Anonymous ID: 129572 July 28, 2022, 8:21 a.m. No.16914141   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>5530

92 The International Jew

 

all over the world, not in Russia only, is Jewish.

 

More to the present point is Palestine, where the unity of

 

revolutionary arid financial Jew.ry is never more clearly established. It is

 

possible for the most irresponsible Jewish spokesman to deny that

 

Palestine is Jewish.* The government is Jewish, the plan of procedure is

 

Jewish, the ·mei.hods used are Jewish. Palestine will do to illustrate the

 

genius of the Je\f when he comes to power.

 

PrOfe~rsor Albert T.Clay, in the "Atlantic Monthly" (will anyone

 

declare that this long established and thoroughly respectable Boston

 

publication is "anti-Semitic"?) warns us that the information about

 

Palestine which we receive in America comes to us through the Jewish

 

Telegraph Service (which is the Associated Press of worldwide Jewry)

 

and the Zionist propaganda. "The latter ," he says, "with its harrowing

 

stories of programs in EuroJ)e, and its misrepresentations of·the situation

 

inthe Near East, has been able to awaken not a little sympathy for the

 

Zionist propaganda."

 

This propaganda of programs,- "thousands upon thousands of Jews

 

killed" -amounts tO nothing except as it illustrates the gullibility of the

 

Press. No one believes this propaganda and governments regularly

 

disprove it. But the fact that it continues indicates that something besides

 

facts is necessary to keep the scheme going. In Jerusalem as this is being

 

written [1921. Ed.] martial law is proclaimed. There has been a struggle

 

between the native inhabitants, whom the Balfour Declaration sought to

 

protect and the new-come Jews. The Jews were well armed and the

 

natives fought with whatever weapons they could find on the spot; the

 

conClusion of all impartial observers bei~g thai the Jews prepared for and

 

sought the fight with unprepared Arabs.

 

The mark of disorder perpetrated by the Jews is all over the place,

 

the "persecuted" turned persecutor; and lest this should be charged to the

 

general wildness of the people in Palestine , let it be sa id th at the Jewish

 

rioters (most of whom are thugs from Eastern Europe) are only .

 

expressing in deeds what the "cultivated" American and English Jews

 

have expressed iri words_:..namely, that the lawful inhabitants of the land

 

ought to be driven out in spite of governmental promises to the contrary.

Anonymous ID: 129572 July 28, 2022, 8:24 a.m. No.16914275   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>16914189

 

Never thought I'd say this but the BO needs to ban Q's tripcode as it has clearly been compromised.

 

If Q wants to return they can do so using more images from their AF1 photo stream. This is how they "established" their identity in the past.

Anonymous ID: 129572 July 28, 2022, 8:25 a.m. No.16914287   🗄️.is đź”—kun

https://english.almayadeen.net/news/health/hundreds-die-as-somalia-faces-famine

 

Hundreds die as Somalia faces famine

 

A drought in the Horn of Africa has taken away four of Owliyo Hassan Salaad's children this year.

 

Now she cradles Ali Osman, her weak and squalling 3-year-old, whom she carried on a 90-kilometer walk from her hamlet to Somalia's capital, frantic not to lose him as well.

 

She can scarcely speak about the young bodies buried back home in the dirt too dry for planting as she sits on the floor of a malnutrition treatment clinic full of worried mothers.

 

The death toll is rapidly increasing amid the region's worst drought in four decades. According to previously unreported data supplied to the Associated Press, at least 448 people have died this year in malnutrition treatment centers in Somalia alone.

 

Authorities in Somalia, Ethiopia, and Kenya are now focusing on the difficult challenge of preventing starvation.

 

'Silent death'

 

Many more individuals are dying without the knowledge of authorities, such as Salaad's four children, all of whom are under the age of ten. Some are killed in isolated pastoral settlements. Some people perish while undertaking rescue missions. Some die even after reaching displacement centers because they are hungry beyond help.

 

“Definitely thousands” have died, the UN humanitarian coordinator for Somalia, Adam Abdelmoula, told reporters on Tuesday, though the data to support that is yet to come.

 

Salaad had four more children with her husband. They were too weak to travel to Mogadishu, she explained.

 

Drought comes and goes in the Horn of Africa, but this time it's like no other. Humanitarian assistance has been sapped by global crises like the COVID-19 pandemic and now the war in Ukraine. Prices for staples like wheat and cooking oil are rising quickly, in some places by more than 100%.

 

Part 1

Anonymous ID: 129572 July 28, 2022, 8:25 a.m. No.16914312   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>5113

https://www.techradar.com/features/this-is-how-new-indian-privacy-law-will-have-negative-impact-on-peoples-privacy

 

This is how new Indian privacy law will have 'negative impact on people's privacy'

 

In April, the Indian government dropped a hard pill to swallow for VPN services and their users.

 

According to India's new data retention law,security software firms will be forced to keep users' data for up to five years. What's more, providers will need to be ready to hand over this information to authorities upon request, too.

 

The news sparked a chasm of discontent across the VPN industry, privacy advocates groups and internet users.

 

"One way or another, it will have a negative impact on people’s privacy and digital security," Laura Tyrell, Head of PR at Nord Security - the company behind the popular NordVPN - told us.

 

While, in a tweet (opens in new tab), digital rights NGO Access Now wrote: "VPNs are necessary in a country with rampant shutdowns and surveillance, and no data protection law. Authorities must stop what they’re doing, and consult with security researchers, civil society, and cybersecurity experts on what to do instead."

 

So, what's at stake for Indian internet users' privacy?

 

VPNs forced to keep users logs

On April 28, the Indian Computer Emergency Response Team (CERT-In) announced that - among other directives, like the obligation to report a cyber attack within six hours - virtual private network (VPN) providers will soon be required to retain users' logs for at least five years. Companies will be also forced to hand over this data to authorities upon request.

 

And it's not just VPNs that are the subject of the new data retention law (opens in new tab) which will come into effect from late June.Virtual private servers (VPS), cloud service providers, data centers and crypto exchanges all will have to follow the new directive.

 

Specifically, the pieces of information that will need to be collected and stored are:

 

Validated names of subscribers/customers hiring the services

Period of hire including dates

IPs allotted to/being used by the members

Email address and IP address and time stamp used at the time of registration/on-boarding

Purpose for hiring services

Validated address and contact numbers

Ownership pattern of the subscribers/customers hiring services

Statement: We call on @IndianCERT to recall Directions on Information Security Practices issued on April 28 that go into effect on June 27. These directions are vague. They undermine user privacy and information security, contrary to CERT's mandate. 1/n pic.twitter.com/okzMhgIG0yMay 4, 2022

 

While cybersecurity experts are lamenting its vagueness, lack of feasibility and worrying privacy implications, the CERT-in justifies the decision as needed to better police cybercrime.

 

With a total of 86.63 million data breaches in 2021, Surfshark found India to be the third most affected nation worldwide (opens in new tab). "Most of the frauds were happening through VPNs," an Indian government official said to The Economic Times (opens in new tab).

 

At the same time,India also gained the gold medal for the number of internet shutdowns executed. Digital rights campaigner group Access Now found the country to be responsible for 106 out of the 182 incidents documented in 2021 (opens in new tab). Not to mention the allegations thatthe Indian government used Pegasus technology to spy on activists, politicians and lawyers.

 

With such a track record, it's no great surprise that many are worried that authorities might abuse this data grab to implement mass surveillance.

pt 1