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Sunday, April 24, 2022

I COULD FILL A FILE ALONE WITH ALL OF WHAT I HAD GONE THROUGH BY HARASSMENTS BY ‘ BLACK AND WHITE “ OVER “ OWNERSHIP “ OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; THOSE F……! PUPPETS !

 

UPDATED 4-25-2022 8:16 PM, 4-26-2022 5:36 AM


IN MY ‘ HEART,’ I DO NOT WANT TO KNOW EVEN ONE HOMOSEXUAL, OUTSIDE OF MY IMMEDIATE FAMILY; I THINK PATRIARCH KIRILL IS RIGHT, YOU DON’T WANT TO FIGHT ‘ POSSESSION ‘ ALL YOUR LIFE BECAUSE THAT WOULD MEAN THE ELDER IS A PEDOPHILE ( FROM AGE 4-2016 ).

THIS HAPPENED WHE I WAS FINISHING MY POST THIS MORNING. HAPPENED WHEN “ KIRILL “ SPELLING WAS CORRECTED. HOMOSEXUALS AND ‘ RUSSIANS DO NOT WANT ME TO BE ABLE TO PROTECT MYSELF. NEW PHOTO:




REASON I JUST GAVE UP, WAS ‘ BARTHOLOMEW,’ ‘ BARTOLME’ ‘ IN SPANISH:  CNN NEW: “ 

“ Ukraine war threatens deep divisions in Orthodox Church 


SOME OF OF THE PHOTOS YOU WILL HAVE TO SEE AND READ EXPLANATIONS ON FACEBOOK.


GOD BLESS MY DAD AND EVEN INGO (?).


 










‘ BUT, I WAS MEXICAN AMERICAN,’ NOT ‘ AMERICAN.’


——————————————————


2002-2003, ALMOST COMPLETELY ‘ BLOCKED ‘ BY OTHERS. 2004-2006, SUCCESS FOR THEM HALF-WAYS, COMPRESSION OF 2003-2004 AS ERASUE OF ONE YEAR, BUT “ HADRON COLLIDER ( 2002 )“ AND CALL TO FBI. ONE OTHER DATE THAT ‘ PSOPS ‘ WAS MENTIONED, WILL NOT PRINT NOW; I HAVE LOOKED FOR ‘ THAT MAN ‘ PHOTO FOR OVER A COUPLE OF YEARS, FOUND IT AGAIN.


 INGO SWANN- MY FATHER’S EYE, LETTER TO PRESIDENT BUSH ‘ THE EYE ‘ WAS AS LARGE AS HALF MY LIVING ROOM, ( SAME MONTH ) SHADOW PERSON WALKED ACROSS THEN IN MARY MOTHER OF GOD, THE VIGIN MARY- I THINK NOW, MESSAGE SOMETHING HORRIBLE WAS HAPPENING IN CHRISTIAN CHURCH.





ANOTHER WORD WAS “ CI “ SEC ? BUT I DON’T THINK WAS ‘ TECH,’ ARGUMENT IN ‘ MENTAL RAPE ‘ WAS OVER IDENTITY OF VOICE, ‘ I SAID ‘ AFRICAN AMERICAN,’ BUT WAS PUNISHED; ONE ONE KNEW WHAT HE LOOKED LIKE: QUESTIONS OF ‘ THEATER FIGHTS,’ MUNITIONS USED, IT WENT ON AND ON.




“ Psychological operations (PSYOP) are operations to convey selected information and indicators to audiences to influence their emotions, motives, and objective reasoning, and ultimately the behavior of governments, organizations, groups, and individuals.

United States Psychological Operations “


“ BELLCAT “ ? COULD OF BEEN HELLCAT ? A CAR.


CNN NEWS:


“ The first investigation that Bellingcat did by just piecing together available pieces of data from the internet was the downing of (Malaysia Airlines) MH17 in July 2014.

At that time, a lot of public data was available on Russian soldiers, Russian spies, and so on and so forth -- because they still hadn't caught up with the times, so they kept a lot of digital traces, social media, posting selfies in front of weapons that shoot down airliners.”


“ That's where we kind of perfected the art of reconstructing a crime based on digital breadcrumbs. ... But as time went by, sort of the bad actors that we were investigating, they started hiding their stuff better. ... By 2016, it was no longer possible to find soldiers leaving status selfies on the internet because a new law had been passed in Russia, for example, banning the use of mobile phones by secret services and by soldiers.”


“ A 'multilevel computer game' vs. the Russian government

WHAT MATTERS: You talked about how your tactics using social media have become dated because the Russians have learned from them. Have you seen that they've learned from this use of gray market data?

GROZEV: Absolutely. It has been what I best describe as a multilevel computer game. Every time we use one, of course, the Russian government learns and closes that gap and then we have to outsmart them in the next stage.

So for example, when we first learned that we can get private data, passport files and residence files on Russian spies who go around killing people, they closed the files on those people. So every spy suddenly had a missing passport file in the central password database.

But that opened up a completely new way for us to identify spies, because we were just able to compare older versions of the database to newer versions. So that allowed us to find a bad group of spies that we didn't even know existed before.

The Russian government did realize that that's maybe a bad idea to hide them from us, so they reopened those files but just started poisoning data. They started changing the photographs of some of these people to similar looking, like lookalikes of the people, so that they confused us or embarrass us if we publish a finding but it's for the wrong guy. And then we'll learn how to beat that.

New journalism needs new ethics

WHAT MATTERS: You talked about dropping your ethical boundaries. Obviously some of your tactics, like the paying of bribes or the use of personal data, is not something that many Western journalists would be allowed to do. Would you say that you veered away from journalism or that the rules of journalism have changed?

GROZEV: Well, first of all, everything changes. Therefore, the rules of journalism should change with the changing times.

And it's not common that journalism was investigating governments conducting government-sanctioned crimes, but now it's happening. ... With the paradigm of sovereign governments, other governments cannot investigate the Russian government ... and the Russian government is not going to investigate itself because it is intending to stay in power forever.

This is not a model that traditional journalism can investigate properly. It's not even a model that traditional law enforcement can investigate properly.

I'll give an example. When the British police asked, by international agreement, for cooperation from the Russian government to provide evidence on who exactly these guys were who were hanging around the Skripals' house in 2018, they got completely fraudulent, fake data from the Russian government. ...

So the only way to counter that as a journalist is to get the data that the Russian government is refusing to hand over. And if this is the only way to get it, and if you can be sure that you can prove that this is valid data and authentic data -- I think it is incumbent on journalists to find the truth. And especially when law enforcement refuses to find the truth because of honoring the sovereign system of respecting other governments.

The Russian government enables these investigations

WHAT MATTERS: You're Bulgarian, and you live in Austria. I'm here in the US. Should we be applying these methods to other governments that aren't Russian?

GROZEV: Well, of course. What is specific about the Russian government that makes it easier to do this kind of journalism there is it has a confluence of two qualities.

One is authoritarianism, which means they love to gather data, comprehensive data, on ... what they consider to be their subjects, and therefore there's a lot of centralized data.

And second, there's a lot of petty corruption ... within the law enforcement system, and this data market thrives on that. And petty corruption exists because that is what an authoritarian government figure like Putin can survive on, because he needs to allow these people to get bribes and get money.

This combination of qualities didn't exist in every market. In China, for example, there is centralized, concentrated data, but there isn't the petty corruption that exists in Russia. But there you have whistleblowers who leak this data, and you can bypass corruption but you still get a lot of access to centralized data.

And in other governments, there is just more transparency on data. There's FOIA (Freedom of Information Act). I think it's all about trusting data. As opposed to trusting sources. That's the main shift in the way we do investigations. We just don't trust sources, as I said in the film as well.

What Russia's army reflects

WHAT MATTERS: How has the process changed? As you've pivoted to Ukraine, has the availability of evidence surprised you?

GROZEV: Well, first of all, each corrupt government is somewhat dysfunctional and is behind the times just because they have different metrics than good governance.

So Russia's army is a reflection of the overall state of Russian society and governance, and it is mismanaged. ... Billions have been spent on creating sophisticated encrypted communications for the military in Russia.

But most of that money has been stolen in corrupt kickbacks, and the result is they didn't have that functioning system. ... So they had to resort to good old telephones, and they were confiscating phones from the locals and using them to make phone calls to their superiors or to their loved ones.

And all of that is easily transparent to the Ukrainians, and they shared all of that with journalists -- so that yeah, it's not unpredictable. It is shocking how incompetent they are. But it was to be expected, because it's a reflection of 23 years of corrupt government.”


IF THERE EVER WAS A DESCRIPTION OF NEW MEXICO…..ALBUQUERQUE !


“ What Russia's army reflects

WHAT MATTERS: How has the process changed? As you've pivoted to Ukraine, has the availability of evidence surprised you?

GROZEV: Well, first of all, each corrupt government is somewhat dysfunctional and is behind the times just because they have different metrics than good governance.

So Russia's army is a reflection of the overall state of Russian society and governance, and it is mismanaged. ... Billions have been spent on creating sophisticated encrypted communications for the military in Russia.

But most of that money has been stolen in corrupt kickbacks, and the result is they didn't have that functioning system. ... So they had to resort to good old telephones, and they were confiscating phones from the locals and using them to make phone calls to their superiors or to their loved ones. “


https://www.cnn.com/2022/04/23/politics/navalny-christo-grozev-russia-investigations-what-matters/index.html



FROM FACEBOOK:

1999-2000 PAINTING WAS STILL BEING WORKED ON, JULIE CATRON HAD NOT BEEN IN MY HOUSE YET, I HADN’T SEEN OR HEARD FROM HER SINCE LATE EIGHTIES.


SO IT DOES NOT EXPLAIN PAINTING AND PUTIN’S EYE AND INGO’S EYE ON NEXT POST. JULIE WAS VERY UPSET LEAVING CIA, SOMEBODY HURT HER. I WOULD LOOK AT HER ‘ POD ‘ WORK GROUP. SHE WAS PAINTING FROM PHOTO OF GROUP AT AGENCY.


“ Boris Ivanov's credentials

& Studied History & Literature at

Russian State University for the

Humanities

Lives in Moscow

Knows Russian “


https://www.quora.com/Does-the-Russian-Orthodox-have-confession


“ Yes, it has. Confession is a pretty universal practice in ancient Churches. Also, Russian laws protect the seal of confession. Although, there is an opinion that Russian Orthodox priests are allowed to break the seal when they feel that the sinner’s remorse was not sincere. Like, when a sinner is unrepentantly bragging about their sins and crimes.


In addition to individual confessions, the Russian Orthodox Church also practices joint confessions. During such confession, a priest stands before his flock and enumerates typical sins or confesses his personal sins, while the believers confess their sins silently or vocally (“Yes, this is my sin too”).”


FROM FACEBOOK IN SCREENSHOT:


IN WHITE ‘ WHITE DOME ‘ LIKE ‘ HAT ‘ THE PATRIARCH K. WEARS-‘ CI, ‘ BUT ‘ C ‘ IS BACKWARDS. SO I GOOGLED IT. ALSO FAINT ‘ P OR R,’ BUT I DON’T THINK THAT TO BE ‘ IMPORTANT ‘ ?.’


What Cl means?

noun [ C] mainly US. abbreviation for

confidential informant: a person who

secretly gives information to the police

about criminal activity: She worked for

years as an active Cl, and still called

occasionally with tips on various cases.

https://dictionary.cambridge.org»ci

Cl1 meaning in the

Cambridge English Dictionary


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