Edward Snowden’s war against the usurpation of all privacy continues. In an interview by the Guardian on the subject of file storage, he warns the Dropbox, the cloud storage firm with over 200 million users, is “hostile to privacy,” and urged people to switch to what he calls more-secure storage of SpiderOak. Dropbox has added Condoleezza Rice to their board who can bring nothing but an inside track into the NSA (see Business Insider)My concern is that people do not appreciate who the law works. I saw first hand government agents take the witness stand and swear in their “expertise” whatever word they desire is really a code word for something else. You can be on the phone with your wife and say pick up 5 pizzas. They can say that was a code for picking up 5 bars of gold. The Judge, usually a former prosecutor, allows this type of nonsense and you will be convicted because the jury believes government is honest. How else do you get 99% conviction rates?
IStoring everything is very dangerous. They only need to type in a name and they have collected everything. This is really becoming 1984 in spades. This is the prelude to the collapse. It is part of the cycle. The Venetian Mouth of Truth was the mark of the end-times for the Venetian Empire. Anyone could drop a slip on you and did not even have to sign their name. You would be tortured to confess and all your assets confiscated. Such practices destroy the very purpose of civilization – combing together for cooperation. Turning everyone against everyone else defeats the entire purpose.
Armstrong
Australia is the first country to reverse this propaganda Global Warming Tax in the world. The data have been manipulated all to justify new taxes and a herd of new bureaucrats to collect and audit such taxes. This has been the greatest propaganda and the scientists who have been on board are doing so ONLY to get money – the academic welfare state. They create pretend training brainwash society you cannot get a job without a piece of paper from them, then 65% of the graduates cannot find jobs in the field they went to study in, and I prefer to hire people with an interest in the field rather than formally trained economists because I only have to fight with them that what they were taught was wrong anyway.
Armstrong