I've actually been monitored; not with all the numbers I call thrown in a giant dumpster along with 300 million other folks, but watching a guy climbing up the pole to plant a bug, and then climbing up the pole to remove it a week or more later. FBI thought my sister and girl friend were giving shelter to en.wikipedia.org wrong
So what did I do? Well, I had a small marijuana plant I dug up and drove across town to give to a friend. Saw a lot of cops on the way. They prolly started watching him, too. LMAO.
I don't worry about the government. They are supposed to follow some sort of protocol if they want to watch da Rat, a opposed to collecting all the Rat's dropping along with everybody else. I also try to be careful, and I'd do something like use disposable untraceable phones to set up meetings in the middle of an open field. It's the people I don't know about, who don't have to follow laws, who concern me.
I'm in the Grange; the Grange tried for GMO labeling... is Monsanto watching me?
Monsanto hired a Blackwater subsidiary to probe anti GMO groups digitaljournal.com 
Are the Kochs watching me? Is Maxxam, since I was arrested in the Headwaters Forest fight? Is China or Russia or Iran hacking me, or my utility company? I sure as hell trust the feds and Cal more than any of them.
I hope to hell we are hacking China, etc. Who hacked climategate? Now that's something important.
China Hacks U.S. Defense Department Dean Cheng
May 29, 2013 at 11:50 am
blog.heritage.org = "I feel betrayed in a big way."
I feel vindicated. I never thought the Eye of Sauron was poked out

MAINWAY is the codename for a database maintained by the United States' National Security Agency (NSA) containing metadata for hundreds of billions of telephone calls made through the four largest telephone carriers in the United States: AT&T, SBC, BellSouth (all three now called AT&T), and Verizon. [1]
The existence of this database and the NSA program that compiled it was unknown to the general public until USA Today broke the story on May 10, 2006. [1] It is estimated that the database contains over 1.9 trillion call-detail records. [2] According to Bloomberg News, the effort began approximately seven months before the September 11, 2001 attacks. [3] As of June 2013, the database stores metadata for at least five years. [4]
en.wikipedia.org |