PDA

View Full Version : Spygate, Real Draining



Aianawa
8th May 2019, 03:14
Exciting times continue Indeed >


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PseDla0l9xE

Emil El Zapato
8th May 2019, 10:07
Nonsense. Only a society failing in its moral duty would have overlooked and promoted such a degenerate.

Aianawa
8th May 2019, 11:18
She spoke very well imo

Aianawa
21st May 2019, 21:59
Slowly slowly >


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gh29MBsRXl4

Emil El Zapato
21st May 2019, 22:07
Judge Jeanine...lol...please...raise the level up...

I'd like to put together a diagram with Trump in the middle and a diagram with Obama in the middle. Then surround them with their friends, staff, and professional associates...I wonder which would look 'cleaner'?

Dreamtimer
22nd May 2019, 01:04
Like Amy Pohler (https://jandeane81.com/showthread.php/7418-The-One-Truth-s-Lounge-Thread?p=842010579&viewfull=1#post842010579) said,

"I say Obama, you say Ayers.
Obama, Ayers!
Obama, Ayers!"

Anyone here recall who that was?

Obama was supposed to be "pallin' around with terrorists". Ayers was the one, so they said.

People were so worked up...

Aianawa
21st December 2019, 19:18
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XTXZvCPvY_8

Emil El Zapato
22nd December 2019, 14:11
Pay close attention folks: Below is the baseline source of a lot of alternative propaganda and it is woefully misleading. Ostensibly they are sound principles in the social sciences and indeed are, but they don't effectively translate to the realities governed by the concept of span which is a principle founded in the hard sciences and is completely overlooked by the 'brains' behind conspiracy theories.

The Classic Study That Showed the World Is Smaller Than You Think
By Thomas MacMillan

https://pixel.nymag.com/imgs/fashion/daily/2018/03/14/14-psych-101-small-world.w700.h467.2x.jpg
Psych 101 is an occasional series on classic psychology research and how it informs the way we understand ourselves today.

Half a century ago, a wheat farmer in Kansas received in the mail a brown folder containing a set of instructions and the name of an assigned target: a Boston divinity school student named Alice.

Just four days later and hundreds of miles away, Alice was on a sidewalk in Cambridge when something surprising happened.

“Alice,” said one of her instructors, approaching her and holding the same brown folder. “This is for you.”

The wheat farmer had followed his instructions. One of hundreds of participants in an ambitious scientific experiment, he had been asked to try to convey the folder to Alice by giving it to someone in his social circle who might be more likely to know her, who then took up the same task. The wheat farmer had given the package to an Episcopalian minister in his hometown, who then mailed it to a colleague in Boston, where it soon reached its target.

The resulting connection — a rapidly created chain of acquaintances joining two perfect strangers in just a few links — was the first indication that Stanley Milgram, the social psychologist who designed the experiment, was on his way to a moving discovery: It really is a small world after all. It’s a finding that feels just as relevant now as it was then, and it’s one worth revisiting in what seems like an increasingly divided era.

It’s known as the small-world experiment. In it, packages were sent to hundreds of participants like the wheat farmer, as Milgram tried to determine just how many degrees of separation exist between any two people. In the 51 years since he published his results in 1967 (the same year he took over the social psychology doctoral program at City University of New York), the answer Milgram came up with — six — has become a commonplace truism and a Kevin Bacon–flavored parlor game. “It was really the first thing to experimentally demonstrate a phenomenon which is one of the most important properties of the social network of the world, which is that we’re all just a few steps from each other,” said Jon Kleinberg, a Cornell University computer scientist who studies networks.

Milgram’s experiment also helped to launch the field of network theory, leading to insights into other important features of an evermore connected world. Today, Milgram’s study can help us understand how diseases can tear through a continent in a matter of days, how a seemingly isolated financial tremor can send markets tumbling across the world, and how fake news from Russian trolls can go viral and transform an American election overnight.

Stanley Milgram, who died in 1984, is more widely remembered for his controversial obedience experiment, in which participants were ordered to administer what they believed were increasingly intense electric shocks to people who were begging them to stop. The 1961 experiment found a majority of participants would follow orders until the maximum voltage was reached even as the people receiving the “shocks” yelled and protested and finally went silent.

Milgram was already notorious for this experiment when he arrived in New York City in the late ’60s and he was an important hire for CUNY, said Herbert Saltzstein, a psychology professor there who overlapped with Milgram. “This was a big deal for them, absolutely,” Saltzstein said. Milgram’s presence may have raised the profile of the department and attracted students, Saltzstein said. “He was probably the best known social psychologist at CUNY, one of the best known in the country, maybe in the world.”

Milgram had a knack for designing experiments to upend conventional wisdom. Few suspected so many people would willingly electrocute someone, and few predicted the small-world experiment would determine that fewer than ten degrees separated pairs of random Americans. When Milgram asked people beforehand to predict what number he would come up with, the answers ranged from 100 to 1000 to “it’s impossible.”

“I think the reason it made a splash is that it was so different from what people thought,” said Mark Granovetter, a professor at Stanford University and the author of what’s believed to be the world’s most cited sociology paper, on the spread of information in social networks via weak ties. “I think Milgram’s was the first piece of research to capture the popular and scientific imagination at the same time.”

Some thinkers, however, had been quietly wondering if apparently unconnected people might in fact be linked. The idea of six degrees of separation is sometimes traced to a 1929 essay by the Hungarian writer Frigyes Karinthy. And Milgram’s work was preceded by some calculations by political scientist Ithiel de Sola Pool and mathematician Manfred Kochen who in the 1950s estimated a greater than 50-percent chance that any two people could be linked by two intermediate acquaintances.

But Milgram was the first to test the small-world idea with a real-world experiment. Funded by a $680 grant, Milgram mailed out brown folders, first to participants in Kansas and, in a later experiment, in Nebraska. Each package contained the name of and basic information about a target person, a roster that participants were asked to add their names to as they came into possession of the folder, and a packet of postcards to be returned to Milgram at each step so he could track folder progress. Participants were asked to give the folder to someone with whom they were on a first-name basis.

The attrition rate was high: Lots of people simply didn’t follow through and forward the package. But the folders that reached their target did so in between two and ten steps, with a median of five intermediaries.

Milgram wrote up his small-world experiment results in the debut issue of Psychology Today, in May 1967. Accompanied by folksy illustrations, the article began with an anecdote of two strangers finding they have a friend in common, and ended with a tidy kumbaya summation: “While many studies in social science show how the individual is alienated and cut off from the rest of society, this study demonstrates that, in some sense, we are all bound together in a tightly knit social fabric.”

It is compelling to think that we are all joined as one human family in a way that’s not necessarily obvious in our day-to-day lives. And so it’s not necessarily surprising that a study that seemed to prove it, presented in a glossy magazine and written for mass appeal, would have a lasting impact. (Milgram also published his findings in a more scholarly fashion two years later.)

But what really launched the small-world idea into the mainstream was the 1990 play — and subsequent film — Six Degrees of Separation, by John Guare. “I read somewhere that everybody on this planet is separated by only six other people,” Stockard Channing says in the 1993 movie. “Six degrees of separation between us and everyone else on this planet. The president of the United States, a gondolier in Venice, just fill in the names.”

Guare told the New York Times that he remembered reading about Milgram’s experiment in Psychology Today and although Milgram never mentioned the phrase “six degrees of separation,” Guare’s pithy summation of his findings stuck … to Kevin Bacon.

In 1994, three college students at Albright College in Pennsylvania were watching movies in a snowstorm when they had a moment of clarity: actor Kevin Bacon is the center of the entertainment universe. Bacon had appeared in so many films that he could be connected to seemingly any actor in fewer than six steps. Anthony Hopkins, for instance, has a “Bacon number” of two, since he was in Fracture with Ryan Gosling, who co-starred in Crazy, Stupid, Love with Kevin Bacon.

The three students’ dorm-room epiphany earned them a spot on The Jon Stewart Show on MTV, and they even created a board game based on the concept. Kevin Bacon initially resisted becoming a meme, but eventually embraced it, starting a charity called Six Degrees. (It’s worth noting that Bacon, despite his reputation, is NOT in fact the center of the Hollywood universe. That honor, according to an analysis by the website Oracle Of Bacon, belongs to Eric Roberts, Julia’s brother and Emma’s father.)

By the late 1990s, the idea of six degrees of separation had permeated the culture, and it found its way back into the world of science.

“I was on the phone with my dad one night,” said Duncan Watts, a mathematician and network theorist and author of Six Degrees: The Science of a Connected Age. “And he said, ‘Did you know that everyone is just six handshakes away from the president of the United States?’ I said, ‘That sounds like a math problem.’”

Watts, along with mathematician Steven Strogatz, began looking at the way networks function, and came up with a model that explains the small-world phenomenon. They used power grids, the neural network of a nematode worm, and the connections between Hollywood actors to demonstrate in 1998 that just a few long-range connections added to any network can shrink the whole system.

For instance, Strogatz has lots of local connections in Ithaca where he’s a professor at Cornell University. But he also plays chess on the internet and has gotten to know a player in Holland. “We’re now on a first-name basis. So now I’m connected to Holland,” Strogatz said. Just a single long-range connection exponentially reduces the world: In just a few more degrees of separation, everyone in New York is linked to everyone in Holland.

“It’s just in the nature of these networks that they have to be small,” he said. “Just the tiniest sprinkling of hubs or shortcuts makes the world small.”

Milgram’s small-world experiment has not been without its detractors. Most notably, Judith Kleinfeld, a psychology professor at the University of Fairbanks in Alaska, has objected that Milgram cherry-picked both his participants and his results, failed to show that the small-world phenomenon transcends race and class, and ignored the fact that many of the chain-letters in his experiment never reached the intended target.

But Watts said that while there may have been flaws in Milgram’s study, his results have been confirmed by subsequent studies. Watts did a version of Milgram’s small-world study via email in the early 2000s with 60,000 participants and 18 different targets drawn from an array of professions in 13 countries (a Norwegian veterinarian, an Australian policeman, etc.) The result: Participants were connected in a median of five to seven steps.

“We’ve done a lot of checking. We have a lot more data. The result as stated by Milgram is solid,” Watts said.

In a subsequent 2009 meta-analysis, Watts looked at 162,328 “small-world” message chains and found that roughly half could be completed in six or seven steps. And in 2011, a study by Facebook found that its users were separated by an average of 4.57 degrees.

There’s sometimes confusion between studies about whether “degrees” refers to intermediary acquaintances or to the links between them, Watts said. And different results are obtained by analyzing a data set and finding the shortest routes using perfect information, versus asking people to muddle through and find their own routes by instinct — a distinction referred to as a topological versus algorithmic approach.

But it doesn’t matter too much what the exact result is; what’s most significant is that all the studies end up with a remarkably small number of degrees of separation, Watts said. “The point is that it’s not 900,000. Or even a thousand, or a hundred. It’s this number less than ten and bigger than two.”

While Milgram had concluded his small-world study by invoking a sense of universal togetherness, network theorists have since pointed out that there are downsides to living in such a connected world — if we don’t stay mindful of the fact that we’re all in this together.

Consider the AIDS epidemic, Watts said. “Why did people not care about it? It was far away.” For many Americans, AIDS was something happening in Africa or to gay men or intravenous drug users, and people failed to appreciate it until it became impossible to ignore.

A danger of a small world, Watts said, is that even though we’re now globally connected, we evolved in small tribes and are thus doomed to fail to fully consider anything beyond our immediate social circle. We care about our friends, and we kind of care about our friends’ friends, but “anything more than two degrees is just some random person,” he said.

“As humans, we’re not really good at appreciating the consequences of exponential growth,” said Kleinberg. “We’re not aware that the actions we take are rippling outward with a kind of frightening velocity.”

“Think about fake news. Think about influencing our election. Think about what’s called today the weaponizing of social media,” said Strogatz. People can now remotely sabotage centrifuges half a world away, he added. “We’re playing this very wild social experiment with ourselves where we have now become this global network. We don’t know what we’re doing.”

People may be oblivious to it’s full impact in their day-to-day lives, “but the network is still there. And if the network is only six degrees, you need to pay attention,” Watts said. “That’s ultimately Milgram’s insight.”

Emil El Zapato
22nd December 2019, 14:25
The critical aspect of spans are that they measure the true relevance of the interaction and the nature of the exchange between objects not just the simple objects. The functional output of the interaction is key to understanding the relationship and discerning the truth. If we overlook this, we have missed everything

Span (category theory)

In category theory, a span, roof or correspondence is a generalization of the notion of relation between two objects of a category. When the category has all pullbacks (and satisfies a small number of other conditions), spans can be considered as morphisms in a category of fractions.

A span is a diagram of type {\displaystyle \Lambda =(-1\leftarrow 0\rightarrow +1),}\Lambda =(-1\leftarrow 0\rightarrow +1), i.e., a diagram of the form {\displaystyle Y\leftarrow X\rightarrow Z}Y\leftarrow X\rightarrow Z.

That is, let Λ be the category (-1 ← 0 → +1). Then a span in a category C is a functor S : Λ → C. This means that a span consists of three objects X, Y and Z of C and morphisms f : X → Y and g : X → Z: it is two maps with common domain.

The colimit of a span is a pushout.

Examples
If R is a relation between sets X and Y (i.e. a subset of X × Y), then X ← R → Y is a span, where the maps are the projection maps {\displaystyle X\times Y{\overset {\pi _{X}}{\to }}X}X\times Y{\overset {\pi _{X}}{\to }}X and {\displaystyle X\times Y{\overset {\pi _{Y}}{\to }}Y}X\times Y{\overset {\pi _{Y}}{\to }}Y.
Any object yields the trivial span {\displaystyle A=A=A;}A=A=A; formally, the diagram A ← A → A, where the maps are the identity.
More generally, let {\displaystyle \phi \colon A\to B}\phi \colon A\to B be a morphism in some category. There is a trivial span A = A → B; formally, the diagram A ← A → B, where the left map is the identity on A, and the right map is the given map φ.
If M is a model category, with W the set of weak equivalences, then the spans of the form {\displaystyle X\leftarrow Y\rightarrow Z,}X\leftarrow Y\rightarrow Z, where the left morphism is in W, can be considered a generalised morphism (i.e., where one "inverts the weak equivalences"). Note that this is not the usual point of view taken when dealing with model categories.
Cospans
A cospan K in a category C is a functor K : Λop → C; equivalently, a contravariant functor from Λ to C. That is, a diagram of type {\displaystyle \Lambda ^{\text{op}}=(-1\rightarrow 0\leftarrow +1),}\Lambda ^{{\text{op}}}=(-1\rightarrow 0\leftarrow +1), i.e., a diagram of the form {\displaystyle Y\rightarrow X\leftarrow Z}Y\rightarrow X\leftarrow Z.

Thus it consists of three objects X, Y and Z of C and morphisms f : Y → X and g : Z → X: it is two maps with common codomain.

The limit of a cospan is a pullback.

An example of a cospan is a cobordism W between two manifolds M and N, where the two maps are the inclusions into W. Note that while cobordisms are cospans, the category of cobordisms is not a "cospan category": it is not the category of all cospans in "the category of manifolds with inclusions on the boundary", but rather a subcategory thereof, as the requirement that M and N form a partition of the boundary of W is a global constraint.

The category nCob of finite-dimensional cobordisms is a dagger compact category. More generally, the category Span(C) of spans on any category C with finite limits is also dagger compact.

It is without thought, self evident

Aianawa
15th April 2020, 20:52
Of late > https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2020/04/15/a-common-misconception-about-the-origin-of-spygate-political-surveillance-in-the-era-of-president-obama/

A very long read but nice good.

Aianawa
29th April 2020, 01:34
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2sEyjQ_qG2g&feature=youtu.be&fbclid=IwAR0dH0B6CcUvUx4eOkY1o_mqQBUxcHXg911ehsSFO 6weAxDhy1lSkjXYdbE

Aianawa
2nd May 2020, 05:16
What a year ahead, jan was wow followed by feb blooming heck then march my gosh then april unbelievable and may now kicks off where we will continue to go > narrative change

https://theconservativetreehouse.com/2020/05/01/why-was-flynn-targeted-a-timeline-review-of-the-three-phases/

Aianawa
2nd May 2020, 05:23
Did not know that Flynn was a democrat >
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2016/08/28/exclusive-lt-gen-mike-flynn-obama-hillary-ignored-intelligence-not-like-middle-east-wanted-happy-talk/

Aianawa
2nd May 2020, 07:47
We are only at the start >


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uDI5jWAGQo4&feature=youtu.be&fbclid=IwAR1H8S-BGSyoq6vrgYq6xPneqKQO4TBeNTLf1OcfbMAVqyNR2zecY9KkZ 84

Dreamtimer
2nd May 2020, 12:11
Trump was a lifelong Democrat. You knew that, right? He was best buds with the Clintons.

Aianawa
6th May 2020, 06:25
Best buds, nope , similar circles of course.

Spose I best be thankfull this thread is not in hoax section, wonder why, good Question ?.

Dreamtimer
6th May 2020, 12:00
Oh they were friends. He has said so and so have they.

Emil El Zapato
6th May 2020, 21:56
Makes me wonder why? Kind of like that friend that you really despise but they have always been around so you tolerate them in silence.

Aianawa
6th May 2020, 22:10
Again, besties as implied, nope, same circles yes.

Eggysample, DT and NAP are Q believers as they know and interact with a known Q orientated person called Aianawa, regularly, that Aragorn dude is obviousely part of the problem also, yip they all live in the shire, we don't see that old wizard Modwiz anymore but we know he is Qued here somewhere.

Dreamtimer
6th May 2020, 23:51
I'm a man because I interact with men.

Aianawa
7th May 2020, 02:41
I'm a man because I interact with men.

There we go, perceptions and ones reality, choice.

Dreamtimer
7th May 2020, 10:57
If folks could just choose to be another gender without all the surgery and hormones, that would be quite an amazing thing.

And I was making a joke in order to show the silliness of what you said above.

Emil El Zapato
7th May 2020, 11:43
I'll stick with what I got... :)

Aianawa
8th May 2020, 23:49
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VvuowX5Na7Y&feature=youtu.be&fbclid=IwAR18ci1gMBVCWs9KhHvHps97ZsT67Og6g1OvjfcU_ blVuZCFVmv20lLFjlg

Emil El Zapato
9th May 2020, 00:04
lol, oh gawd...noooooooooooooo!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

she does look good in all that hi dollar makeup job...

Dreamtimer
9th May 2020, 14:20
She gave a very twisty turny 'explanation' for why her opinion of Trump has changed so drastically. (I don't have a link at the moment)

Aianawa
10th May 2020, 07:55
https://twitter.com/i/status/1259215842237177858


https://twitter.com/i/status/1259215842237177858

Aianawa
12th May 2020, 21:09
https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=21&v=Ekf-iDEgb60&feature=emb_logo

Emil El Zapato
12th May 2020, 23:23
aint a never gonna happen ... cool song, though

Aianawa
13th May 2020, 00:41
https://twitter.com/i/status/1260298233332543488

Aianawa
18th May 2020, 22:45
Trump Appoints Angry Honey Badger As New Press Secretary

OPERATION HONEY BADGER
- Name of a joint FBI-CIA investigation into this intelligence fiasco.
- How was China able to dismantle the spy network so quickly & efficiently?
- Led by top counterintelligence officials at both FBI and CIA.
- Details about this investigation have been tightly held.
- Ten US officials described the investigation on the condition of anonymity.
- The first signs of trouble emerged in 2010.
- At the time, the quality of the Chinese info was the best it had been for years.
- By early 2011, senior officers realized they had a problem & were scrambling.
- Working out of a secret location in Northern VA, they began reviewing everything.
- Obama WH urgently asking why Chinese intelligence had slowed.
- By 2013, the investigation turned up nothing conclusive.
- It ended with some believing a hack, others a CIA sellout, & others faulty tradecraft.

DIRECTOR OF CEE.I.A
Leon E. Panetta Feb 13, 2009 - June 30, 2011
Gen David Petraeus Sept 6. 2011 - Nov 9, 2012
John Brennan Mar 8, 2013 - Jan 20, 2017

Head of FBI
Robert S Mueller III Sept 4, 2001 - Sept 4, 2013
James Comey Sept 4, 2013 - May 9, 2017

Director of National Intelligence
Dennis Blair Jan 29, 2009 - May 28, 2010
David Gomport (A) May 28,2010 - Aug 5, 2010
James R Clapper Aug 5, 2010 - Jan 20, 2017

Secretary of State
Hillary R Clinton Jan 21, 2009 - Feb 1, 2013
John Kerry Feb 1, 2013 - Jan 20, 2017

Gang of 8 (2009-2011)
Nancy Pelosi - John Boehner - Harry Reid - Mitch McConnell
Dianne Feinstein - Kit Bond - Silvestre Reyes - Peter Hoekstra

- How many of these senior leaders knew of HRC's private server?
- Communicated with her via her personal email?
- Did Operation Honey Badger identify this as a potential vulnerability?
- In 2015, ICIG reported the server hack tied to China, triggering a "Section 811".
- Did this "811" tied to China espionage reach the senior FBI on Operation Honey Badger?

References:
Killing C.I.A. Informants, China Crippled U.S. Spying Operations
Solving the CIA’s Mass Murder Mystery
FBI probe of Clinton's emails prompted by espionage fears, secret letters say

Emil El Zapato
18th May 2020, 23:36
my take is a little different...I think HRC's private server was a 'hook' to draw people in and I think it worked...and somebody knows they were hooked which led to much of what went on during the U.S. Presidential election and transition of 2016

Aianawa
21st May 2020, 22:16
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k1aEY5hKxok

Chester
22nd May 2020, 02:00
my take is a little different...I think HRC's private server was a 'hook' to draw people in and I think it worked...and somebody knows they were hooked which led to much of what went on during the U.S. Presidential election and transition of 2016

Did you start using Jimmy's remedy for the scamDEMic?


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zUCPrLusiKU

Wind
22nd May 2020, 02:50
Legalize it!

Aianawa
20th March 2021, 22:17
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kb0jNqFy-ak&t=1s

Aianawa
22nd February 2022, 02:37
Exciting times continue Indeed >


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PseDla0l9xE

Now before i get into this, can i share the results of the Durham material , i see that most mainstream sites have remained silent the last week or so, being entered into record in USA so may i discuss ? or are these truths still unacceptable ?.

Dreamtimer
22nd February 2022, 12:08
It was fun watching the circus show from the right over the filing which didn't show what they were saying at all. But of course it doesn't matter. They were all Hillary! Hillary! Hillary! like Pavlov dogs. And then when it was clearly a nothing burger they just went silent.

Kind of like Trump when suddenly he didn't know who a person was.

Hillary who? Hardly knew her.

It's so utterly predictable.

Aianawa
22nd February 2022, 19:49
So Durham probe/imdickty whatever it is, is a nothing burger DT ?

Emil El Zapato
22nd February 2022, 20:25
So Durham probe/imdickty whatever it is, is a nothing burger DT ?

She's not here so I'll add my answer ... nothing burger deluxe ... nothing has changed since the initial story. :)

Aianawa
22nd February 2022, 20:33
Gosh why has it gone on so long ? years

Emil El Zapato
22nd February 2022, 20:39
Gosh why has it gone on so long ? years

c'mon man, there are thousands of posts on the TOT saying why.

Fred Steeves
22nd February 2022, 21:10
Gosh why has it gone on so long ? years

Some people still wonder that about Russiagate. One group had their brains melted over the Clintons, and the other group had their brains melted over Trump.

It’s an obsessive addiction, and neither group is able to put down the crack pipe.

Aianawa
22nd February 2022, 21:22
Nothing burger the russia russia russia Mueller thing also Fred ?.

Fred Steeves
22nd February 2022, 22:06
Nothing burger the russia russia russia Mueller thing also Fred ?.

Absolutely not Vern, I never saw the long promised "bombshell" evidence. Lordy, how often did we see from the stenographers for the corporate left like Rachel Maddow exclaim in their hair on fire editorials "WE GOT HIM!!!". Well, actually, no you didn't, you're just still continuing to make yourselves look silly.

It's along the lines of the frustratingly amusing Q predictions, and even supposed first hand accounts of "trusted insiders" claiming that Hillary and others either finally just got frog marched down to Gitmo, or it's happening any day now. Actually, no, we're 5+ years into this silliness now and it still hasn't happened.

Aianawa
22nd February 2022, 23:28
Lol you say silliness, some say evolving humanity will always have change either created or forced ( one side or other ) in a leave behind the false, lies, manipulation, evil etc to to effect outside, including other star etc systems, for evolving to happen, some say just as a person works n creates a differing evolving self through mindfullllness etc to be at peace, the macro is all doing this, so lots of baggage to gift or transmute away. so imo at this point in our collective and mutual gathering mind wise especialllly, all is purrfect. Oh unless Q posts again lol.

Dreamtimer
23rd February 2022, 10:18
Gosh why has it gone on so long ? years

Why did they chase after Whitewater for years? If there was a 'there' there, it would have been there.

Why are they making up the big lie now? It's always been about manufacturing. That's why they have to say it over and over. That's the conditioning part. My brother enlightened me on the tactic decades ago. "It's not about the truth," he told me. "You're naive if you think it is," he told me. "You just say something over and over again. That's how you get the votes. That's where the power is. It's not about the truth."

I was laughing at all the talking heads reacting to Giuliani saying truth is not truth. Where were they the last three decades? That's been standard operating procedure from the Republicans for decades. They just make stuff up about Hillary because of the Pavlov effect. It's so easy now.

And that's why I have pointed out the grave danger of the rhetoric being used to describe 'liberals' in America. "They hate America. They hate our way of life." Those words have been conditioned into the national conscience with the muslim terrorists. And now it's being used against Americans.

It's vastly stupid, base, and corrosive. But it's such a knee-jerk, the talking heads cannot see the forest for the trees anymore.

There was plenty going on with Russia which is why folks also have to keep saying it was nothing. Folks were conditioned to believe that a pandemic happening right before their eyes was a Democrat Impeachment Hoax.

It's really easy to do once people have been conditioned.

Aianawa
26th February 2022, 18:21
Ok unsure if it is left or rite rag.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/durham-probe-reveals-government-access-to-unregulated-data-streams-11645871581?mod=hp_lead_pos2

Emil El Zapato
26th February 2022, 18:56
Ok unsure if it is left or rite rag.

https://www.wsj.com/articles/durham-probe-reveals-government-access-to-unregulated-data-streams-11645871581?mod=hp_lead_pos2

It was a market watch journal for many years, I think the False Profit bought it some years ago.

Aianawa
26th February 2022, 19:47
Ok BNC, trying to just pass on the data here regards the Durham, Biden allowed it to continue under him also, gosh BNP what would you call a trust worthy news channel nowadays for all people to watch ?.

Aianawa
26th February 2022, 21:54
Just realised something important, many here only choose one side , their side, of news from where ever, so may have missed that it has been confirmed that Trump was spied on, most here know this ?.

To Be clear, before and during 2016 election, unsure if it is conclusive regards Trump being spied on while president, yet.

Aianawa
17th May 2023, 17:30
With the Durham report out, spying yes, can mods put me back into or allow me to post again on my fav thread > https://jandeane81.com/showthread.php/8857-Trump-Illusion-Mist-and-Bought/page200 < ?