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Spying Is Meant to Crush Citizens’ Dissent, Not Catch Terrorists

George Washington's picture




 

Preface: NSA Lied When It Said It Doesn’t Record Content

Last week, Washington Post reporter Barton Gellman -  who has reviewed many of the documents leaked by Ed Snowden – told PBS’ Frontline:

Who’s e-mailing whom? Who’s texting whom? Who’s doing Skype calls with whom? They’re collecting a lot of information, a lot of content of phone calls. They’re actually recording the voices— not for all of our calls, but for a lot of U.S. telephone calls.

Background.

Okay, now you're ready for the main story ...

Spying Is Meant to Crush Citizens’ Dissent, Not Catch Terrorists

While many Americans understand why the NSA is conducting mass surveillance of U.S. citizens, some are still confused about what’s really going on.

In his new book, No Place to Hide, Glenn Greenwald writes:

The perception that invasive surveillance is confined only to a marginalised and deserving group of those “doing wrong” – the bad people – ensures that the majority acquiesces to the abuse of power or even cheers it on. But that view radically misunderstands what goals drive all institutions of authority. “Doing something wrong” in the eyes of such institutions encompasses far more than illegal acts, violent behaviour and terrorist plots. It typically extends to meaningful dissent and any genuine challenge. It is the nature of authority to equate dissent with wrongdoing, or at least with a threat.

 

The record is suffused with examples of groups and individuals being placed under government surveillance by virtue of their dissenting views and activism – Martin Luther King, the civil rights movement, anti-war activists, environmentalists. In the eyes of the government and J Edgar Hoover’s FBI, they were all “doing something wrong”: political activity that threatened the prevailing order.

 

The FBI’s domestic counterintelligence programme, Cointelpro, was first exposed by a group of anti-war activists who had become convinced that the anti-war movement had been infiltrated, placed under surveillance and targeted with all sorts of dirty tricks. Lacking documentary evidence to prove it and unsuccessful in convincing journalists to write about their suspicions, they broke into an FBI branch office in Pennsylvania in 1971 and carted off thousands of documents.

 

Files related to Cointelpro showed how the FBI had targeted political groups and individuals it deemed subversive and dangerous, including the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, black nationalist movements, socialist and communist organizations, anti-war protesters and various rightwing groups. The bureau had infiltrated them with agents who, among other things, attempted to manipulate members into agreeing to commit criminal acts so that the FBI could arrest and prosecute them.

 

Those revelations led to the creation of the Senate Church Committee, which concluded: “[Over the course of 15 years] the bureau conducted a sophisticated vigilate operation aimed squarely at preventing the exercise of first amendment rights of speech and association, on the theory that preventing the growth of dangerous groups and the propagation of dangerous ideas would protect the national security and deter violence.”

 

These incidents were not aberrations of the era. During the Bush years, for example, documents obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) revealed, as the group put it in 2006, “new details of Pentagon surveillance of Americans opposed to the Iraq war, including Quakers and student groups“. The Pentagon was “keeping tabs on non-violent protesters by collecting information and storing it in a military anti-terrorism database”. The evidence shows that assurances that surveillance is only targeted at those who “have done something wrong” should provide little comfort, since a state will reflexively view any challenge to its power as wrongdoing.

 

The opportunity those in power have to characterise political opponents as “national security threats” or even “terrorists” has repeatedly proven irresistible. In the past decade, the government, in an echo of Hoover’s FBI, has formally so designated environmental activists, broad swaths of anti-government rightwing groups, anti-war activists, and associations organised around Palestinian rights. Some individuals within those broad categories may deserve the designation, but undoubtedly most do not, guilty only of holding opposing political views. Yet such groups are routinely targeted for surveillance by the NSA and its partners.

 

One document from the Snowden files, dated 3 October 2012, chillingly underscores the point. It revealed that the agency has been monitoring the online activities of individuals it believes express “radical” ideas and who have a “radicalising” influence on others.

 

***

 

The NSA explicitly states that none of the targeted individuals is a member of a terrorist organisation or involved in any terror plots. Instead, their crime is the views they express, which are deemed “radical“, a term that warrants pervasive surveillance and destructive campaigns to “exploit vulnerabilities”.

 

Among the information collected about the individuals, at least one of whom is a “US person”, are details of their online sex activities and “online promiscuity” – the porn sites they visit and surreptitious sex chats with women who are not their wives. The agency discusses ways to exploit this information to destroy their reputations and credibility.

 

The NSA’s treatment of Anonymous, as well as the vague category of people known as “hacktivists”, is especially troubling and extreme. That’s because Anonymous is not actually a structured group but a loosely organised affiliation of people around an idea: someone becomes affiliated with Anonymous by virtue of the positions they hold. Worse still, the category “hacktivists” has no fixed meaning: it can mean the use of programming skills to undermine the security and functioning of the internetbut can also refer to anyone who uses online tools to promote political ideals. That the NSA targets such broad categories of people is tantamount to allowing it to spy on anyone anywhere, including in the US, whose ideas the government finds threatening.

Greenwald told Democracy Now yesterday:

People are aware of J. Edgar Hoover’s abuses. The nature of that series of events is that the United States government looks at people who oppose what they do as being, quote-unquote, “threats.” That’s the nature of power, is to regard anybody who’s a threat to your power as a broad national security threat.

 

***

 

There has already been reporting that shows that—the document, for example, in the book that shows the NSA plotting about how to use information that it collected against people it considers, quote, “radicalizers.” These are people the NSA itself says are not terrorists, do not belong to terrorist organizations, do not plan terrorist attacks. They simply express ideas the NSA considers radical. The NSA has collected their online sexual activity, chats of a sexual nature that they’ve had, pornographic websites that they visit, and plans, in the document, on how to use this information publicly to destroy the reputations or credibility of those people to render them ineffective as advocates. There are other documents showing the monitoring of who visits the WikiLeaks website and the collection of data that can identify who they are. There’s information about how to use deception to undermine people who are affiliated with the online activism group Anonymous.

Recent stories show that Greenwald is right:

And it’s not just spying …

The government may treat anyone who challenges its policies as terrorists.  For example:

The indefinite detention law may be used against American dissenters. Specifically, the trial judge in the lawsuit challenging the law had asked the government attorneys 5 times whether journalists like Pulitzer prize-winning reporter Chris Hedges could be indefinitely detained simply for interviewing and then writing about bad guys.   The government refused to promise that journalists like Hedges won’t be thrown in a dungeon for the rest of their lives without any right to talk to a judge.

Constitutional attorney John W. Whitehead writes:

No matter what the Obama administration may say to the contrary, actions speak louder than words, and history shows that the U.S. government is not averse to locking up its own citizens for its own purposes. What the NDAA does is open the door for the government to detain as a threat to national security anyone viewed as a troublemaker. According to government guidelines for identifying domestic extremists—a word used interchangeably with terrorists, that technically applies to anyone exercising their First Amendment rights in order to criticize the government.

Daniel Ellsberg notes that Obama’s claim of power to indefinitely detain people without charges or access to a lawyer or the courts is a power that even King George – the guy we fought the Revolutionary War against – didn’t claim.  (And former judge and adjunct professor of constitutional law Andrew Napolitano points out that Obama’s claim that he can indefinitely detain prisoners even after they are acquitted of their crimes is a power that even Hitler and Stalin didn’t claim.)

And the former top NSA official who created NSA’s mass surveillance system says, “We are now in a police state“.

 

 

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Sat, 05/17/2014 - 11:26 | 4769242 Emergency Ward
Emergency Ward's picture

FREE Hunter Biden !!...

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 15:31 | 4769705 Boxed Merlot
Boxed Merlot's picture

FREE Hunter Biden !!...

 

 

Didn't you hear, he's as much a free citizen as the first lady.  She travels for free too.

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 01:09 | 4768694 intric8
intric8's picture

are things so polarized these days that zh doesnt understand when its own supporters are being facetious?

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 20:56 | 4768246 messystateofaffairs
messystateofaffairs's picture

One form of non violent dissent that is already no doubt growing is an off the books economy. The gubbermint don't like that, it dosen't fit the slave model. Spying on peoples everyday communications lets them know where to send the IRS. Cryptocurrencies are great for off the books underground trading and everything possible will be done the discredit them in their infancy if there is no technical way to destroy them. The inevitable people response to everyday spying will be open source solutions that render Utah cost ineffective, it's already happening. Independent people will stay ahead of gubbermint, they are just stupid self centered sociopaths. At least the NSA dumbocrats can get off watching porn until this little spying problem is circumvented, they won't be able to hold this thing together unless they go the full North Korea model. In the meantime everybody should do their part and clutter up their analists with shit.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 20:36 | 4768204 kchrisc
kchrisc's picture

Surveillance is to assure obedience.

For those that persist in believing a totalitarian police state cannot be brought down, remember that one of the greatest surveillance states ever, East Germany, fell because a confused pol issued the wrong press release. The people went to the wall and the outnumbered and overwhelmed guards feared what would happen if they shot at the people. In affect the people "disobeyed" and the regime fell.

And being that obedience resides in you, the individual, obedience is suicide.

Therefore surveillance is to see who is still killing themselves for them.

 

"I secretly watch my guillotine from my kitchen window."

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 02:09 | 4768742 mumcard
mumcard's picture

Yeah, they only put up with that bullshit for 4 decades...

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 19:46 | 4768071 Conax
Conax's picture

Spying squelches free speech, torture terrorizes the enemy, nothing is done for the official reasons given.  Both policies diminish what was America and create countless new enemies.

America should be better than this.  The Founders have spun their way to the earth's mantle by now.

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 10:12 | 4769102 centerline
centerline's picture

Rather than evolve, this is about maintaining the status quo for the wealthy and powerful... at all costs.  Spying also helps in hunting down capital.  So does an all electronic currency system - which is what is coming next if they have thier way.

Western nations, and perhaps wider, skirting the laws by scratching each others backs here.  No different than military skirting treaties in the same fashion.  Same shit, different day - but now reaching a tipping point.

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 10:50 | 4769167 intric8
intric8's picture

The fucked up thing nowadays is nobody knows what it means to be an american. The shenanigans of our govt (chiefly the massive deception with iraq) has made it impossible for other countries to trust our motives. That mistrust was not so readily palpable at the time, but it has sunk in since, festering and breeding both conscious and subconscious resentment in the psychology of people around the globe.

americans dont know what being an american truly represents anymore. that makes it difficult to feel proud of our country. At present, americans have a fucked up identity crisis. We dont know what we fight for or even WHO we fight for anymore because our govt has made its own citizens the enemy! Too much nonsense has been imposed on other countries around the world in the name of 'freedom', 'democracy' and the fight against 'terrorism'. That entire shtick is way over used already. People are wising up and getting sick of it.

Unless the govt truly starts practicing politics that are for the american people and finds ways to expand its empire without exploiting innocent countries, it will all end badly.

Sun, 05/18/2014 - 00:35 | 4770765 mccvilb
mccvilb's picture

Intricat8, I feel for kids today. Talk about an identity crisis. If you've watched any of the Monday demonstrations in Germany it sounds like whatever they're speaking about they're describing our government, our MSM and our banksters, but no, they're talking about their own collusive embedded hive. This is bigger than America.

I fear we suffer from a global pandemic and somehow along the way we became the main enabler in this scheme. Maybe we were too accepting of our way of life and in our negligence allowed it to be stolen out from under us.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 19:35 | 4768053 stant
stant's picture

They would make more money if they just left everyone alone, it's a negative drag on economic activity. But it's to late now. Can't unring a bell

Sun, 05/18/2014 - 11:27 | 4771242 Bohm Squad
Bohm Squad's picture

@ Stant

Money is a means to an end...but it embodies so much more.

Money is Life - Most people trade a percentage of their time on this planet for money.  It follows that money represents the amount of life you've either spent to acquire it or others have spent and given it to you.

People in power are the latter - they don't have to spend a large portion of their lives acquiring wealth...others do it for them.  With a gig like that, it's no wonder they're willing to kill off a certain percentage of their livestock to keep their vaulted position.

Though corny, Robert Kyosaki (sp?) said it best...Rich people buy assets, poor people buy liabilities.  An asset is anything that makes you money...a liability is anything that costs you money.  

Poor people are rich people's assets...and they make laws to keep it that way...it's why money flows from the top down and not from the bottom up...at least not anymore.

 

 

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 20:20 | 4768172 Crawdaddy
Crawdaddy's picture

If money was all they cared about, that would be true. They want total control. Dissent must be eliminated!

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 18:52 | 4767986 NoWayJose
NoWayJose's picture

"The more you tighten your grip, Obama, the more star systems will slip through your fingers." -- a certain Princess from a galaxy, far, far away...

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 20:10 | 4768151 Jstanley011
Jstanley011's picture

"Resistance is futile." -The Borg

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 20:24 | 4768181 kchrisc
kchrisc's picture

Resistance is Liberty.

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 01:11 | 4768696 semperfi
semperfi's picture

resistance is duty

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 01:43 | 4768718 runswithscissors
runswithscissors's picture

resist we much!

 

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 02:01 | 4768735 mumcard
Fri, 05/16/2014 - 22:33 | 4768452 Radical Marijuana
Radical Marijuana's picture

All resistance is assistance.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 22:22 | 4767946 blindman
blindman's picture

as much as anything else, information and gathering is
a business, the raw resource is the patterns of
thought and expression that the public gives willingly
for access to the internet or telephony. the ideas, the coherency,
etc.. are harvested by corporations and the intelligence
community and traded as capital, an asset financialised.
that the public is presented with the bill for the collection
by the "intelligence" agencies and then receives no compensation
other than being terrorised is treasonous fraud.
like shrimp, seals or whales this information, to better "refine" the
lives of the people into orderly conformity or rebellion
depending on the wishes of the designers and owners of the
"property" or derived capital, is used to infuse semiotic control
mechanisms and memes into the culture and discourse to further
modify and control the people of the culture in direct opposition
to their nature, intuition and personal and individual perception
and insight.
mostly derivative and tangential distraction or obfuscation proliferates,
rarely a momentous new market or beginning. market making in hell
makes for a stressful career, the resulting and inevitable guilt
leads to misadventure, misallocation and miseducation; not to
neglect little miss understanding.
.
people are weird, dangerous and funny.
.
i suspect catching terrorists has little to do with it.
terrorist can be found nearly anywhere including in
the intelligence community, government etc ...
creating terrorists is like market making for the security
industry and associated agencies, fed money in the bank,
job security and a public works project all rolled into
one regime de fascism. come to think of it, how could anyone
imagine world government or empire without embracing fascism?
you can't, it is inevitable and yet it won't work. so .....
here we are.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 18:32 | 4767945 SMC
SMC's picture

Good article. Not surprising that data is recorded and/or manufactured for the purpose of manipulating, controlling, and ensuring the everlasting obedience of alleged "public servants" to do exactly what the puppet masters desire.

The US Government may have billions (or is it trillions now - sarc) of bullets and a few million thugs, but very few actually believe them anymore, their lies have destroyed the credibility of the country as well as the credibility of the Cartoon News Network and other mainstream news media who play softball and report government statements as "truth" without verification.

Considering all the laws, regulations, and the recent trend of classified laws and regulations that citizens are not permitted to read yet must obey under threat of indefinite detention or execution at the whim of the executive branch, life as a citizen in the United States for the 99% is basically a life sentence without parole in a large decaying gulag.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 23:51 | 4768581 Shad_ow
Shad_ow's picture
  • Well said.  Without equal protection and enforcement of law, chaos ensues.  That is why they are spying on the people, an attempt to control the angry masses when TSHTF and protect their wealth.

The masses are so great, ain't nothing going to stop them if they ever awaken to the truth.  Would hate to be a banker or politician then.

 

The masses are too mesmerized with their electronics and EBT cards to wake up. It won't happen until all is lost, if then.

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 01:58 | 4768731 mumcard
mumcard's picture

The poor have nothing to fight for.  If the middle class won't take up arms to resist then why should the proles fight the battle for them?  No, the middle class must lead the charge and hope to recruit the poor with promise of opportunity after the banksters and their puppet masters are all swaying in the breeze.

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 10:30 | 4769141 Cathartes Aura
Cathartes Aura's picture

the resource-full DIY-class will always fly under the radars. . . they re-Use, re-Cycle, barter, share and support each other with minimal interacting in the consumer's worlds.

and they blend in so well, not uni-formed with the latest See-Me style'd, not shopping in the big-box'd stores, not eating at the slop-troughs, not lining up to voterrr. . .

steering past the mass, gettin' shit done.

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 03:25 | 4768809 bunnyswanson
bunnyswanson's picture

It may be that obamacare wakes up the poor class.  I spoke to a homeless guy as I was giving him my recyclables and he mentioned he had to get a copay for medication to treat a serious spider bite.  He seemed astounded. 

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 18:17 | 4767894 kurt
kurt's picture

Aw Come On!

The goverment and security agencies are like Skipper on Gilligan's Isle. You have your millionaires and their wives, movies stars, professors, cute girls in cutoff shorts, and you, Gilligan. You wacky Gilligans! Garshes and Golly, why all the fuss? Jeepers, the Skipper and Professor are in charge, the millionaire, Thurston Howell is next, then his wife. Ginger or Maryanne are your rewards if you play your cards right. Gilligan? Why everybody be hatin' so much?

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 17:59 | 4767881 Son of Captain Nemo
Son of Captain Nemo's picture
"Spying Is Meant to Crush Citizens’ Dissent, Not Catch Terrorists"...

To add to the collective list in this read! 

Just imagine what wound happen to Hayden if he had said something like this when COINTELPRO was first revealed?

http://www.newsforage.com/2014/05/us-admits-killing-people-on-basis-of.html
Fri, 05/16/2014 - 17:47 | 4767857 falak pema
falak pema's picture

Matahari proved that right but she got crushed in the process.

Not everybody is as smart as Putin to have survived both the Gorby and the Elstine era and thrive. 

Some master spies got caught coming out of the cold; they say so for Colby who spilt the beans before the Congress on Angleton's hit man antics; unlike Helms who was tight lipped and Petty who hated James Jesus.

It makes ugly reading, the thrilla about the pscho killa in the Cia; Colby just died in his boat...nobody "knows" how. 

Some traditions never die and killing the people also means killing your own kind. The Snake eats its tail.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 17:37 | 4767825 MrBoompi
MrBoompi's picture

All of this "activity" should be considered economic in nature. The Powers That Be want to protect their wealth, therefore they want to know any threats that might affect it. The safety of the American people is less important, even though they lie by saying otherwise. The actions of the Federal Reserve, foreign wars, letting Wall st frauds go unpunished, and collecting every piece of data around the globe are all related to money and who controls it.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 23:28 | 4768551 kedi
kedi's picture

I would not mind them protecting their wealth so much, if it was not so short term planned and slanted to particular ideals, at the expense of actual good longterm business sense. They are milking us cash cows dry, then getting ready to butcher the skinny remains. Not caring what happens after they get theirs. Economics has an ecology. They are eliminating their prey. All will starve.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 23:47 | 4768576 Radical Marijuana
Radical Marijuana's picture

Indeed, kedi!

To put it my way:

The banksters' prey have degenerated into being so incompetent to resist, that it has become too easy for the predators, which has resulted in those predators degenerating into parasites, that are killing their hosts, rather than acting as predators that ultimately strengthen their prey.

Their systems of debt slavery, backed by wars based on deceits, are suffering from the paradox of final failure from too much success.

Sun, 05/18/2014 - 10:10 | 4771120 Acidtest Dummy
Acidtest Dummy's picture

RM, you are about one comment away from getting a permanent upvote from me. Don't let the fuckers get you down.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 17:32 | 4767816 AdvancingTime
AdvancingTime's picture

Thanks to information leaked by  Edward Snowden we know the "black budget" last year was a massive 52 billion dollars. This is the money used in "secret" spy operations, and it is enough to send shivers down the back of those that cherish privacy.

This is beginning to look like the society we have read about the totalitarian society of Oceania described in George Orwell's novel Nineteen Eighty-Four. In Orwell's novel, all citizens of Oceania are monitored by cameras and are fed fabricated news stories by the government. More on this subject in the article below.

http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2013/09/are-we-creating-orwellian-society...

 

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 15:31 | 4769704 g'kar
g'kar's picture

Snowden wasn't a leaker, he was part of TPTB fear campaign to bring it "all to light". With all the "good stuff" he has on everyone in power, where is it, hmmm? Bomb away, won't change my opinion.

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 20:21 | 4770311 Umh
Umh's picture

Why should anyone do as you ask?

Sun, 05/18/2014 - 17:10 | 4770679 g'kar
g'kar's picture

I posted this very late so none of the Snowden fans would notice.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 17:29 | 4767806 assistedliving
assistedliving's picture

and we thought HFT's were frontrunning....

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 17:26 | 4767803 disabledvet
disabledvet's picture

Does taking out a put/call option spread qualify as being a "radicalizer"?

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 18:01 | 4767880 machineh
machineh's picture

Bullish spread good; bearish spread bad.

Struggle to meet our S&P 2000 quota, comrade.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 17:25 | 4767796 semperfi
semperfi's picture

they'll have to pry my dissent out of my cold, dead hands

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 17:24 | 4767793 Mandel Bot
Mandel Bot's picture

All of us here at ZH must be taking up a lot of their time. How can they keep up?

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 23:32 | 4768560 kedi
kedi's picture

I have a small hope. That as they gather all the information on the common habits of humanity. Compute it. Average it out. The bar of abnormal will be reset ever higher.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 17:57 | 4767876 franzpick
franzpick's picture

See the reference above to the 52 BIL $ black budget, which pays for 1000s of blog monitors.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 19:37 | 4768056 max2205
max2205's picture

TD should make them buy a cool ZH T Shirt

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 18:16 | 4767917 Papasmurf
Papasmurf's picture

And 1000's of bloggers.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 22:07 | 4768415 metastar
metastar's picture

That's why they have FEMA and billions of bullets.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 16:06 | 4767575 verum quod lies
verum quod lies's picture

Ockham's razor and, as mentioned, their actions tell us all we need to know: we are the targets and they the executioners.

Sat, 05/17/2014 - 00:16 | 4768613 amanfromMars
amanfromMars's picture

When we and they exchange places is there a New Orderly World Order with CHAOS ..... Clouds Hosting Advanced Operating Systems? 

amanfromMars 1 Sat 17 May 04:44 [1405170444] squaring the circle/putting a round peg in a square hole on http://forums.theregister.co.uk/forum/1/2014/05/16/cyber_challenge/

 

Talking of drones and clones/machines and muppets and puppets

 

They don't pay enough at the end of the day, you want top people, with top skills to work in London...... For 25-50k errr no thanks. …. Anonymous Coward

 

Top cyber skilled entities, for of course the challenges in cyber space to be mastered and controlled, commanded and redirected are always in both real time and beta testing simulations, virtual exercises, and peoples there are but fleeting phantoms that exist only at the whim of the servering host, would be choosing to work, rest and/or play for nations and cities and not necessarily have any need or desire to be in them, and whenever  good enough to be effective in what be sought and needed, and as be intimated at in the brief,  are they able to exact their own most agreeable fee/retainer/danegeld which would be nothing at all like a lowly wage. 

 

The abiding and expanding, catastrophic zeroday vulnerability rich problem which the present universal/global/new executive world order systems administration has in command and control/power generation and currency distribution, is that it fails to fully recognise and accept the folly of their own ways and means and memes, which are now highlighting rather than concealing the leading players of failed Great Games plays for critical mass mob attention and more finely tuned, accurately targeted personalised attack.

 

No wonder cyber systems admin are looking for capable warriors which be also exceptional defenders …….. but defending the indefensible and inequitable will never ever attract the best and top tier candidates unless they be simply asked and tasked with changing everything for the better and to the betterment of all, which the best of the best at the top can do surprisingly easily? 

 

And shared as a question for all those who would posit that such cannot be done, but that only reveals that it and the IT and Media Command and Control required, cannot be done by them and theirs. For others which may be the few, is it no problem. 

In an advanced intelligent intelligence movement and in Live Operational Virtual Environments which are Astute and Active and Autonomously Able and Enabling, are future solutions to present problems no clones of the past. They be entirely different propositions and proposals and projects and programs ....... with SMARTR AIdDefinite Vision and NEUKlearer HyperRadioProActive IT ...... Almighty Vast Thrusting Power to Trust Deliver Real Change with Global Operating Devices.

Fri, 05/16/2014 - 19:36 | 4768054 max2205
max2205's picture

It's as old as history, people get paid to find out and know stuff

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