@deepwebslinger It's been going on for quite some time. I noticed it well over a decade ago. At the same time I really payed attention to the skies being sprayed and the uptick in children with asthma. It's all tied together but hey I'm just a conspiracy theorist.
On Israeli national TV:
"I don't feel sorry for starving Gazans. Not for adults, not for the elderly, and not for children."
"We are the real victims. You should feel sorry for us."
"The Gazans? Let them starve to death. Why should I care about them?"
@FBIDirectorKash Selective arrests, selective prosecutions ... you're such a righteous man. What about the pedos you share hands with and cover for everyday? So honorable you are.
🚨 THE CEO OF FLOCK JUST SAID THE QUIET PART OUT LOUD — AND PEOPLE ARE LOSING IT
Remember when Flock cameras were only supposed to read license plates?
Apparently that's not enough anymore.
Now we're talking about AI that can find a vehicle from a simple description.
Microphones that are always listening for so called "sounds of distress."
Drones that can be launched automatically after a 911 call.
And camera networks that can follow movement across entire cities.
Every year the cameras get smarter.
The databases get bigger.
The AI gets more powerful.
And the amount of information being collected keeps growing.
Then came the comment that really got people's attention.
The CEO behind Flock, one of the largest camera networks in America reportedly compared people who map camera locations to terrorists.
Think about that for a second.
The cameras aren't the problem.
The people tracking the cameras are.
Some people see a tool that makes communities safer.
Others see a system that knows where you've been, where you are, and eventually where you're likely to go next.
If mapping Flock cameras makes you a "terrorist," what does that make the people putting cameras everywhere?
Israeli soldiers use young boys for "target practice." As in, Mondays, we shoot the stomach, Tuesdays, the knees, etc.
This was reported last year by the BBC and now corroborated by the United Nations' report.