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    GORGworld conspiracy // 911 // new world order ... part 3 :: Love your local Illuminati :)
    KERRAY
    KERRAY --- ---
    The enforcer

    Michael Koubi worked for Shin Bet, Israel's security service, for 21 years and was its chief interrogator from 1987 to 1993. He interrogated hundreds of Palestinian prisoners, including renowned militants such as Sheikh Yassin, the former leader of the Palestinian group Hamas, who was killed in an Israeli attack this year. He claims that intelligence gained in interrogation has been crucial to protecting Israel from terrorism. He tells Michael Bond that, given enough time, he could make almost anyone talk


    http://www.newscientist.com/opinion/opinterview.jsp;jsessionid=EEFCIFMECEPN?id=ns24741
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    'We could monitor you anywhere on Earth'

    http://newpaper.asia1.com.sg/top/story/0,4136,77782,00.html
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    Special Report

    On executions, beheadings, and other propaganda operations

    http://www.onlinejournal.com/Special_Reports/112004Chin/112004chin.html
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    "Smart Dust" may soon be watching you

    King 5 | Nov 20 2004

    It's a project first dreamed up by the military to get information from the battlefield.

    They call it "Smart Dust" and it may soon make it possible to keep track of anything, anywhere, including you.


    Video - click here

    They are the world's smallest wireless sensors. And at about the size of a wristwatch, the contain a battery powered microphone, an accelerometer, as well as temperature and humidity sensors, according to Sam Godwin, Vice President of Crossbow.

    Scatter them 250 feet apart and they will form their own wireless network similar to a spider's web.

    Smart Dust was first designed for the military, enabling troops to crop dust enemy lines with of millions of networked wireless sensors too small to see and too numerous to destroy.


    They can be used to track enemy troops or where a gunshot is coming from.

    Through a contract with the Pentagon, researchers invented Smart Dust at the University of California in the late 1990s.

    "I coined the name Smart Dust to describe where all this was headed," said Kris Pister, chief technology officer for Dust Networks.

    Pister said an initial prototype as small as a grain of rice was able to sense, think, talk and listen.

    Smart Dust has enormous potential to improve lives.
    It can offer a high-tech inexpensive way to monitor a pipeline in Auburn, securing the perimeters at the Purdy jail, monitoring the nuclear power plant in Hanford or sensing vibration on Tacoma Narrows bridge, even monitor children at day care centers.

    But privacy experts warn Smart Dust has a potential dark side. Imagine living in a city coated with wireless sensors.

    In the futuristic movie "Minority Report," even billboards seemed to know the identity of people passing by.

    Something like Smart Dust is already on the way even closer to home.

    Radio frequency ID chips, RFID, may soon be in driver's licenses and passports, even consumer items like clothes.

    "And these chips can be read without your knowledge. And by reading them people can get a unique number which means you can be tracked using them," said Kevin Bankston, with the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

    And guess what? RFID can be read by Smart Dust.


    "That is a concern," says Godwin.

    Not just the government, but businesses could trade information about where you are, what you are wearing, what you eat and where you shop.

    "This is like when you are walking around, someone is following you everywhere you go and writing it down and storing it and probably selling it to someone," Bankston says.

    But some argue most of it is already possible because of credit card records, cell phone logs, security cards.

    "If you think it is going to enable people to invade privacy in ways they haven't been able to do before, that is not true," says Pister.

    A Smart Dust coated world may still be a few years away.

    But it's possible for an invention that could save us from pipeline accidents and keep our children safe, to also put Big Brother on every building, door and window ledge.


    http://www.infowars.net/Pages/Nov_04/201104_tagging.html
    SWEDE
    SWEDE --- ---
    Co je nechutné ? Stwora, Arafat nebo sionisté ?
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    Arafat zemřel na AIDS? Tak tohle je opravdu nechutné!

    Vladimír Stwora
    (více o autorovi=>>)
    18.11.2004

    Sionistická propaganda nedá Arafatovi pokoj ani po smrti. Je skutečně neuvěřitelné, kam až je ochotna zajít. Bezprostředně po Arafatově smrti přinesla světová média na předních stránkách palcovými titulky "Arafat je mrtev - konečně se objevují naděje na mírové dohody". Jako kdyby byl Arafat překážkou těch mírových dohod.


    Co to je ty "mírové dohody", kterým Arafat tak bránil, to už média nevysvětlila. V sionistické interpretaci to totiž znamená genocidu Palestinců. Jejich totální a úplné vyhubení. Arafatovo jediné provinění, lze-li to vůbec tak nazvat, bylo to, že odmítl dát Židům další území z těch ubohých 22 procent, která zbyla z původního státu Palestina, než mu byl zločinně ukraden. Arafat byl pragmatik a dobře věděl, že Palestina proti Izraeli vojensky nemá šanci. Lapidárně řečeno, říkal zhruba toto: "Je mi jasné, že s vámi (Izraelci) nic neuděláme. Musíme s vámi žít. Nechte si tedy těch 78 procent našeho území, ale ani o chloupek více. Nedáme vám nic z těch zbývajících dvaadvaceti procent. A nechte nás, ať si tam vládneme sami." Jenomže ani to sionistům nestačilo. Chtěli všechno - jak je ostatně v jejich povaze.

    Arafat byl v tomhle neústupný. Budiž mu za to sláva. A sionisté to věděli. Proto přikročili k jeho postupné likvidaci - nejprve z něj udělali diplomatickou mrtvolu a pak i skutečnou. Výrobu diplomatické mrtvoly prováděli důsledně desítky let. Kolik špíny na něho nakydali, nelze ani spočítat. Arafatova diskreditace probíhala na všech frontách. Udělali z něho teroristu, obvinili ho z korupce, ze zašantročení desítek miliard dolarů, které dostala Palestina formou mezinárodní pomoci. Izolovali ho od světa. Poslední tři roky ho věznili v jeho polozbořeném domě. Zničili vše kolem. Nějakou dobu dokonce přerušili i vodu a elektřinu. Nedovolili mu vycházet ven. Když viděli, že ani to nepomáhá, přikročili k jeho fyzické likvidaci.

    Nemám žádné důkazy pro své tvrzení, ale domnívám se, že ho otrávili. Naznačuje to rychlý průběh jeho smrti a to, že najednou dovolili, aby se léčil ve Francii (ačkoliv předtím ho nepustili ani pro housky), a že mu slíbili povolení návratu. Dobře věděli, že žádný návrat se konat nebude. (Jen uvažte, jaká absurdnost - sousedící stát blahosklonně dovolí prezidentovi vedlejšího státu odejít na léčení do jiné země a slíbí mu, že se bude moci vrátit. Je to asi stejně zvrácené, jako kdyby Klaus onemocněl a potřeboval léčbu v Německu a polská vláda by slíbila, že nebude bránit jeho návratu.) Mezi dalšími nepřímými důkazy je i to, že nebyla vydána žádná oficiální zpráva o příčinách jeho úmrtí, nebyla provedena pitva a Arafat byl hned druhý den po smrti pohřben. Víceméně s vyloučením veřejnosti, v cizí zemi, a rychle. Proč takový spěch? Pro otrávení hovoří i skutečnost, že Sharon jasně a otevřeně řekl, že Izrael bude usilovat o Arafatovu smrt. Čekal se útok raketou, dočkali jsme se jedu. I to je možné. Raketou by Židé popudili světovou veřejnost. Jed je méně krvavý a výsledek je stejný.

    Arafat jistě měl svoje chyby, a bylo jich hodně. Ale nedal se koupit a stál za svým národem. A to mu sionisté neodpustili.

    Sionisté dobře vědí, jak zesměšnit a zničit pověst politika v arabském světě. Tam (v arabském světě) ještě nepřevládlo dekadentní myšlení Západu, že homosexualita je nejen fajn, ale že je akceptovatelná a dokonce moderní. Tam (v arabském světě) stačí označit politika za homosexuála, aby byl zesměšněn navždy. A s tím teď sionisté vyrukovali proti mrtvému Arafatovi, který se už nemůže bránit. To je jejich poslední trumf. V novinách, které patolízalsky vyplňují každé přání svých majitelů, se dnes objevila další "spekulace". Je důležité podtrhnout fakt, že jde "jen o spekulaci", nic konkrétního. Jinak by to neznělo věrohodně. Proto také v iDnes napsali Arafat zemřel na AIDS, spekulují Izraelci. Slovo spekulace je hned v titulku.

    Z článku se dozvídáme, že podle této poslední "spekulace" zemřel možná Arafat na AIDS, protože byl homosexuál..

    Představa pětasedmdesátiletého dědka, který nemá nic lepšího na práci, než si do svého téměř zbořeného sídla zvát mladíky, aby se od nich nechal uspokojovat je tak nechutná, nevkusná a absurdní, že ji mohli vypustit jedině sionisté.

    Pomluva je strašná zbraň. Ale pomluva mrtvého je ještě strašnější a nechutnější. To dokážou udělat skutečně jen lidé bez morálky a etiky.

    Je z toho vidět ještě další věc. Totiž, jak velmi se sionisté Arafata báli. A bojí se ho i po smrti, neštítí-li se přijít s takovou "spekulací".

    Je pro Palestinu tragédií, že tento člověk už nad ní nedrží ochrannou ruku. Teď bude mnohem snazší dosáhnout nových "mírových dohod", které budou pro Palestince skutečně nevýhodné. Nové vedení je rozhádáno, chybí Arafatova odvaha a neústupnost i jeho popularita.

    Na druhé straně bliká v temném tunelu malinká lampička naděje. Existuje totiž zákon přírody, který říká, že národ určený k vyhubení se semkne zevnitř a má šanci přežít spíše než ten, který se zvolna rozkládá, choulostiví a měkne vlivem toho, že nemusí bojovat o své přežití - jako to ostatně vidíme na národech v tzv. západních demokraciích. Myslím, že tento aspekt malinko sionisté přehlédli. Čím více se budou snažit Palestince vaporizovat, tím větší je šance, že Palestina jednou bude znovu soběstačným a nezávislým státem.

    A ještě něco. Než mě tady zase nějaký chytrolín napadne za můj "antisemitismus", upozorňuji, že Palestinci patří k semitům stejně jako Židé. Jsou to příbuzné národy. Jsem-li antisemita, logicky vyplývá, že bych měl být i proti Palestincům. A to, jak vidíte z právě napsaného, příliš zřejmé není.

    http://www.zvedavec.org/clanky_1018.htm
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    'Arrest without evidence' planned by Government

    Filed: 17/11/2004)


    The Government is planning a change in the law to allow police to arrest suspects without evidence, it was claimed today.

    Britain will get its own FBI

    The Law Society said it believed the new powers would be included in the Bill which will create the new British FBI.

    It warned that the cumulative effect of the Government's clampdown on crime and terrorism would be a step towards a police state.

    Janet Paraskeva, the Law Society's chief executive, said: "The Government is in serious danger of overstating the threat to public order and national security and bringing in draconian new laws, which will take away centuries of hard won rights.

    "If the Bill to establish the Serious Organised Crime Agency (Soca) includes the power to arrest someone without evidence, then solicitors could not support it.

    "That would be a serious step in the direction of a police state.

    "Anyone could be lifted from the streets or from their homes just on the basis of suspicion."

    She added: "The threat to end jury trials for terrorism cases is another chipping away of the centuries old rights for people to be tried before a jury of their peers, which goes back to Magna Carta."

    Soca will have around 5,000 investigators to crack down on serious crime and fraud, merging the National Crime Squad, the National Criminal Intelligence Service and the investigating arms of customs and the immigration service.

    A Law Society spokesman said they had been told on good authority that the new powers of arrest were being considered by ministers.

    http://news.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2004/11/17/uarrest.xml
    GORG
    GORG --- ---
    nee arnie nas vsechny zachrani
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    no to je jine kafe...

    btw i ty nejbeckovejsi thrillery konci nakonec happy endem ;)
    MARSHUS
    MARSHUS --- ---
    JAXXE: už vím kdo.. George Lucas v THX_1138 .. ale to byl kvalitní film...
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    lol ;)))))
    MARSHUS
    MARSHUS --- ---
    no kdo by to byl řek, že se realita změní v béčkovej akční thriller....
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    1993 'Demolition Man' Movie: Schwarzenegger As President

    Prison Planet | November 17 2004

    Movies and television often pre-empt reality. Whether you believe this is coincidental or planned, the track record is there.

    In this audio clip, Sylvestor Stylone's character, a time-traveling cop from the past, is told to his disbelief that Arnold Schwarzenegger had become president after the Constitution was amended.

    http://www.prisonplanet.com/articles/november2004/171104demolitionman.htm

    ------------------------------------------------------

    RELATED:
    Elite Push For Schwarzenegger Presidency Gains Momentum


    RELATED:
    Schwarzenegger Behind Group Seeking to Repeal Constitutional Rule Baring Foreigners
    from Presidency


    FLASHBACK:
    The Lone Gunmen: Pilot episode of X-Files spin off an insider 911 warning
    or sick conditioning?

    FLASHBACK:
    1996 action film provides yet more anecdotal evidence of government complicity
    in 9/11


    -------------------------------------------------------------

    'Amend for Arnold' campaign launched
    Web site, TV spot promote change in Constitution

    John Wildermuth, Chronicle Political Writer

    Thursday, November 18, 2004


    Those who see the White House in Arnold Schwarzenegger's future have taken to the airwaves and the Internet to generate support for a constitutional amendment to make it possible.

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2004/11/18/SCHWARZENEGGER.TMP

    ------------------------------------------------------

    arnoldova stranka o zmene ustavy Amend US:

    http://www.amendus.org/

    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    To the conspiracy theory born

    By Arnaud de Borchgrave
    Published October 18, 2004

    ...

    In the West Bank, Ma'ariv reported, Israeli settlers are not worried about the Arab demographic threat as they nurture the vision of a "mega-occupation," or expanding the Kingdom of Israel to the borders promised in the covenant with Arbaham.
    The Committee of Rabbis in Judea, Samaria, and Gaza, writes, "Everyone who has faith in his heart ... will not countenance betrayal of the divine promise of the Jewish people."
    Professor Hillel Weiss, said Ma'ariv, spelled out what this meant: "The purpose of the armed struggle is to establish a Jewish state in all the territory that will be captured, from the River Euphrates [in Iraq] to the Egyptian River [Nile]."
    For good measure, Rabbi Haim Steinitz, writing on behalf of the rabbis of the Beit El settlement, explained, "In general, the Euphrates and the Nile are the main points of reference, as well as the Mediterranean and the Red Sea." That takes care of the western border. There is some dispute about the eastern border. Most West Bank rabbis say the Kingdom of Israel "should rest on the upper Syrian stretch of the Euphrates. Others, wrote Ma'ariv, "take a broader view with a border that runs down to the mouth of the Persian Gulf."
    One rabbi calls for the military conquest of all Arab countries. Even this was not enough for Rabbi Zelman Melamed, who wrote: "It is not impossible that the Jewish people will have the ability to threaten and put pressure on the entire world to accept our way. But even if we acquire the power to seize control of the world, that is not the way to realize the vision of complete redemption."
    Rabbi Yitzhak Ginsburg says he knows in the near future the Land of Israel is about to expand. "It is our duty to force all mankind to accept the seven Noahide laws, and if not -- they will be killed."

    ...

    http://www.washingtontimes.com/functions/print.php?StoryID=20041017-102451-5514r
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    In Texas, 28,000 Students Test an Electronic Eye

    November 17, 2004

    By MATT RICHTEL

    PRING, Tex. - In front of her gated apartment complex, Courtney Payne, a 9-year-old fourth grader with dark hair pulled tightly into a ponytail, exits a yellow school bus. Moments later, her movement is observed by Alan Bragg, the local police chief, standing in a windowless control room more than a mile away.

    Chief Bragg is not using video surveillance. Rather, he watches an icon on a computer screen. The icon marks the spot on a map where Courtney got off the bus, and, on a larger level, it represents the latest in the convergence of technology and student security.

    Hoping to prevent the loss of a child through kidnapping or more innocent circumstances, a few schools have begun monitoring student arrivals and departures using technology similar to that used to track livestock and pallets of retail shipments.


    Here in a growing middle- and working-class suburb just north of Houston, the effort is undergoing its most ambitious test. The Spring Independent School District is equipping 28,000 students with ID badges containing computer chips that are read when the students get on and off school buses. The information is fed automatically by wireless phone to the police and school administrators.

    In a variation on the concept, a Phoenix school district in November is starting a project using fingerprint technology to track when and where students get on and off buses. Last year, a charter school in Buffalo began automating attendance counts with computerized ID badges - one of the earliest examples of what educators said could become a widespread trend.

    At the Spring district, where no student has ever been kidnapped, the system is expected to be used for more pedestrian purposes, Chief Bragg said: to reassure frantic parents, for example, calling because their child, rather than coming home as expected, went to a friend's house, an extracurricular activity or a Girl Scout meeting.

    When the district unanimously approved the $180,000 system, neither teachers nor parents objected, said the president of the board. Rather, parents appear to be applauding. "I'm sure we're being overprotective, but you hear about all this violence," said Elisa Temple-Harvey, 34, the parent of a fourth grader. "I'm not saying this will curtail it, or stop it, but at least I know she made it to campus."

    The project also is in keeping with the high-tech leanings of the district, which built its own high-speed data network and is outfitting the schools with wireless Internet access. A handful of companies have adapted the technology for use in schools.

    But there are critics, including some older students and privacy groups like the American Civil Liberties Union, who argue that the system is security paranoia.

    The decades-old technology, called radio frequency identification, or RFID, is growing less expensive and developing vast new capabilities. It is based on a computer chip that has a unique number programmed into it and contains a tiny antenna that sends information to a reader.

    The same technology is being used by companies like Wal-Mart to track pallets of retail items. Pet owners can have chips embedded in cats and dogs to identify them if they are lost.

    In October, the Food and Drug Administration approved use of an RFID chip that could be implanted under a patient's skin and would carry a number that linked to the patient's medical records.

    At the Spring district, the first recipients of the computerized ID badges have been the 626 students of Bammel Elementary school. That includes Felipe Mathews, a 5-year-old kindergartner, and the other 30 students who rode bus No. 38 to school on a recent morning.

    Felipe, wearing a gray, hooded sweatshirt with a Spiderman logo and blue high-top tennis shoes also with a Spiderman logo, wore his yellow ID badge on a string around his neck. When he climbed on to the bus, he pressed the badge against a flat gray "reader"just inside the bus door. The reader ID beeped.

    Shortly after, he was followed onto the bus by Christopher Nunez, a 9-year-old fourth grader. Christopher said it was important that students wore badges so they did not get lost. Asked what might cause someone to get lost, he said, "If they're in second grade they might not know which street is their home."

    But on the morning Felipe and Christopher shared a seat on bus No. 38, the district experienced one of the early technology hiccups. When the bus arrived at school, the system had not worked. On the Web site that includes the log of student movements, there was no record that any of the students on the bus had arrived.

    It was just one of many headaches; the system had also made double entries for some students, and got arrival times and addresses wrong for others. "It's early glitches," said Brian Weisinger, the head of transportation for the Spring district, adding that he expected to work out the problems.

    But for the Enterprise Charter School in Buffalo, where administrators gave ID cards with the RFID technology to around 460 students last year, the computer problems lasted for many months.

    The system is set up so that when students walk in the door each morning, they pass by one of two kiosks - which together cost $40,000 - designed to pick up their individual radio frequency numbers as a way of taking attendance. Initially, though, the kiosks failed to register some students, or registered ones who were not there.

    Mark Walter, head of technology for the Buffalo school, said the system was working well now. But Mr. Walter cautions that the more ambitious technological efforts in Spring, particularly given the reliance on cellphones to call in the data, are "going to run in to some problems."

    In the long run, however, the biggest problem may be human error. Parents, teachers and administrators said their primary worry is getting students to remember their cards, given they often forget such basics as backpacks, lunch money and gym shoes. And then there might be mischief: students could trade their cards.

    Still, administrators in Buffalo said they had been contacted by districts around the country, and from numerous other countries, interested in using something similar.

    And the administrators in Buffalo and here in Spring said the technology, when perfected, would eventually be a big help. Parents at the Spring district seem to feel the same way. They speak of momentary horrors of realizing their child did not arrive home when expected.

    Some older students are not so enthusiastic.

    "It's too Big Brother for me," said Kenneth Haines, a 15-year-old ninth grader who is on the football and debate teams. "Something about the school wanting to know the exact place and time makes me feel kind of like an animal."


    Middle and high school students already wear ID badges, but they have not yet been equipped with the RFID technology. Even so, some bus drivers are apparently taking advantage of the technology's mythical powers by telling students that they are being tracked on the bus in order to get them to behave better.

    Kenneth's opinion is echoed by organizations like the A.C.L.U. and the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit group that promotes "digital rights."

    It is "naïve to believe all this data will only be used to track children in the extremely unlikely event of the rare kidnapping by a stranger," said Barry Steinhardt, director of the technology and liberty program at the A.C.L.U.

    Mr. Steinhardt said schools, once they had invested in the technology, could feel compelled to get a greater return on investment by putting it to other uses, like tracking where students go after school.

    Advocates of the technology said they did not plan to go that far. But, they said, they do see broader possibilities, such as implanting RFID tags under the skin of children to avoid problems with lost or forgotten tags. More immediately, they said, they could see using the technology to track whether students attend individual classes.

    Mr. Weisinger, the head of transportation at Spring, said that, for now, the district could not afford not to put the technology to use. Chief Bragg said the key to catching kidnappers was getting crucial information within two to four hours of a crime - information such as the last place the child was seen.

    "We've been fortunate; we haven't had a kidnapping," Mr. Weisinger said. "But if it works one time finding a student who has been kidnapped, then the system has paid for itself."

    http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/17/technology/17tag.html?ei=5006&en=edeb6cd5169d554b&ex=1101272400&partner=ALTAVISTA1&pagewanted=print&position=

    RFID FOR ALL KIDS IN TEXAS SCHOOL, IMPLANTABLE MICROCHIPS ADVOCATED :.

    "They do see broader possibilities, such as implanting RFID tags under the skin of children to avoid problems with lost or forgotten tags."

    Those of us who have been warning about this have always said that it will be done FOR THE CHILDREN. We have always said that it will be ID cards first and then implants, because the cards will get lost/stolen/left behind. Well, it's not just weirdos on obscure radio stations (in the middle of the night) or webpages from the backwaters of the Internet talking about it now.

    This story appeared in the New York Times!

    This overt, sickening form of social control is beyond the pale, and what do the parents have to say? Nothing. They're letting it happen.

    I can't wait until the "Good Christians" begin handing over their spawn to be microchipped by the state. That will be a delicious moment.

    Read your own book! Revelation 13:

    16 And he causeth all, both small and great, rich and poor, free and bond, to receive a mark in their right hand, or in their foreheads:

    17 And that no man might buy or sell, save he that had the mark, or the name of the beast, or the number of his name.

    I'm not a Christian in the talking in tongues, Jerry Falwell, hypocrite, SUV/American flag sticker sort of way, but if I had kids and this nonsense was happening to them, there would be an immediate and SERIOUS problem...

    How far away are we from the implantation of microchips in kids? Weeks? Months? Years?
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    Fallujah in Pictures

    Pictures from Fallujah that probably won't be on your television.

    http://fallujapictures.blogspot.com/
    Kliknutím sem můžete změnit nastavení reklam