Me going to see John Wick 5 in the theater and seeing "Based on a true story" in the opening credits...
Keanu Reeves' home has once again been targeted
2020s crazy story: Spain expels two US spies for infiltrating secret service at Embassy in Madrid for bribing agents from Spain's CNI intelligence service in order to infiltrate it.
Most tragicomic aspect of the report is this:
Not sure whether to laugh or crawl back in my bunker and slam the blast door shut.
And the most eyebrow-raising aspect of the report is this:
Lee Kuan Yew, former Prime Minister of Singapore reveals in 1965 that a CIA agent was caught in 1960 for trying to buy information from a Singapore intelligence officer. A longtime and poisonous practice of bribery which often violently erodes the social contract and cohesion of every country it touches, as the brilliant statesman Lee Kuan Yew elucidates. Now is your chance, Spain...
Yew forced the US, to pay a very large sum of money to Singapore. It is a pattern of behaviour by the US intelligence services as well as all nation (NATO) intel agencies. Obviously, the trick of the tradecraft is to not get caught!
Can't help but wonder if British intel had a role in one or more of these scandals.
And right there on the British Order of the Garter "motto Honi soit qui mal y pense" (Middle French: "Shame on him who thinks evil of it") - Also note the Garter club has Muslim members too. All in it together because like Kissinger once said...
Found in April 1921, 14 feet below the surface at London Bridge. Gold ring, early 17th century. "A freinds guift" and "R. H." (British Museum)
Just had the thought "I'm tired of everything, I feel like I've seen it all, (I haven't) I want to see something entirely alien and new" - maybe I should venture back into the desert and see what's going on there.
Or maybe I'll try some fishing therapy in the great outdoors with friends. LOL.
Imagine the campfire stories that would be told!!
This looks like a place of honor for a powerful culture, commemorating highly esteemed deeds with valuable things buried within. I bet even if it were to become dangerous, the danger is not within my own time.
I'm gonna dig it up.
View of a giant geometric structure covering a demolished uranium mill and its radioactive tailings. New Mexico, USA:
Buried in 1992 by the Department of Energy, this mill near Grants, N.M. is one of about 20 uranium mill tailings sites in the U.S. that were remediated as part of the Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action project (UMTRA). Courtesy of the Department of Energy.
Ambrosia Lake Mill Site | Map Location
It's intriguing how much is hidden away in plain/plane sight that COULD be something else. Archaeologists will marvel at it in 500 years. There will be no warning signs other than nomadic bioluminescent cats in the area indicating great treasure is hidden there which will end up in the British museum.
We have to establish the Atomic Priesthood with "ray cats"!
Long Term Nuclear Waste Warning Messages
"It stores an unforgeable amount of money, and enables unforgeable transactions with other wallets. It is safer than cash money since only the legitimate owner who knows the password can operate it." Advances in Cryptology, Proceedings of CRYPTO '83, Santa Barbara, CA, Aug. 1983. 1983 was certainly an interesting year!
Cashless society been in the planning a long time...
Electronic Wallet (Israel again. Why am I not surprised)
Keanu Reeves' home has once again been targeted
2020s crazy story: Spain expels two US spies for infiltrating secret service at Embassy in Madrid for bribing agents from Spain's CNI intelligence service in order to infiltrate it.
Most tragicomic aspect of the report is this:
Quote:The case is a very serious matter, since recruiting secret agents of a host state to betray their own country is considered an openly hostile act. Such actions may be taken with enemy or adversary governments, but never with friends and allies. Sources from the Spanish intelligence service do not fully understand what happened. “What do Americans have to pay for if we give them everything they ask for?” they noted. These sources insist that Spain openly collaborates with the United States, and always exchanges information. According to these sources, the number of times in which Spain has refused to share information of interest to Washington is “between one and zero.”
Not sure whether to laugh or crawl back in my bunker and slam the blast door shut.
And the most eyebrow-raising aspect of the report is this:
Quote:These sources explain that, when the U.S. Ambassador Reynoso was summoned by Minister Robles, she said that she was not aware of the case. The U.S. ambassador allegedly claimed that the U.S. agents who had bribed the Spanish spies were working independently of her, in a program that was launched before current President Joe Biden arrived at the White House and that, for reasons unknown, had been maintained until now.
Lee Kuan Yew, former Prime Minister of Singapore reveals in 1965 that a CIA agent was caught in 1960 for trying to buy information from a Singapore intelligence officer. A longtime and poisonous practice of bribery which often violently erodes the social contract and cohesion of every country it touches, as the brilliant statesman Lee Kuan Yew elucidates. Now is your chance, Spain...
Yew forced the US, to pay a very large sum of money to Singapore. It is a pattern of behaviour by the US intelligence services as well as all nation (NATO) intel agencies. Obviously, the trick of the tradecraft is to not get caught!
Quote:Denmark helped US spy on Angela Merkel and European allies – report (31 May 2021)
Danish public broadcaster Danmarks Radio said the US National Security Agency (NSA), whose alleged tapping of Merkel’s phone was disclosed by Edward Snowden in 2013, also used the Danish Defence Intelligence Service (FE) to spy on officials in Sweden, Norway and France.
Snowden on Sunday accused Joe Biden, who was US vice-president at the time, of being “deeply involved … the first time around”. Snowden called on Twitter for “full public disclosure not only from Denmark, but their senior partner as well”.
Can't help but wonder if British intel had a role in one or more of these scandals.
And right there on the British Order of the Garter "motto Honi soit qui mal y pense" (Middle French: "Shame on him who thinks evil of it") - Also note the Garter club has Muslim members too. All in it together because like Kissinger once said...
Found in April 1921, 14 feet below the surface at London Bridge. Gold ring, early 17th century. "A freinds guift" and "R. H." (British Museum)
Just had the thought "I'm tired of everything, I feel like I've seen it all, (I haven't) I want to see something entirely alien and new" - maybe I should venture back into the desert and see what's going on there.
Or maybe I'll try some fishing therapy in the great outdoors with friends. LOL.
Imagine the campfire stories that would be told!!
This looks like a place of honor for a powerful culture, commemorating highly esteemed deeds with valuable things buried within. I bet even if it were to become dangerous, the danger is not within my own time.
I'm gonna dig it up.
View of a giant geometric structure covering a demolished uranium mill and its radioactive tailings. New Mexico, USA:
Buried in 1992 by the Department of Energy, this mill near Grants, N.M. is one of about 20 uranium mill tailings sites in the U.S. that were remediated as part of the Uranium Mill Tailings Remedial Action project (UMTRA). Courtesy of the Department of Energy.
Ambrosia Lake Mill Site | Map Location
It's intriguing how much is hidden away in plain/plane sight that COULD be something else. Archaeologists will marvel at it in 500 years. There will be no warning signs other than nomadic bioluminescent cats in the area indicating great treasure is hidden there which will end up in the British museum.
We have to establish the Atomic Priesthood with "ray cats"!
Long Term Nuclear Waste Warning Messages
"It stores an unforgeable amount of money, and enables unforgeable transactions with other wallets. It is safer than cash money since only the legitimate owner who knows the password can operate it." Advances in Cryptology, Proceedings of CRYPTO '83, Santa Barbara, CA, Aug. 1983. 1983 was certainly an interesting year!
Cashless society been in the planning a long time...
Electronic Wallet (Israel again. Why am I not surprised)
Quote:A story for bad times
Here is a story that seems most appropriate to the current era in which we (scientists, especially those not at Weizmann) face administrations (i.e., VERA, VATAT, and the government) that reason only via money and power...
In the late 1970s, when becoming chairman of CS at the Technion, Shimon noted that the computer used for teaching was more adequate for a historical display. He asked for a meeting with the Technion's president, in which he requested permission to buy a new computer. The president refused Shimon's request by saying that the department already has a computer, and remained unconvinced by Shimon's explanation that this "piece of junk" is worthless (beyond its junk-yard value). "For all I know", the president said, "you have a computer".
A week later, Shimon phoned the president and asked again for a new computer. The conversation went on as follows.
President: I already told you that you have a computer, so you don't need a new one.
Shimon: But I don't have a computer.
President: What do you mean?
Shimon: I sold it.
President: What did you do???
Shimon: I sold it as junk.
President: Who allowed you to do this???
Shimon: I don't need permission to sell old equipment (see Technion's Regulations, Article No. NNN).
President: So what do you want now?
Shimon: Your permission to buy a new computer.
President: You are NOT getting it!
Shimon: So I'm not opening the next academic year. We cannot teach Computer Science without a computer.
President: We'll see about this.
Shimon: Yes, we'll see about this. I'm not opening the next academic year without a computer.
Well, the next academic year was opened with a new computer...
Stories about Shimon Even (by Oded)
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell