin" - divesting power - grounding peace - [PEACE]
Run down of recent Russian parliamentary events and what to expect. Putin's Now Purged The West From The Kremlin https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/putins-now-purged-west-kremlin https://tomluongo.me/2020/01/17/putin-purged-west-kremlin/ ... These events of the past couple of days in Russia are the end result of years of work on Putin’s part to purge the Russian government and the Kremlin of what The Saker calls The Atlanticist Fifth Column. ... Gilbert Doctorow has an excellent early reaction to this dramatic turn by Putin which I encourage everyone to read in full. The subtle point he makes is: https://gilbertdoctorow.com/2020/01/16/vladimir-putin-prepares-his-succession/ To understand what comes next, you have to take into account a vitally important statement which Putin made a few moments before he set out his proposed constitutional reforms. He told his audience that his experience meeting with the leaders of the various Duma parties at regular intervals every few weeks showed that all were deeply patriotic and working for the good of the country. Accordingly, he said that all Duma parties should participate in the formation of the cabinet. And so, we are likely to see in the coming days that candidates for a number of federal ministries in the new, post-Medvedev cabinet will be drawn precisely from parties other than United Russia. In effect, without introducing the word “coalition” into his vocabulary, Vladimir Putin has set the stage for the creation of a grand coalition to succeed the rule of one party, United Russia, over which Dimitri Medvedev was the nominal chairman. The end result of this move to devolve the cabinet appointments to the whole of the Duma is to ensure that a strong President which Putin believes is best for Russia is tempered by a cabinet drawn from the whole of the electorate, including the Prime Minister. That neither opens the door to dysfunctional European parliamentary systems nor closes it from a strong President leading Russia during crisis periods. Once the amendments to the constitution are finalized Putin will put the whole package to a public vote. This is the early stage of this much-needed overhaul of Russia’s constitutional order and the neocons in the West are likely stunned into silence knowing that they can no longer just wait Putin out and sink their hooks into his most likely successor. On Thu, Jan 16, 2020 at 03:16:33PM +1100, Zenaan Harkness wrote: > Peace and politics - they don't usually go together. > > But you don't usually have a putin at the helm of your state. > > We could be so lucky in Australia to have half a Putin. Alas we have > pocket lining dunderheads, morons and some genuinely sociopathic > compromateds. > > As the Western media scrambles to paint every cough and pause by > Putin in the maximum possible nefariousness, at least we can look > afield on occasion and get a betterer backstory: > >Russian political earthquake: Putin sets out plan >for Kremlin departure & Medvedev resigns >https://www.rt.com/op-ed/478381-russian-government-resignation-mishustin/ > > ... > Today, the president set out the roadmap for his exit from the > Kremlin, more-or-less kicking off the build-up to the transition > of power. He will step down in 2024, or perhaps even earlier, and > he intends to dismantle the “hyper-Presidential” system which > allowed him to wield so much control in office. > > ... > Make no mistake, Putin’s goal is to preserve the system which he > inherited from Yeltsin, and then tweaked. For all its faults, > after a difficult birth it has given Russians the greatest > freedom and prosperity they have ever known. Even if much work > remains to be done on distributing economic gains more fairly. > > ... > One notable suggestion is that future presidents must have lived > in Russia for 25 continuous years before taking office, and have > never held a foreign passport or residency permit. This would bar > a lot of the Western-leaning Moscow opposition from running. Not > to mention a large swathe of Russian liberals, a great many of > whom have lived abroad at some point. Interestingly, if this rule > had existed in 2000 Vladimir Putin himself wouldn't have been > able to become Russia's president. He lived in Germany from > 1985-1990 (albeit on state duty). > > ... > > > > Thank you, Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin.
CNN share price rockets ... or something - Fake News CNN take down - [PEACE]
For a Fake News "Russiagate" literal dumpster dive - CNN. For brutal own goals, fraud, deception and lies - CNN. And for bombing sand n.gger weddings, there's Google. Sean Davis Goes Scorched Earth On CNN After 'Attempted Takedown Of Bernie' https://www.zerohedge.com/political/sean-davis-federalist-goes-scorched-earth-cnn-after-attempted-takedown-bernie ... The Federalist' Sean Davis owns CNN six ways from Sunday: CNN still refuses to explain why or how @mkraju fabricated the date on an e-mail to falsely claim @DonaldJTrumpJr secretly coordinated with Wikileaks prior to their document dumps in 2016. https://t.co/AOOicRdKVP — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 CNN Cut 540 Words To Frame Trump For 'Favor' He Never Requested https://t.co/XpTKlS0zuF — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 CNN Still Hasn't Corrected False Story On Comey's Classified Memos https://t.co/huB897nCuP — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 CNN Settles Lawsuit After Defaming Pro-Life Covington Catholic Student Nick Sandmann https://t.co/KQI36X4vP3 — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 CNN Falsely Claims Merkel Chose G20 Location To Hurt Trump https://t.co/L0C6vuXVlf — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 Nunes Sues CNN For Defamation Following False Vienna Collusion Story https://t.co/knalZci9TH — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 61 Hacks Who Peddled Collusion And Should Never Be Trusted Again https://t.co/MC8ZC5ssJb — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 Report: James Clapper Leaked Dossier Briefing To CNN, Lied About It https://t.co/L8VGWmRztx — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 CNN Journalism Award Winner Exposed As Massive Fraud https://t.co/0PtdtAnvTB — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 CNN's Favorite Con Artist Indicted For Stealing Stormy Daniels' Book Advance https://t.co/yxDwMMTv6Q — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 CNN Just Published A Fake Quote From Abraham Lincoln https://t.co/MqadwxYczw — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 CNN Botches Basic Gun Fact, Then Refuses To Correct The Error https://t.co/wEEu6pV7uZ — Sean Davis (@seanmdav) January 16, 2020 This... is CNN. ...
False GPS data used to arrest person.
Police arrested an innocent man for murder using Google location data https://mol.im/a/7897319 via http://dailym.ai/android
The Irish Times: Could constellations of mini-satellites prevent the splintering of the internet?
The Irish Times: Could constellations of mini-satellites prevent the splintering of the internet?. https://www.irishtimes.com/business/innovation/could-constellations-of-mini-satellites-prevent-the-splintering-of-the-internet-1.4138431?localLinksEnabled=false