Posted on 12/23/2006 11:31:23 AM PST by BibleBabe1
Remote detection satellites are used by the intelligence branch of the military to conduct mind control exercises in the theater of war. All this technology is dependent upon the higher branches of particle physics and quantum mechanics. The array of satellites safe in deep space cover the entire earth making the mind control intelligence program widely successful. Be amazed as you view this military program break out of the box. Go to the following web site that shows a real-time mind control zombie being manipulated by satellite and the military. www.MindControlUSA.com
Well, since I principally post from my office, when the workload ramps up, my screen name gets more scarce.
I'd read about your truck; sorry to learn of it. I'm a real fan of the James Bond car alarm, myself. [ka-BOOOM!]
They've some neat little doodads in South Africa that the citizenry install on their cars to prevent carjackings, which is epidemic in that country. Among these devices is a sort of driver-controlled flamethrower that torches the perp as he's standing at your carside demanding "Your car or your life!" Another is like a spring-loaded sword that shoots out from under the car and mows down everything more than 6" tall; literally taking the perp off at the ankles.
Illegal here, of course. All the really fun stuff is reserved for the public servants who then get hamstrung by their resopective legislatures and rendered ineffective at all but writing citations.
I'm sorry. Am I coming off too cynical??
I don't "store" anything except "active" files. The rest of it goes into the shredder. And I don't "collect" things because I don't want to have to move them and dust them!
I like the idea of a flame-thrower and the electric shock. The sword "mower" is cool, too! I saw the gizmos from South Africa, and thought that would be a REAL deterrent! Of course, here, we have too many liberals.
Maybe they'll all just do away with themselves by allowing abortions, gay marriages, and banning guns from everyone but criminals. But don't get me started on that.
That's something I'm slowly beginning to learn!
You'll appreciate this from another thread, earlier today:
When the metal meets the meat, those with the guns & ammo will be too busy ensuring the safety and survival of themselves and their own to give any aid to the present-day malcontents. Liberals will be hoisted on their own petard; no guns, no ammo, no fight, no future. Their notions of Utopian political dynasty will end as all others have: in painful bloody gore...[redacted].
In that day, their cries for mercy will be heard by no one; not even God, for they have rejected Him.
Any who do not prepare to fight must prepare to DIE.
My garage is telling me that this is something I desperately NEED to learn! LOL!!
You should see our workshop... no dust extraction system! :-P
I believe that "he who liveth by the sword shall perish by the sword." If you campaign for things things like save the gay whales, and other illogical "causes," you may get those things, but you may also lose much more in ways you never dreamed of. "Pay-back" doesn't apply to liberals. But it's beautiful in action!
I, for one, don't intend to give up without a fight.
If you lived around me, I could help you with your clutter problem while performing an experiment: I want to know if OCD is contageous...;o]
Surf FR? *\;-)
No, it was far worse than that. Their usual program runs you through over a period of two or three months. But my "training program from hell", now...
1. Training session 1, general Six-Sigma, 3 days, last February. Poorly presented, I might add -- a bunch of disjoint topics and tools, no overall framework, and few of the topics were internally coherent. At least to me.
2. Training session 2, software Six-Sigma, 1-2 days(?), supposed to follow session #1 in a couple of weeks. Actually done sometime April to June. Very difficult because Six-Sigma wasn't designed for software and some concepts just didn't fit. But presentations better than session 1, I think.
3. Normally right after session 2 is done project teams are formed to do a project demonstrating their knowledge and use of the tools. Didn't happen. Oh -- somewhere along the way they let the top corporate Six-Sigma guy go (sort of the black-belt of black-belts -- he trains the black-belts who mentor other black-belts, who help the rest of us become green-belts), and reduced the Six-Sigma staff to being an HR adjunct.
4. Refresher training in August, 1 day. By now it's needed, but it didn't refresh much. Rated most fun session, as we set up a demonstration "assembly line" and learned the obvious ways to tune such. But it was amusing to see the boss, as the "carrier" (transport from one station to another) become very quickly overwhelmed by poor layout. He thought he was going to have it easy... *\;-)
5. Team finally formed in November. Software manager gets bright idea we should base our project on an ongoing R&D project, for maximum benefit to the company. Fair enough, but I'm not involved in any R&D projects, these days my work is in technical standards. Doesn't matter -- I'm on the project now. Win points by showing up at the office Nov/Dec for the 6 AM teleconference project reviews, and even showing them where some decisions they made related to my standards might be questionable. (Good benefit, won't deny.)
6. January. Get rather snippy e-mail from corporate HR noting that I have not completed my Six-Sigma training and am thus about to be in violation of corporate policy. Please, make my day...
7. Monday. Get e-mail from team lead pointing out all the incompleted parts, and noting that we want to wrap up everything but the actual presention of the results on Monday (because two us will be away for a week).
8. Friday. Finish up my work and send to the group for review. [crickets] Put together my powerpoint slides and add to the master presentation. (Hmmm... nobody else has done that.)
Don't get me wrong, there is some interesting and useful stuff in this training. If I were back doing hardware, I'd want all this (and more, as the hardware guys got more). But its application to software is a bit dicey, though there are somethings good also.
But to technical standards... there is nothing. An inherently chaotic process, driven by personalities and agendas and even at the very best a little bit political.
So now you've read my complaint... *\;-) For my part, once my certification is stamped, I will probably forget everything I was taught other than Modified Pugh Concept Matrices.
I hope they ask for feedback when it's all over. I will be delighted to point out in many ways how this training process desperately needs itself to be processed according to the Six-Sigma process improvement process. For processes. Or something like that.
Did I mention the questionnaire that covered material we weren't taught?
Aw, man! ANd here I was taking so much pride in being able to clear SO much paper off my desk today...
(DON'T open that cabinet door, I say...
IF I go down, it'll be in a murderous hail of semiautomatic weapons fire with my three sons dishing it out in equally deadly portions on my right and left flanks.
I didn't inherit 300 years of Chirstian heritage and the freedom forged between Calvary's cross and the garden's empty tomb just to roll over with nary a whimper at the advent of a band of bloodthirsty thugs coopting a freakish and false religion as a means of abetting their dirty work.
They came from Hell and, by God, if they pop up over here, I'll send 'em back!
Fibber McGee's closet?
LOL! Yep. I have one cabinet that needs cleaning out.
Evening, y'all! James has had his Happy Birthday and is off to bed, slightly crumby.
Anoreth and Bill are at a Christian rock concert at the United Methodist Church nearby; it's supposed to be over at 11:30, long past my bedtime, but our neighbor whose daughters are also attending will bring them all home.
Wednesday is eating and drinking after hiding from the boys most of the day!
Is she "full of woe"?
Yepper! I thank God at least once a week that I was born in America, and that I was taught how to shoot a rifle at the tender age of seven.
(We've been military as far back as I've been able to trace...before there even WAS an America. One of my grandfathers was lost in the War of 1812.)
Good news: I've finally cleared the hurdles preventing me from copying my ripped (MP3) CD collection to the "new" MP3 player (installed "Rockbox" on it -- no more digital rights mismanagement!). Bad news -- the goodwife's Jimmy became an accident magnet again; I'm just glad it has a tough frame, apparently only the passenger-side doors are, um, impacted.
When I had that mini-flood here in November, I learned very quickly the error of my ways. I scrambled to get things out of the water, and have been looking for things ever since...*sigh*
No, just a little nervous :-).
I don't know why she's named Wednesday. Maybe the previous owner got her on a Wednesday, or maybe it's related to Wednesday Addams, since she's a black cat.
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