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To: Conservative Gato

Why is it a surprise? We knew the internet was a DARPA project for a long time - Al Gore only thought he invented it. So it makes sense that they would continue to expand.

We knew about Echelon too for a long time. No telling what they are doing that we don’t yet know about.


1,356 posted on 04/12/2018 2:41:24 AM PDT by greeneyes
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To: greeneyes
Why is it a surprise? We knew the internet was a DARPA project for a long time - Al Gore only thought he invented it. So it makes sense that they would continue to expand.

We knew about Echelon too for a long time. No telling what they are doing that we don’t yet know about.

I'm not so sure it is surprise but more of how big a drop it was tying it all together and the implications of it all. Like I said, many of us have suspected what was going on behind the scenes but tonight's info brings it more in to the light.

We'll have to see if non-red-pilled Americans come to understand what under-handed places like Facebook and other deep state operations like it, really is. And these people gave them all their info, voluntarily.

No one likes to be duped but these are turning out to be some of the biggest government deep-state deceptive projects we've ever seen if you think about it, next to the deep-state corporate media or the other REAL LARPS. I guess we'll see if all this sinks in and red pills more Americans.

CGato

1,365 posted on 04/12/2018 3:22:58 AM PDT by Conservative Gato (There are NOW 4 kind of LIES; Lies, Damned Lies, Statistics, and the Media.)
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To: greeneyes; NIKK
Spent some time in the Lifelog rabbit hole:

Original Lifelog

Perhaps the first, and probably the most extreme, lifelogger was Robert Shields, who manually recorded 25 years of his life from 1972 to 1997 at 5-minute intervals. The resulting 37-million word diary is thought to be the longest ever written. Perhaps the first person to capture continuous physiological data together with live first-person video from a wearable camera, was Steve Mann whose experiments with wearable computing and streaming video in the early 1980s led to Wearable Wireless Webcam. Starting in 1994, Mann continuously transmitted his everyday life 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, and his site grew in popularity, becoming Cool Site of the Day on February 17, 1995. Using a wearable camera and wearable display, he invited others to both see what he was looking at, over the Web, as well as send him live feeds or messages in real time. In 1998 Mann started a community of lifeloggers (also known as lifebloggers or lifegloggers) which has grown to more than 20,000 members. Throughout the 1990s Mann presented this work to the U.S. Army, with two visits to US Natick Army Research Labs, as well as a formal invited talk.

Darpa Gets Invloved

LifeLog aims to compile a massive electronic database of every activity and relationship a person engages in. This is to include credit card purchases, web sites visited, the content of telephone calls and e-mails sent and received, scans of faxes and postal mail sent and received, instant messages sent and received, books and magazines read, television and radio selections, physical location recorded via wearable GPS sensors, biomedical data captured through wearable sensors. The high level goal of this data logging is to identify "preferences, plans, goals, and other markers of intentionality". The DARPA program was canceled FEB 4 2004 after criticism from civil libertarians concerning the privacy implications of the system. Generically, the term lifelog or flog is used to describe a storage system that can automatically and persistently record and archive some informational dimension of an object's (object lifelog) or user's (user lifelog) life experience in a particular data category. News reports in the media described LifeLog as the "diary to end all diaries—a multimedia, digital record of everywhere you go and everything you see, hear, read, say and touch". According to U.S. government officials, LifeLog is not connected with Total Information Awareness.

GovCo claims Lifelog not connected to TIA, So of course it is

Lifelog becomes Facebook

Facebook is an American online social media and social networking service company based in Menlo Park, California. Its website was launched on February 4, 2004, by Mark Zuckerberg, along with fellow Harvard College students and roommates Eduardo Saverin, Andrew McCollum, Dustin Moskovitz, and Chris Hughes. The founders initially limited the website's membership to Harvard students. Later they expanded it to higher education institutions in the Boston area, the Ivy League schools, and Stanford University. Facebook gradually added support for students at various other universities, and eventually to high school students. Since 2006, anyone who claims to be at least 13 years old has been allowed to become a registered user of Facebook, though variations exist in this requirement, depending on local laws.

NOW take all that and combine it with what have already learned about MK Ultra

The project attempted to produce a perfect truth drug for interrogating suspected Soviet spies during the Cold War, and to explore other possibilities of mind control. Subproject 54 was another MKUltra effort and was the Navy's top secret "Perfect Concussion" program, which was supposed to use sub-aural frequency blasts to erase memory. However, the program was never carried out. CIA documents suggest that they investigated "chemical, biological, and radiological" methods of mind control as part of MKUltra. They spent an estimated $10 million or more, roughly $87.5 million adjusted for inflation. LSD Early CIA efforts focused on LSD-25, which later came to dominate many of MKUltra's programs. The CIA wanted to know if they could make Soviet spies defect against their will and whether the Soviets could do the same to the CIA's own operatives. Once Project MKUltra got underway in April 1953, experiments included administering LSD to mental patients, prisoners, drug addicts, and sex workers—"people who could not fight back," as one agency officer put it. In one case, they administered LSD to a mental patient in Kentucky for 174 days. They also administered LSD to CIA employees, military personnel, doctors, other government agents, and members of the general public to study their reactions. LSD and other drugs were often administered without the subject's knowledge or informed consent, a violation of the Nuremberg Code the U.S. had agreed to follow after World War II. The aim of this was to find drugs which would bring out deep confessions or wipe a subject's mind clean and program him or her as "a robot agent."

Now with all that in mind lets review Mr Nikolas Cruz

Deputies called to suspected shooter’s home 39 times over seven years

CNN: Law Enforcement Went To Nikolas Cruz’s Home 39 Times Over 7-Year Period

Florida school shooting: Sheriff got 18 calls about Nikolas Cruz's violence, threats, guns

'Nikolas Cruz' YouTube comment brings FBI to bail bondsman's door

I say no way, they MISSED Nikolas CRUZ.

PS Natick Army Labs Are Less Than 20 miles from Harvard and MIT

1,440 posted on 04/12/2018 6:42:24 AM PDT by edzo4 (Thank Q very much!!!)
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