Posted on 07/09/2013 8:32:47 AM PDT by george76
Weeks after the fiery death of investigative journalist Michael Hastings , who was probing abuses by the CIA and NSA and had recently informed others that he was being investigated by federal authorities, suspicions about his mysterious car crash are still swirling around the Internet. While police officially ruled the death an accident, serious questions are still surfacing even in the establishment media and among prominent officials. Based on e-mails Hastings sent out shortly before he died about working on a big story and needing to go off the radar, it has become clear that he was worried, too.
Hastings, who wrote for Rolling Stone, BuzzFeed, Gawker, and other publications, was probably best known for his award-winning 2010 article The Runaway General. The piece helped bring down U.S. Gen. Stanley McChrystal, commander of American and NATO forces in Afghanistan. Despite his establishment credentials and what analysts called his Democrat-friendly reporting, Hastings had become extremely alarmed about the surveillance state and other troubling developments in recent months. His last published story: "Why Democrats Love To Spy On Americans."
...
Less than 24 hours before his death, Hastings made it crystal clear that he was concerned about his own well-being
...
Heavy-hitters from the government sector have expressed concerns, too. Former U.S. National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection, and Counter-terrorism Richard Clarke, for example ... that the deadly car crash was consistent with a car cyber-attack. Intelligence agencies for major powers including the U.S. government almost certainly know how to remotely seize control of a car
(Excerpt) Read more at thenewamerican.com ...
MB makes engines that small? I guess they do. What’s it, the size of a Thanksgiving turkey? (completely baffled)
Thank you!
New higher-end cars generally don’t need a key at all. An electronic fob in your pocket allows you to use a push button without a key being inserted at all. Some cars don’t even have a place to insert a key.
I went back and checked your old posts. Most of the time it was you starting the name calling. Knock it off. Many of the people you consider ‘infiltrators’ were here long before you.
"The research team then developed Controller Area Network (CAN) protocol sniffing software to locate, observe, monitor and subsequently take advantage of security weaknesses to bypass rudimentary protection within the car and take over aspects of control from the driver. Perhaps more worryingly, they also managed to plant malicious code which would completely erase its tracks after any crash."
I think the 1.8 is the smallest USA engine by MB. They make smaller ones for Europe.
It’s also insight into how an engine that small, secured by only three (I think) motor mounts could launch through the safety-required collapsible front end if a front corner hit something like a tree at a high enough speed.
The new F1 racing engines are about 98 cubic inches and thought to produce 600-700 or more horsepower.
Several manufacturers sell cars here that have 2 liter engines making around 275 horsepower.
Thank you, didn’t mean to hijack the thread. Only think I’ve ever owned are 260s, 289s, 302s and 351s. I simply can’t think that small.
keeping the thread BUMPED!
Thanks. Do you have any idea about what that sentence meant about the key? Just curious. (I HATE it when technical writers aren't specific.)
It’s just a button on the dashboard which you push to start the car. You have to have the electronic key fob nearby (purse or pocket)
Maybe these people should just released the information instead of letting their enemies know they are going to do so before the fact. Because after all is said and done and these people are buried, we still don’t know a damn thing that could possibly bring these criminals down.
If you mean post 98, I did not see what 2009 vehicles were used for the hacks, and at least one of them did use a traditional key starter.
Mercedes “Keyless-Go” is an option on the C250.
;^), yep...
Me too! That’s why I’m shocked.
I will NEVER believe that Breitbart died of a natural heart attack.....NEVER!
Never.
I knew it as soon as his Breitbart employees all immediately said he died of natural causes before any autopsy was done. And the one eyewitness saw him turn bright beet red before he passed.
Like the old 60s song stated, “There’s something happening here, what it is ain’t exactly clear...”
To: Ann Archy
Breitbart had dinner with Ayers & Dorn 3 weeks before his death.
63 posted on Tue Jul 09 2013 13:56:58 GMT-0500 (CDT) by Obama_Is_Sabotaging_America (If Americans were as concerned for their country as Egyptians are, Obama would be ousted!) [ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 31 | View Replies | Report Abuse]
Did Ayers and dorn have anything to do with it?
Someone said that a couple of years ago I don’t remember who it was and I don’t remember how they knew, but they were certain BW was a visitor here.
If the sex scandal “leak” leads back to Hillary being the one that did the leaking, that’s enough to shut Hastings down.
Danny Pearl was also “shut down” during his investigation into the KLA being connected to al Qaeda.
Michael Hastings’ GPS: “Turn left right where that tree is, and if you don’t, the car will do it anyway!”
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