Sunday, April 24, 2011

Apple and GoogleNSACIA's Globalist Coup backers ease into their strong-arm surveillance in stages

We were told by no less than NATO through FOX, CNN and others that the USA was fighting al Qaida in Afghanistan and Iraq as it aids al Qaida in Libya, marking de facto Civil War. If they're firing on one group as they defend another and the two meet, won't they end up firing on each other ?

So first they eased into the splice rooms saying it was for your protection against what they created and armed. Yet since 1914 every Western Union was handed to the intel office at the end of each shift.

In The One Percent Doctrine, by Ron Suskind, this was once again detailed to be the case. Of course by now everyone knows they get your email, credit card activity, plane activity, etc., as reported by thousands of report pages and news articles. AT & T splice rooms are now notorious, and this link represents just one of hundreds and hundreds of articles and broadcast features.

No one of any long term fortitude is protesting. They'll move on with their plans.

They eased into revolution by internet by first giving absurd cover stories for them splicing cables, then making it so obvious that each internet cable outage precedes another "revolution" staged by the groups they created.

In 2008, the USA began its preparation for the Middle East and Asia revolts by pretending not to know why cables had been "severed" on the floor of the Med. Then they pretended a series of boats simultaneously cut them day after day.

This is of course a joke when the USS Jimmy Carter was itself spliced with a room designed to allow fiber optic and other cables to be brought up into it for tapping / splicing purposes.


The submarine Jimmy Carter, which joined the Navy's fleet on Saturday, has a special capability, intelligence experts say: it is able to tap undersea cables and eavesdrop on the communications passing through them.

The Navy does not acknowledge that the submarine has this capability. "That's going to be classified in nature," said Kevin Sykes, a Navy spokesman. "You're not going to get anybody to talk to you about that."

But intelligence community watchdogs have little doubt. The previous spy submarine, the Parche, was retired last fall. That would only happen if a new one was on the way, they say.

The $3.2 billion Carter was extensively modified from its basic design, given a hull extension that allows it to house technicians and gear to perform the cable-tapping and other secret missions, experts say. The Carter's hull, at 453 feet, is 100 feet longer than the other two submarines in the Seawolf class.


The majority of Internet and international telephone traffic travels goes under the sea. When two submarine cables in the Mediterranean Sea were cut (most likely by ship anchors) on Wednesday, Internet connectivity in the Middle East and in parts of Asia cratered.

According to reports, as much as 70 percent of Egypt’s Internet connectivity was down...

What an odd coincidence for the last week in January 2008 to match the last week in January 2010.

Yes, I know, it was the DNS servers.

No one of any long term fortitude is protesting. They'll move on with their plans.

They concocted an absurd cover story, Georgian woman cuts off web access to whole of Armenia.

Entire country loses internet for five hours after woman, 75, slices through cable while scavenging for copper...

In simple terms, the cables are made from:


No one of any long term fortitude is protesting. They'll move on with their plans.


Check your internet connection, Mr. President.

"First there were political threats, disavowal of [presidential] elections, [European] entry bans and economic sanctions. Then there was an instigation of turmoil on our foreign currency market and dances on the bones after the blast at the Oktyabrskaya metro station," Lukashenko said addressing the parliament and his people...

"These are all links of one chain aimed to plant mistrust for the authorities and to strangle the country with a slipknot. They want to force us to be just like everybody else, like they are eventually. We are like a bone in their throat," he said.

"If they try to bend us, to bring us down to our knees, we will at least resist. We will fight for our plot of land," the president added.

At each stage they release information on their nefarious profit and power grabbing acts to be sure you won't riot as they watch you and curtail your rights in increments.

So that's how it is with Apple and Google which are of course the biggest names in internet devices right now. Check out the map of every place in New York, Connecticut and Cape Cod that Henry Blodget, author of what follows, has been. It looks like he leaves Falmouth for a house on the Vineyard to me...

Bug?

Mistake?

Apple built a system into your iPhone that secretly tracks and records everywhere you go. This system records your exact location and the exact time you were there--down to the second.

Anyone who gets ahold of your phone or computer can tell exactly where you were when: Police, people suing you, your husband/wife, your employer, private investigators, the government--anyone. And Apple didn't tell you that!

Please explain, with a straight face, how that could possibly be a "bug" or "mistake."

And let's say hypothetically that it actually was a mistake. That Apple didn't mean to build that system that tracks and records everywhere you go and then keep it a secret. Let's say, hypothetically, that it was some rogue Apple engineer who built that system into iOS without telling his or her superiors and that Apple has only recently discovered it.

Well, then, Apple should already have come forward, apologized profusely, explained that the engineer has now been summarily dismissed, and offered a software update that eliminates the tracking system forever.

Has Apple done that?

Heck no!

Apple hasn't even acknowledged the problem, let alone apologize for it or do something about it.

Why would they ? They've already released the disinformation stream through another one of those bloggers that magically has corporate contacts while the rest of us use search engines and don't shill for the Globalist coup d'etat:

Why is Apple doing that? It wouldn't comment to us when we emailed, but a "little-birdy" informed Apple blogger John Gruber the location log is "either due to a bug or, more likely, an oversight."

Yes. It's a bug that records where you are, saves it and then transmits it to two intelligence community connected, Bilderberg attending companies in a complete reversal of statements that it "enhances the mobile experience".

No one of any long term fortitude is protesting. They'll move on with their plans.

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