THE TIBETAN CLAN DAG DUGPA WAS OBSERVING THE BEE'S WINGS GEOMETRY. THE BEE'S WINGS ARE SPECIAL , MAKE A SPIRAL PUSHING THE BEES UP WHEN THEY FLY. THE TIBETAN MONKS APPLY THE GEOMETRY OF THE BEE'S WINGS FREQUENCY TO A BOMBO ( 233 HZ ) . WHEN THEY PLAY THE DRUMS TOGHETER THE STONE WAS LEVITATING.
Forwarded from Disclose.tv
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NEW - Minor G1-class geomagnetic storms are possible on June 1st when a CME is expected to sideswipe Earth's magnetic field.
This is one of the brightest and fastest CMEs in years. If it were heading directly toward Earth the forecast might be different, calling for major instead of minor geomagnetic storms. Close miss.
@disclosetv
This is one of the brightest and fastest CMEs in years. If it were heading directly toward Earth the forecast might be different, calling for major instead of minor geomagnetic storms. Close miss.
@disclosetv
Edward Snowden
@Snowden
As he hands the White House to Trump, Obama just unchained NSA from basic limits on passing raw intercepts to others
N.S.A. Gets More Latitude to Share Intercepted Communications (Published 2017)
New rules relax longstanding limits on what the National Security Agency may do with the information gathered by its most powerful surveillance operations.
nytimes.com
11:54 AM · Jan 12, 2017
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As the rule change made its way through the review process, Robert Litt, the top lawyer for the intelligence community, publicly explained the rationale: The rules “respond to the widely recognized lesson learned from the 9/11 attacks that intelligence should not be ‘stovepiped’ by individual agencies but should be shared responsibly within the intelligence community.”
But this massive database inevitably includes vast amount of American’s communications — swept up when they speak to people abroad, when they go abroad themselves, or even if their domestic communications are simply routed abroad. That’s why access was previously limited to data that had already been screened to remove unrelated information and information identifying U.S. persons. The new rules still ostensibly limit access to authorized foreign intelligence and counterintelligence purposes — not ordinary law enforcement purposes — and require screening before they are more widely shared. But privacy activists are skeptical
@Snowden
As he hands the White House to Trump, Obama just unchained NSA from basic limits on passing raw intercepts to others
N.S.A. Gets More Latitude to Share Intercepted Communications (Published 2017)
New rules relax longstanding limits on what the National Security Agency may do with the information gathered by its most powerful surveillance operations.
nytimes.com
11:54 AM · Jan 12, 2017
2.4K
161
Share this Tweet
As the rule change made its way through the review process, Robert Litt, the top lawyer for the intelligence community, publicly explained the rationale: The rules “respond to the widely recognized lesson learned from the 9/11 attacks that intelligence should not be ‘stovepiped’ by individual agencies but should be shared responsibly within the intelligence community.”
But this massive database inevitably includes vast amount of American’s communications — swept up when they speak to people abroad, when they go abroad themselves, or even if their domestic communications are simply routed abroad. That’s why access was previously limited to data that had already been screened to remove unrelated information and information identifying U.S. persons. The new rules still ostensibly limit access to authorized foreign intelligence and counterintelligence purposes — not ordinary law enforcement purposes — and require screening before they are more widely shared. But privacy activists are skeptical
Twitter
Edward Snowden (@Snowden) | Twitter
The latest Tweets from Edward Snowden (@Snowden). I used to work for the government. Now I work for the public. President at @FreedomofPress
Forwarded from Isabelle CœuM
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