BOHICA, an take it dry

Gunfighter14e2

Hunter/trapper of Remora's
Full Member
Minuteman
Jul 9, 2002
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17,596
Lick skillet Alabama
eham.net
Any one see a connection here?






 
Any one see a connection here?







Imagine sensor technology coupled with a high speed, reliable communications infrastructure, back-end image processing and access to the most comprehensive image database....

Nothing to see here....never happen
 
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Imagine sensor technology coupled with a high speed, reliable communications infrastructure, back-end image processing and access to the most comprehensive image database....

Nothing to see here....never happen

I'll have to dig the information back up, but the last time I was through CDG, they had "cattle pens" that utilized RFID, facial recognition, retina scans and voice recognition. When I say "And", I meant "And". You'd step into the pen and if something was "amiss" with your credentials, you were stuck there until a customs agent could give you some personalized "attention"...........
 
I'll remain an "Unscannable".
Won’t be possible bar codes are so yesterday. With nano tech they will eventually just inject you with a tracker. You won’t even know it. You’ll get a flu shot or vax and you will be online.

They know people won’t submit, so they won’t even tell you.

Sounds crazy. There was a time when wanting to fly was crazy.
 
Won’t be possible bar codes are so yesterday. With nano tech they will eventually just inject you with a tracker. You won’t even know it. You’ll get a flu shot or vax and you will be online.

They know people won’t submit, so they won’t even tell you.

Sounds crazy. There was a time when wanting to fly was crazy.

Doesn't sound crazy to me. At my age it will be easy to avoid the injections.
 
For a $102.00 paperback, it better shine my shoes for at least a year........

Yes I agree.

But, ask yourself why Amazon does not provide Kindle, or more economical versions of these books.

That's the same thing they did with Unintended Consequences.

Almost seems they are placing hurdles in front of consumers getting to read materials they don't want people to be reading.

Naah, that can't be it...

From Internet Archive:

VI THE PERESTROIKA DECEPTION

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Anatoliy Golitsyn was born in the Ukraine in 1926. While a cadet in military school, he
was awarded a Soviet medal Eor the defence of Moscow in the Great Patriotic War'
for digging anti-tank trenches near Moscow. At the age of fifteen, he joined the
Komsomol (League of Communist Youth) and, at nineteen, he became a member of
the Communist Party.

In the same year, he joined the KGB, in which he studied and served until
1961. He graduated from the Moscow School of Military Counter-espionage, the
counterintelligence faculty of the High Intelligence School, and the University of
Marxism-Leninism and completed a correspondence course with the High Diplo-
matic School. In 1952 and early 1953 he was involved with a friend in drawing up a
proposal to the Central Committee on the reorganisation of Soviet intelligence.

In connection with this proposal he attended a meeting of the secretariat
chaired by Stalin and a meeting of the Presidium chaired by Malenkov and attended
by Khrushchev, Brezhnev and Bulganin. In 1952-53 he worked briefly as head of a
section responsible for counter-espionage against the United States. In 1959 he grad-
uated with a law degree from a four-year course at the KGB Institute (now the KGB
Academy) in Moscow.

From 1959 to 1960, at a time when Soviet long-range strategy was being for-
mulated and the KGB was being reorganised to play its part in it, he served as a
senior analyst in the NATO section of the Information Department of the Soviet intel-
ligence service. He served in Vienna and Helsinki on counterintelligence assign-
ments from 1953 to 1955 and from 1960 to 1961, respectively.

He defected to the United States in December 1961. Subsequently, his contri-
bution to the national security of leading Western countries was recognised by the
award of the United States Government Medal for Distinguished Service.

He was made an Honorary Commander of the British Empire (CBE). A
promise of membership of the Legion d'Honneur made when President Pompidou
was in power was not fulfilled owing to the change of government.

Since 1962, the Author has spent much of his time on the study of Communist
and international affairs, reading both the Communist and the Western press. In
1980 he completed, and in 1984 he published, 'New Lies for Old', a study of the Soviet
long-range strategy of deception and disinformation.

For over thirty years, the Author has submitted Memoranda to the Central
Intelligence Agency, in which he has provided the Agency with timely and largely
accurate forecasts of Soviet Bloc developments and on the evolution of Soviet/Russ-
ian/Communist strategy. By applying the dialectical methodology which drives the
strategy, the Author has been able to score innumerable 'bulls-eyes'. This unparal-
leled track record reflects the Author's personal experience of four years in the KGB's
strategy 'think tank', together with his deep understanding of the dialectical nature
of the strategy and the Leninist mentality of its originators and implementers.

The Author is a citizen of the United States.

Maskirovka...



Greg
 
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Yes I agree.

But, ask yourself why Amazon does not provide Kindle, or more economical versions of these books.

That's the same thing they did with Unintended Consequences.

Almost seems they are placing hurdles in front of consumers getting to read materials they don't want people to be reading.

Naah, that can't be it...

From Internet Archive:



Maskirovka...



Greg


You do know that it isn't Amazon that creates a Kindle version, it is the publisher.

If you have a pdf of any book, you can convert it to Kindle or iBook format for free using Amazon
 
Gives a whole new meaning to give blood now.
A transfusion here and there would fuck the entire system up.

Perhaps... There might be a big market for back-room blood transfusions to change identities. My guess with officially sanctioned blood drives would be that the blood would first be "neutralized" by treating the blood with a signal that wipes the nano tech memory. Then when someone needs blood, they just configure the nano tech again with the identity of the new host. That's probably a pretty stupid thing to do, though, when the nano tech could just have a dynamic host recognition process.

Who knows, man... Who knows...