Anonymous ID: d25a26 July 22, 2019, 8:50 a.m. No.24647   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>24623

The company regularly had reorganizations ( changes in organizational structure ). They had organizational consultants. They had employee training. One got to meet employees from other parts of the company and other parts of the world. One worked with client/customer companies, some of which were also very large enterprises, and got a chance to observe which ones had free information flow and which ones were very tight about who gets to know what, who's allowed to do what.

Companies and organizations that have confidentiality as one aspect of the organization's data holdings will necessarily be structured somewhat into silos. Employees will only receive information on a need-to-know basis. Certainly that describes our U.S. intelligence agencies and government. The secrecy is necessary when handling and protecting confidential info. However it does tend to feed a bureaucracy that will use their ownership of secret information as levers to increase control.

You gotta wonder why the U.S. needs so many intel agencies. Because none of them trusts the other ... new ones always being created ... fighting over control? ...

Q did allude to a reorganization in their future ... we haven't seen it habben yet ... wait for it...

Anonymous ID: d25a26 July 22, 2019, 8:57 a.m. No.24656   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>4657 >>4664 >>4831 >>4850 >>4855 >>4994 >>5175 >>5246 >>5261

>>24641

Interesting. No much seen on ADSB radar ATM. Of 152 mil a/c over CONUS, they are showing zero Blackhawk choppers, and nothing really over DC.

 

The operation evide3ntly involves classified info. Perhaps document raids to retrieve sensitive info needed for the tribunals?

 

"The Pentagon has revealed a few details about a secret Army mission that has Black Hawk helicopters flying missions over the Washington, D.C., area backed by active-duty and reserve soldiers.

 

The mysterious classified operation was disclosed when the Army asked Congress for approval to shift funds to provide an extra $1.55 million for aircraft maintenance, air crews and travel in support of an “emerging classified flight mission.”

 

It’s part of a $2.5 billion request this month to “reprogram” funds in the current fiscal year’s budget to programs considered high priorities. “Without additional funding, the Army will not be able to perform this classified mission,” the Defense Department said.

 

“Soldiers from assault helicopter company and aviation maintenance units will be supporting the mission with 10 UH-60s and maintenance capabilities for four months,” according to the document, referring to the Black Hawks. The money will also pay for a specialized “Sensitive Compartmented Information Facility” at Davison Army Airfield at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, just outside Washington.

 

Army spokesman Wayne Hall declined in an email to comment on some possibilities -- including whether the mission involved protecting the White House or other federal buildings and whether it’s making use of specialized commando units of the Pentagon’s Joint Special Operations Command, which includes the Army’s Delta unit and Navy’s Seal Team Six.

 

Hall said the operation began early in the fiscal year, which started Oct. 1, and “the duration of the mission is undetermined.”"