Soros @ WEF, Davos: Trump (administration) "will disappear in 2020 or even sooner" - [PEACE]

2020-07-26 Thread Zenaan Harkness
Soros starts to lift the mask:

   Soros Says 'Trump Will Disappear In 2020 Or Sooner' In Ominous Message
   
https://www.zerohedge.com/political/soros-says-trump-will-disappear-2020-or-sooner-ominous-message
  .. Billionaire progressive activist George Soros made an ominous comment 
at this week's World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. 
  After explaining that he considers the Trump administration to be "a 
danger to the world," Soros then said he sees it as "a purely temporary 
phenomenon that will disappear in 2020 or even sooner," according to CNBC. ...



Soros is also trying to gin up nuclear war, he hopes possibly with North Korea:

   Soros: Trump has US 'set on a course towards nuclear war'
   
https://www.cnbc.com/2018/01/25/soros-trump-has-us-set-on-a-course-towards-nuclear-war.html
  .. "Clearly I consider the Trump administration a danger to the world," 
he said.
  text:"But I regard it as a purely temporary phenomenon that will 
disappear in 2020 or even sooner."



As with the threats against Tucker Carlson and his family, this is real folks.  
As more and more people ask without irony their simple and straightforward 
questions, in the face of tyranny, the demon rats are left with fewer and fewer 
options.



Re: IQNets, Tor, "Dumpster Fires"

2020-07-26 Thread Zenaan Harkness
[If this arrives twice, that's b/c the first one from nearly 3 hours
ago did not arrive on the list.]


Karl, your failure to fix your email client or to use a proper client,
causes replying to your emails to involve annoying extra work every
time:

 - no List-ID header, so I'm having to "reply all" and delete the
other recipients, or to manually add the list address back in

 - duplicate emails from you, consistently

Feel free to continue to burden those who would otherwise attempt to
engage with you, but I'm almost out of tuits.


I'll give it one more shot, in the hope that you will begin to use a
proper email client.




Regarding the below, a quick yandex search brings up this:

   https://www.yandex.com/search/?text=%2Bchaff%20site%3Atorproject.org=10145

   .. Passive attacks are correlation based on observations. Do not
underestimate this. With the NSA's fangs on literally every fiber
optic cable and in every exchange they can weasel into, GPA. They are
difficult to defeat unless you are filling the network with fill
traffic such that they can't tell wheat from chaff. Tor doesn't do
this.

   ..  At this point the middle node could also randomly appends 5-10%
binary chaff to the streams to obfuscate the size.

   .. My understanding is that Navy intelligence wanted a tool they
could use on the open net to hide operatives. If only MI used it,
they'd be identifiable by fingerprint of the software. So we are just
chaff for the NSA, under that theory, to hide them hiding what they
wish to keep hidden themselves. Tor users may be the only secrets left
safe, if the NSA hasn't built better yet. ;)

   ..


So, the Tor Project is under no illusion about chaff.

The issue is not that they don't know about it, but that they may not
implement chaff fill.  That would cause serious problems for their
ability to track and deanonymize who is talking to who etc.

Once again, you appear to be labouring under the illusion that those
whom you acknowledge have already censored/banned you (another example
of "your superiors"), are good people "doing their best" who are
perhaps just a little misguided but for the enlightenment you are
about to bring to them.


Karl, could there be a lesson here for you?



You might find there are a few castaways on this list who used to post
on the tor email list(s), but got banned and/or censored, just like
you ...

Good luck,




On Sat, Jul 25, 2020 at 10:32:45AM -0400, Karl wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Long story short:
>
> A Tor dev "pastly" on OFTC muted me ("remotecontrolledboy") in their off
> topic channel relating to asking about an event some years ago with
> coderman.  pastly and I also had some positive interactions supporting
> users of Tor and did not stop me from slightly raising the bar.
>
> I'm thinking of posting something like this in their main channel:
>
> "pastly, some of our experienced people running an onion host were recently
> deanonymized by DHS.  zenaan harkness has collected a number of needed
> improvements to Tor to prevent such deanonymization in a project called
> IQNets.  we understand that handling this is difficult and are happy to
> eventually resolve it ourselves, but things could go a lot better if we
> worked together.  The history of the nascent IQNets project is stored in
> the on-chain repositories managed by bsv
> address 1CQKe1veVPUaxpeYXeqAHnA4SJQpnbfZ2v.  dumpster fires are for staying
> anonymous in many different ways.  would you be willing to unmute me in
> #tor-offtopic?"
>
> I tried to post the private key to that address when I posted the
> exconfidetial repo.  Not attached to it.
>
> If no clear reply is received by me I'll take it as indication to proceed
> however I feel.
>
> Thank you.
>
> -
>
> K
>
> There is proof inside many peoples' electronics.  Proof that a marketing
> group would contract development of a frightening virus.  A virus that
> responds to peoples' keystrokes and browsing habits, and changes what
> people see on their devices.  A virus that alters political behavior en
> masse, for profit.


Fw: Re: communicating with police officers, narratives, discrimination

2020-07-26 Thread таракан
Such terminology of 'bad apples' should be used for honest police officers, 
provided with ideals and eager to protect vulnerable people and defend 
innocents & punish the guilty...


Re: communicating with police officers, narratives, discrimination

2020-07-26 Thread Zenaan Harkness
On Sun, Jul 26, 2020 at 07:01:47AM -0400, Karl wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 25, 2020, 9:54 PM Zenaan Harkness  wrote:
> > Are you saying that there are no "bad apples" around?
> 
> I am saying that "bad apples" is a disdainful opinion.  I note it also
> spreads disbelief in mediation to solve problems without violence.

Why are you saying that the phrase "bad apples" is _not_ appropriate to 
describe for example police who use excessive force or violence, or lawyers or 
news readers who lie?


Re: communicating with police officers, narratives, discrimination

2020-07-26 Thread Karl
On Sat, Jul 25, 2020, 9:54 PM Zenaan Harkness  wrote:

> On Sat, Jul 25, 2020 at 02:48:04PM -0400, Karl wrote:
> > How does this expression land for this being a cryptoanarchist list?
> >
> > 1 in line reply below.
> >
> > -
> >
> > K
> >
> > There is proof inside many peoples' electronics.  Proof that a marketing
> > group would contract development of a frightening virus.  A virus that
> > responds to peoples' keystrokes and browsing habits, and changes what
> > people see on their devices.  A virus that alters political behavior en
> > masse, for profit.
>
> Your sig fills ~10 extra lines in every email you send.
>
> Again you keep sending me 2 copies of almost every email you reply to me,
> and accasionally an extra email apologising.
>

Something I'm cognitively strong enough to take action on is the
"occasionally".  Sorry for my last email going out twice towards you.  I'm
thinking maybe if I can get a new phone or fix my computer I can get set up
with a bright reminder notice over my email send button.  Maybe I can think
of a way to do that without requiring that.

> On Wed, Jul 22, 2020, 12:44 PM Zenaan Harkness  wrote:
> >
> > > Some people seem to like to direct their anger at external
> authorities, or
> > > treat certain other humans with disdain because they've had a bad
> > > experience with someone else of the same profession/job/ race/ sex/
> > > whatever.
> > >
> > > There are bad apples around, but
> >
> >
> > Here you begin treating people with disdain ("bad apples") which you
> > criticize doing in the paragraph prior.
>
>
> Are you saying that there are no "bad apples" around?
>

I am saying that "bad apples" is a disdainful opinion.  I note it also
spreads disbelief in mediation to solve problems without violence.

>


Re: Bunker Fuel - black strap molasses

2020-07-26 Thread таракан


I wonder how that email survived to the SPAM filter.

Either proof of superior intelligence of Bayesian filters, either proof of 
their huge limitations...

--
CRYPTOANALYZER
--

Sent from ProtonMail, encrypted email based in Switzerland.

Sent with ProtonMail Secure Email.

‐‐‐ Original Message ‐‐‐
On Sunday, 26 July 2020 г., 12:15, Zenaan Harkness  wrote:

> Black strap molasses, either in jars or larger food grade storage containers, 
> is classified as a super food, and it's super affordable (relatively).
>
> From porridge to coffee, molasses is mineral rich and stores really well (if 
> you start with a large container, decant into e.g. jars for daily use 
> (minimises the risk of a large sealed bucket going mouldy etc).
>
> Such high density mineral supplement at such an affordable price, is rare 
> these days, and thanks to our sugar industry, should remain affordable.
>
> You can also mix it with ascorbic acid and warm water, or perhaps lemon 
> juice, to make morning drink.
>
> Zinc, Magnesium and Selenium are particularly good for men, and for quickly 
> solving muscle cramps. If you have animals including cats and dogs that you 
> may need to keep healthy in times where a vet is hard or inpossible to get to 
> or to afford, "horse molasses" is even cheaper, in bulk and supposedly lower 
> quality, but will certainly provide a treat for your cat if mixed in with 
> milk.
>
> If you are prepping for the apopalypse, you might even keep a written copy of 
> a "how to make licorice" recipe.
>
> May your apocalypse be healthy for you and yours ;)




Bunker Fuel - black strap molasses

2020-07-26 Thread Zenaan Harkness
Black strap molasses, either in jars or larger food grade storage containers, 
is classified as a super food, and it's super affordable (relatively).

>From porridge to coffee, molasses is mineral rich and stores really well (if 
>you start with a large container, decant into e.g. jars for daily use 
>(minimises the risk of a large sealed bucket going mouldy etc).

Such high density mineral supplement at such an affordable price, is rare these 
days, and thanks to our sugar industry, should remain affordable.

You can also mix it with ascorbic acid and warm water, or perhaps lemon juice, 
to make morning drink.

Zinc, Magnesium and Selenium are particularly good for men, and for quickly 
solving muscle cramps.  If you have animals including cats and dogs that you 
may need to keep healthy in times where a vet is hard or inpossible to get to 
or to afford, "horse molasses" is even cheaper, in bulk and supposedly lower 
quality, but will certainly provide a treat for your cat if mixed in with milk.

If you are prepping for the apopalypse, you might even keep a written copy of a 
"how to make licorice" recipe.


May your apocalypse be healthy for you and yours ;)


Re: NYT accidentally publishes Ghislaine Maxwell obituary ahead of schedule

2020-07-26 Thread Zig the N.g
OK Karl, it is satire.

The BabylonBee.com is satire.

This is the second time you've publicly commented on a satire article as though 
it is not satire.

It is a good lesson for me here - some people are not able to distinguish 
satire in the written form, and also fail, repeatedly, to actually read 
original articles (with dozens of BabylonBee.com articles posted, evidently 
Karl (but the individual is not the issue here) has not actually clicked on 
even one, or if he did, he  still  failed to recognise that this site is a 
satire site.

That is actually counter productive for all of us, and in a very real way 
dangerous, since then it appears that a lot of falsehoods (which are simply 
satire) are being spread and read as factual, rather than the dry satirycal 
commentary on certain of the problems in our broader Western community today.

And that, is not good.

I take my duty of care to us all, seriously.

So Karl, I hope you are now under no illusion about the many links I have 
posted to the BabylonBee.com.

As an evidently necessary precaution, from now on I shall either pre- or 
post-fix such emails with "[SATIRE]" or something similar, in an attempt to 
avoid the real damage that may arise when folks are for whatever reasons not 
able to identify satire as satire.

Karl, I hope there is a positive (or "constructive") lesson here for you, 
perhaps in relation to "believing everything your superiors say to you" - in 
this case, what you read as "true" was actually just "shit posting" with the 
intention to point out how stupid some parts of our shared reality are.  Take 
care and I hope that you will no longer be mislead by what I mistakenly thought 
was "obvious to see, must be" satire.

We are in precarious times, and, for example, Juan's no nonsense straight talk 
may well be a more functional (for everybody) approach.  We certainly do not 
need exaggerated falsehoods to be amplified, far from it!

Take care everybody, and let's look out for one another, these are challenging 
times...


(In case it's useful, the satire might highlight that her life may be at risk - 
she's in the same jail Epstein was "suicided" in.)



On Sat, Jul 25, 2020 at 03:00:58PM -0400, Karl wrote:
> Zig below has bravely quoted a public death threat issued denianly by
> the business mafia.  These things are very common.
> 
> If you could cut through the deniability and make clear argument that it is
> a death threat, it would be the job of the local authorities to stop it,
> criminally charge the source of it, and protect the target.  This rarely
> happens as far as I am aware of.
> 
> Death threats are used when fear is preferred to actual death.
> 
> You could make progress on figuring out where the threat came from by
> talking with the people who published the article.  Trump and Hillary are
> just towing the line, both.
> 
> -
> 
> K
> 
> There is proof inside many peoples' electronics.  Proof that a marketing
> group would contract development of a frightening virus.  A virus that
> responds to peoples' keystrokes and browsing habits, and changes what
> people see on their devices.  A virus that alters political behavior en
> masse, for profit.
> 
> 
> On Wed, Jul 22, 2020, 2:28 PM Zig the N.g  wrote:
> 
> >New York Times Accidentally Publishes Ghislaine Maxwell Obituary Ahead
> > Of Schedule
> >
> > https://babylonbee.com/news/oops-ghislaine-maxwell-included-in-list-of-covid-19-deaths
> >
> >   [cute pic not attached]
> >
> >   NEW YORK, NY—Oops! The New York Times accidentally included Ghislaine
> >   Maxwell in its daily list of New Yorkers killed by COVID-19,
> > publishing
> >   the socialite's name on its website Tuesday morning.
> >
> >   The glowing obituary called Maxwell a "generous, loving, austere
> >   childcare provider" who "will be missed by many of us elites." ...
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > In other news, NY governor Cuomo is blazing an old new trail:
> >
> >Ceremony Honoring Governor Cuomo's COVID-19 Response To Be Held At
> > Now-Vacant Nursing Home
> >
> > https://babylonbee.com/news/ceremony-honoring-governor-cuomos-covid-19-response-to-be-held-at-now-vacant-nursing-home
> >
> >   ALBANY, NY—A ceremony honoring Governor Cuomo's fantastic response
> > to the
> >   coronavirus pandemic will be held at a convenient location: a
> > now-vacant
> >   nursing home upstate.
> >
> >   Cuomo was awarded the United States Award for Disease Response
> > Excellence
> >   by Dr. Anthony Fauci at the recently vacated venue.
> >
> >   "We just had all this free space opened up," said Cuomo. "This is a
> > great
> >   new space to host all kinds of cool events. They've got a cafeteria,
> > lots
> >   of available beds for a little shut-eye, and a room to play Bingo. I
> >   could get comfortable here."
> >
> >   ..
> >