Anonymous ID: 00d98f Dec. 30, 2022, 9:10 a.m. No.18041895   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1904 >>2110 >>2210 >>2436 >>2503 >>2526

Colonel Mills on Warroom.

The Gray Beards

Anons kinda already knew this but

seemed interdasting so here's a summary:

 

Colonel Mills on Warroom 11:30ish

Gray Beards

 

jamie gorelick - huge name people gotta remember who this is

michael chertoff - Chertoff and hayden conducted weekly phone call with comey brennan and clapper. sauce: Col Mills

michael hayden

dmitri alperovich - " i won't even mention the company name" cough cough Crowdstrike

 

what we've IDed is the fourth corner of the seat of the largest government censorship operation since operation mockingbird.

the 4th element which needs to be out and to begin prosecutions is what we call thegray beards. There's always a gray beardadvisory councilfor these committees

.

1st corner twitter dump

2nd corner elvis chan sworn official testimony

3rd identification of the task force. the Foreign Influence Task Force FITF

4th these grey beards

 

there's moar of them but these are some of the Homeland Security Advisory Council led by DHS.

They are cheerleading and targeteering of the most grotesque government censoring operation in american history

 

The grey beards are special gov employees who are deputized for up to 180 days a year.

Anonymous ID: 00d98f Dec. 30, 2022, 9:15 a.m. No.18041904   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2110 >>2210 >>2436 >>2503 >>2526

>>18041895

>jamie gorelick

 

Jamie S. Gorelick (/ɡəˈrɛlɪk/; born May 6, 1950) is an American lawyer who served as the Deputy Attorney General of the United States from 1994 to 1997, during the Clinton administration. She has been a partner at WilmerHale since 2003 and has served on the board of directors of Amazon since February 2012.[2][3]

 

Gorelick served on British Petroleum's Advisory Council, as their top legal counsel after the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil spill.[4] She was appointed by former Senate Democratic Leader Tom Daschle to serve as a commissioner on the bipartisan National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States, which sought to investigate the circumstances leading up to the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and also served as Vice Chairman of Fannie Mae.

 

9/11 Commission

 

According to Gorelick's op-ed letter in the Washington Post she states that: "At last week's hearing, Attorney General John Ashcroft, facing criticism, asserted that 'the single greatest structural cause for September 11 was the wall that segregated criminal investigators and intelligence agents' and that I built that wall through a March 1995 memo."[19] However, the report from the 9/11 Commission, co-authored by Gorelick, asserts that the 'wall' limiting the ability of federal agencies to cooperate had existed since the 1980s and is in fact not one singular wall but a series of restrictions created over the course of over twenty years.[20]

Conflict of interest

 

A 1995 Department of Justice memorandum states that the procedures her memorandum put in place for the investigation of the 1993 WTC bombing "go beyond what is legally required…[to] prevent any risk of creating an unwarranted appearance that FISA is being used to avoid procedural safeguards which would apply in a criminal investigation." The wall intentionally exceeded the requirements of FISA (the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978) for the purposes of criminal investigations, as well as the then-existing federal case law. These rules were, shortly after their creation, expanded to regulate such communications in future counter-terrorism investigations.[21]

 

Gorelick eventually recused herself from reviewing her own role in the regulation of information about terrorist activities.[citation needed] Attorney General Ashcroft was incensed before the 9/11 commission to learn that the commission had not investigated or been told of Gorelick's memo or her role regarding the "wall". This assertion was disputed by former senator Slade Gorton (R-WA), a member of the 9/11 Commission, who said, "nothing Jamie Gorelick wrote had the slightest impact on the Department of Defense or its willingness or ability to share intelligence information with other intelligence agencies." Gorton also asserted that "the wall" was a long-standing policy that had resulted from the Church committee in the 1970s, and that the policy only prohibits transfer of certain information from prosecutors to the intelligence services and never prohibited information flowing in the opposite direction.[20]

 

Testifying before the commission, Attorney General John Ashcroft said, "Although you understand the debilitating impact of the wall, I cannot imagine that the commission knew about this memorandum, so I have declassified it for you and the public to review," he said. "Full disclosure compels me to inform you that its author is a member of this commission."[22]