Listen to @CorbettReport on @RBNlive Weeknights at Midnight from corbett report: His films have birthed some of the most iconic images in the history of cinema, yet still remarkably little is known about Stanley Kubrick’s life…or death. Today on the podcast we examine the works of the world-famous director for clues as to what he knew, and whether or not he was silenced for blowing the whistle on the powers that shouldn’t be.
Welcome back to New World Next Week - the video series from Corbett Report and Media Monarchy that covers some of the most important developments in open source intelligence news. This week:
Visit NewWorldNextWeek.com to get previous episodes in various formats to download, burn and share. We also have weekly episodes from FoodWorldOrder.com. And as always, stay up-to-date by subscribing to the feeds from Corbett Report here and Media Monarchy here. We also have weekly episodes from FoodWorldOrder.com Thank you.
Welcome back to New World Next Week - the video series from Corbett Report and Media Monarchy that covers some of the most important developments in open source intelligence news. This week:
Visit NewWorldNextWeek.com to get previous episodes in various formats to download, burn and share. And as always, stay up-to-date by subscribing to the feeds from Corbett Report here and Media Monarchy here. Thank you.
north korea attack may be response to drills from danger room: It’s not the diplomacy-minded former president who is ready to spy, it’s the secretive nuclear submarine named for him. The surveillance and attack capabilities it’s supposed to have could keep the tense situation on the Korean peninsula from spiraling out of control. In the wake of yesterday’s North Korean artillery barrage against a South Korean island, the U.S.S. George Washington is sailing to South Korea to participate in joint exercises.
A statement from the Navy’s Seventh Fleet, which patrols the western Pacific, says the drill was planned before the “unprovoked” North Korean attack, but will demonstrate “the strength of the [South Korea]-U.S. Alliance and our commitment to regional stability through deterrence.” In other words: to stave off another attack, not to initiate a retaliation.
The George Washington aircraft carrier is equipped with 75 planes and around 6,000 sailors. But it’s not coming alone. It’s got the destroyers Lassen, Stethem and Fitzgerald with it, and the missile cruiser Cowpens in tow. Rumor also has it that the carrier strike group will link up with another asset in area: The undersea spy known as the Jimmy Carter, which can monitor and potentially thwart North Korean subs that might shadow the American-South Korea exercises.
According to plugged-in naval blogger Raymond Pritchett, word’s going around Navy circles that the first surveillance assets that the United States had in the air over yesterday’s Korean island battle were drones launched from the Jimmy Carter.
Last week the airwaves and internet were besieged with a fabulous story of al-Qaeda miscreants in Yemen attempting to send toner cartridge bombs to synagogues in Chicago.
“The packages from Yemen contained chemical explosives camouflaged as printer cartridges and wired to be detonated by a cell phone, and were found in Dubai and England on Friday only after the U.S. received a tip from Saudi Arabia,” reported the Los Angeles Times.
In response, bureaucrats said we’ll have to get used to more obtrusive airport “pat-downs” and screening of incoming foreign parcels using a network of government-certified private screeners and companies as well as its own inspectors at about 18 gateway airports around the country, according to the Transportation Security Administration. Terror is a growth industry, undoubtedly.
But wait a minute. There is a problem with all of this and, as usual, the government has not done a very good job of making the latest al-CIA-duh plot credible, at least not for people who bother to pay attention.
Naturally, a news search using the term Mohammed al-Shaibah produces no results from the New York Times, the Washington Post, or the rest of the corporate Mockingbird media.
please donate to zero point radio & ground zero media! from clyde lewis: Now the mainstream media has another crisis that they have to tell you about & that is the evils of digital drugs or I-dosing. A story in Oklahoma highlighted a perceived crisis of children downloading Mp3s containing sounds that according to the report induced the same effects as Marijuana & LSD. The report was first filed by KWTV News channel 9 & demonstrated how a TV channel desperately wants to be the first to induce a mass psychosis & hysteria by showing young people wearing headphones listening to binaural beats & psychotronic drones & tripping out.
"One supporter, Dr. Roxana Mayer, a physician who does not live in Jackson Lee’s district, praised the reform plan for overhauling a broken system. 'I don’t know what there is in the bill that creates such panic,' she said."
In this video, Mayer claims to be a general practitioner, eliciting applause and even a hug from Queen Sheila:
I’m not sure why, but something didn’t smell right. So my colleagues and I did a little digging, and wouldn’t you know it? Roxana Mayer is, like, totally not a doctor. But she is an Obama campaign volunteer. Our own David Jennings secured a phone interview, in which Mayer admitted to impersonating a physician, saying - get this - she thought it would help her credibility. (It didn’t.)
Now here’s where it spins off into a whole new dimension of weird. See the bug-eyed woman seated behind not-doctor Mayer? Look familiar? Yes, that little ray of sunshine, who accompanied Mayer to the meeting, is none other than Maria Isabel, the unhinged moonbat who ran a Barack Obama campaign office, complete with Che Guevara flag. Hell, she’s even wearing the exact same outfit she wore the last time we mocked her! A word of advice to budding political operatives: when you need two plants, try to pick people smarter than actual plants. This isn’t brain surgery.
from ap: The astronauts aboard the shuttle-station complex are celebrating the 40th anniversary of man's first moon landing with their own spacewalk. Late Monday morning, David Wolf and Thomas Marshburn ventured out to hook spare parts to the international space station. It is the second spacewalk in three days, and it's taking place 40 years to the day that Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin walked on the moon. "How cool," is how one shuttle astronaut described it. The space station crew, meanwhile, is working on a broken toilet that malfunctioned Sunday. For the time being, the 13 astronauts are lining up at the two good toilets, one on the station and one on Endeavour. NASA says it's not yet a serious problem.
doj budget details high-tech crime fighting tools from abcnews: The release of the 2010 budget request has shed more light on some FBI surveillance programs the bureau is currently developing and testing. While the FBI has been criticized at times for its slow reforms after the 9/11 attacks, which revealed the FBI did not have adequate computer resources, some of the new programs sound like something out of a high-tech cloak and dagger film. The budget request shows that the FBI is currently developing a new "Advanced Electronic Surveillance" program which is being funded at $233.9 million for 2010. The program has 133 employees, 15 of whom are agents. According to the budget documents released Thursday, the program, otherwise known as "Going Dark," supports the FBI's electronic surveillance intelligence collection and evidence gathering capabilities, as well as those of the greater Intelligence Community.
general calls for new thinking on cyberspace from defencetalk: The Air Force's top cyber official told a mostly industry-based audience here May 8 that the cyber arena is filled with new business opportunities, and some very hard challenges. "In an Air Force that is a lot of times focused on kinetic activity - read that as F-16 (Fighting Falcons) and 2,000-pound bombs - not at warfare conducted in a different manner at the speed of light, cyber operations require some new thinking," said Maj. Gen. William Lord, commander of Air Force Cyber Command (Provisional). Speaking to about 125 people at the Hanscom Representatives Association meeting here, he noted that it's very difficult to find out who the attackers are or even what their attributes and intentions are. He also noted that existing laws and policies often hamper the ability of U.S. cyber experts to find the answers or to launch an attack of their own. "It's easier for us to get approval to do a kinetic strike with a 2,000-pound bomb than it is for us to do a non-kinetic cyber activity," General Lord said. Yet while law, policy and culture all present potential barriers to effectively controlling cyberspace, technology needs are just as vital. "Our trouble today is that we're always shooting behind the rabbit... We wait for the latest exploit, and then when something bad happens, we figure out how to fix it."
china developed its own operating system for cyber war with US from world tribune: A leading cyber security specialist said last week that China has developed its own ultra-secure operating system for a strategic edge in its cyber warfare with U.S. computer systems. Kevin G. Coleman, a specialist with the Technolytics Institute and consultant to the office of the Director of National Intelligence, said in congressional testimony that the United States is woefully unprepared to counter cyber attacks on its electronic infrastructures. Part of the cyber arms race includes China’s creation of Kylin, a new "hardened" operating system. It began converting systems to it in 2007, according to the current edition of East-Asia-Intel.com.
flight simulation site avsim 'destroyed' by hackers from wikinews: The flight simulation website Avsim has recently been "destroyed" after an attack by hackers. The website was used for all types of computer flight simulation, but it was mainly devoted to Flight Simulator X. The site was launched thirteen years ago, in 1996.
information-sharing platform hacked from fcw: The Homeland Security Department’s platform for sharing sensitive but unclassified data with state and local authorities was hacked recently, a DHS official has confirmed. The intrusion into the Homeland Security Information Network (HSIN) was confirmed to Federal Computer Week by Harry McDavid, the chief information officer for DHS’ Office of Operations Coordination and Planning. McDavid said the U.S. Computer Emergency Readiness Team reported an intrusion into the system in late March. The initial hack was brief and limited, and it was followed by a more extensive hack in early April, McDavid said.
general: we just might nuke those cyber attackers from danger room: How would the American military respond to an attack on its networks? If we take the commander of U.S. strategic forces at his word, they’d nuke those hackers, if need be. Speaking to reporters at a press breakfast last week, Gen. Kevin Chilton, the head of U.S. Strategic Command, said the president retained the option to retaliate with military force in the event of a serious cyber attack against U.S. networks. Global Security Newswire’s Elaine Grossman has the key quote: “I think you don’t take any response options off the table from an attack on the United States of America... Why would we constrain ourselves on how we respond?”
from clyde lewis: In the original Allen Moore "Watchmen” comic (set in an alternate reality 1985), one of the "heroes" commits what is essentially a very villainous act for the "good of all mankind." He basically contrives an "alien invasion" so that the United States, Soviet Union, and presumably the rest of the world, will join together in peace and harmony to protect themselves against the outside "alien threat." The idea of a threat from the heaven’s or a divine intervention from the skies has been recorded throughout history as means to create a new government or religious movement. The idea of an event of this magnitude was spoken of by Ronald Reagan in the 1980’s. There is a remote possibility that the powers of the World could fake or hoax and alien threat or a Deus Ex Machina in order to regain control of a populace run amok. The well known conspiracy theory is explored here at the Ground Zero Lounge as Clyde Lewis demonstrates that there is technology indistinguishable from magic and that it can be used to simulate a paranormal event capable of changing the way we look at God and the cosmos. Is Operation Blue beam a reality and will it be used in 2012 to usher in a New World Ecumenical Brotherhood of man? Listen in and decide for yourself if it is probable and possible.
Recorded every Monday evening in front of a live audience at Dante's Inferno in Portland Oregon, the Ground Zero Lounge features Clyde Lewis in this audience participation discussion of current events as they relate to the paranormal.
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