Take a moment to listen to shlomo talk about the 1st amendment.
https://x.com/9mm_Scorpion/status/2006793718440038755
https://x.com/9mm_Scorpion/status/2006793718440038755
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Forwarded from Freedom is Not Negotiable (Jaime)
Telegram founder Pavel Durov has accused Emmanuel Macron of seeking to turn the European Union into a “digital Gulag.”
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The 2017 Las #Vegas massacre was by far the deadliest mass shooting in American history. The official explanation for it makes no sense. Ian Carroll explains what we know for sure.
NoGoolag
The 2017 Las #Vegas massacre was by far the deadliest mass shooting in American history. The official explanation for it makes no sense. Ian Carroll explains what we know for sure.
(0:00) What Was the Las Vegas Shooting?
(10:43) The Active Shooter at McCarran Airport
(16:40) The Suspicious Deaths of Witnesses
(18:49) The Independent Journalists Dedicated to This Story
(25:30) What Was Stephen Paddock's Motive?
(27:59) Were There Multiple Shooters?
(34:37) What Happened to Jose Campos?
(41:25) Was Stephen Paddock Dead Before the Shooting Started?
(46:09) Why Is This Story Being Censored?
(50:52) Who Tampered With the Locks?
(56:47) Who Actually Was Stephen Paddock?
(1:05:18) How Did America Change After the Shooting?
(1:11:40) Was Saudi Arabia Involved?
(1:32:43) The Assassination Attempt on Mohammed bin Salman
(1:38:16) Why Were There Helicopters in the Area?
(1:47:18) The Shootings in the Helicopter Hangars
(1:51:02) Donald Trump's Visit to Saudi Arabia
(1:53:36) Was This a Diversion?
(1:58:53) Has the Hotel Ever Released Surveillance Footage?
(2:00:30) Has Anyone Ever Questioned the Saudi Government?
(2:03:45) Where Was the SWAT Team?
(2:06:26) Have Any Victims Been Questioned?
(2:11:01) The Assassination of Charlie Kirk
(2:21:39) Mass Formation Psychosis
(2:25:12) Where Did Ian Carroll Come From?
(2:35:22) Ian's Next Research Project
https://x.com/TuckerCarlson/status/2007149893891277240
(10:43) The Active Shooter at McCarran Airport
(16:40) The Suspicious Deaths of Witnesses
(18:49) The Independent Journalists Dedicated to This Story
(25:30) What Was Stephen Paddock's Motive?
(27:59) Were There Multiple Shooters?
(34:37) What Happened to Jose Campos?
(41:25) Was Stephen Paddock Dead Before the Shooting Started?
(46:09) Why Is This Story Being Censored?
(50:52) Who Tampered With the Locks?
(56:47) Who Actually Was Stephen Paddock?
(1:05:18) How Did America Change After the Shooting?
(1:11:40) Was Saudi Arabia Involved?
(1:32:43) The Assassination Attempt on Mohammed bin Salman
(1:38:16) Why Were There Helicopters in the Area?
(1:47:18) The Shootings in the Helicopter Hangars
(1:51:02) Donald Trump's Visit to Saudi Arabia
(1:53:36) Was This a Diversion?
(1:58:53) Has the Hotel Ever Released Surveillance Footage?
(2:00:30) Has Anyone Ever Questioned the Saudi Government?
(2:03:45) Where Was the SWAT Team?
(2:06:26) Have Any Victims Been Questioned?
(2:11:01) The Assassination of Charlie Kirk
(2:21:39) Mass Formation Psychosis
(2:25:12) Where Did Ian Carroll Come From?
(2:35:22) Ian's Next Research Project
https://x.com/TuckerCarlson/status/2007149893891277240
X (formerly Twitter)
Tucker Carlson (@TuckerCarlson) on X
The 2017 Las Vegas massacre was by far the deadliest mass shooting in American history. The official explanation for it makes no sense. Ian Carroll explains what we know for sure.
(0:00) What Was the Las Vegas Shooting?
(10:43) The Active Shooter at McCarran…
(0:00) What Was the Las Vegas Shooting?
(10:43) The Active Shooter at McCarran…
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🇺🇸⚡️ — NEW: NASA is aiming for February 6 as the opening of the launch window for the Artemis II mission, which will send astronauts on a crewed flight around the Moon for the first time since Apollo 17 in 1972.
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🇺🇸 U.S. Air Force Lieutenant General Steven L. Kwast stated that the U.S. military and intelligence community possess the ability to transport any individual from anywhere on Earth to any other location in under one hour.
https://x.com/di313_/status/2006808634366505421
https://x.com/di313_/status/2006808634366505421
Israel becomes the first country to recognize Somaliland as independent.
Somali President Mohamud says Somaliland agreed to resettle Palestinians, host an Israeli military base on the Gulf of Aden, and join the Abraham Accords.— Article
Somali President Mohamud says Somaliland agreed to resettle Palestinians, host an Israeli military base on the Gulf of Aden, and join the Abraham Accords.— Article
U.S. airstrikes are underway in Caracas, Venezuela, with helicopters visible in some footage. Military installations and oil refineries are said to be among the targets.
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Ex-CIA Director Mike Pompeo:
"Happy New Year to every Iranian in the streets."
"Also to every Mossad agent walking beside them." 🔗
"Happy New Year to every Iranian in the streets."
"Also to every Mossad agent walking beside them." 🔗
#usa #cops #Google #why
FYSA - Legal/Regulatory
4th Amendment / Privacy
On December 16th, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled in a criminal assault case that individuals do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in certain Google search records when those searches are voluntarily entered into Google and disclosed to a third party. In such cases, investigators may use a reverse keyword search warrant to identify a suspect based on searches of a victim’s name and address. The court’s majority relied on third-party doctrine principles, concluding that by using Google under its terms, users assume the risk that search data may be accessed by law enforcement, a decision that has raised national concerns among privacy advocates because reverse keyword warrants start with search terms rather than suspects and can collect data from multiple unrelated users. Debrief: The case stemmed from a successful investigation where police found that the offender, John Kurtz, used Google to search for the home address of a woman that he later kidnapped and raped. Pennsylvania State Police obtained a search
warrant for a substantial quantity of Google’s records and examined them to link the suspect to the crime. The court determined that citizens using Google to conduct searches do not have an "expectation of privacy in the records generated by those searches" and that uses of such warrants are constitutional.
》Sources: www.pacourts.us/assets/opinions/Supreme/out/J-36A-2024oajc%20-%20106611829340009817.pdf
www.abajournal.com/news/article/pa-supreme-court-rules-that-police-can-access-google-searches-without-a-warrant
https://natlawreview.com/article/can-law-enforcement-access-google-search-data-without-warrant-pennsylvania-says-yes
FYSA - Legal/Regulatory
4th Amendment / Privacy
On December 16th, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled in a criminal assault case that individuals do not have a reasonable expectation of privacy in certain Google search records when those searches are voluntarily entered into Google and disclosed to a third party. In such cases, investigators may use a reverse keyword search warrant to identify a suspect based on searches of a victim’s name and address. The court’s majority relied on third-party doctrine principles, concluding that by using Google under its terms, users assume the risk that search data may be accessed by law enforcement, a decision that has raised national concerns among privacy advocates because reverse keyword warrants start with search terms rather than suspects and can collect data from multiple unrelated users. Debrief: The case stemmed from a successful investigation where police found that the offender, John Kurtz, used Google to search for the home address of a woman that he later kidnapped and raped. Pennsylvania State Police obtained a search
warrant for a substantial quantity of Google’s records and examined them to link the suspect to the crime. The court determined that citizens using Google to conduct searches do not have an "expectation of privacy in the records generated by those searches" and that uses of such warrants are constitutional.
》Sources: www.pacourts.us/assets/opinions/Supreme/out/J-36A-2024oajc%20-%20106611829340009817.pdf
www.abajournal.com/news/article/pa-supreme-court-rules-that-police-can-access-google-searches-without-a-warrant
https://natlawreview.com/article/can-law-enforcement-access-google-search-data-without-warrant-pennsylvania-says-yes
ABA Journal
Police can access Google searches without warrant, state supreme court rules
The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruled earlier this week that police investigating a rape did not need a warrant to obtain a person's Google searches, the Record reports.
🚨Trump drops the first photo he claims shows Maduro aboard the USS Iwo Jima
👍 @geopolitics_prime | Follow us on X
👍 @geopolitics_prime | Follow us on X