Anonymous ID: f0a3d4 March 3, 2023, 4:40 p.m. No.18441732   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1741

>>18441578

Oh goodie another Flynn family fundraiser at Ramtha School of Enlightenment

Call Jordan Sather, Corey Goode, David Wilcock Jeffery pederson, Alex Jones, John b wells, Roger hedonistic stone, Stan mcchrystal, field McConnell, SidneyPowell, Lin Wood

Anonymous ID: f0a3d4 March 3, 2023, 4:50 p.m. No.18441788   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1974

>>18441719

The article is long.

 

https://www.wired.com/2011/07/darpas-secret-spy-machine/

 

A second Nexus 7 godfather is Maj. Gen. Michael Flynn. Until recently, Flynn was the head of U.S. intelligence in Afghanistan.

 

But he didn't always think too highly of the apparatus he ran. In report publicly released in December 2009 , Flynn excoriated his fellow intelligence professionals for being "only marginally relevant to the overall strategy."

 

They were so focused on old-school metrics like body counts, he complained, they hadn't bothered to learn the first thing about Afghanistan's people. Rudimentary questions about Afghanistan's social and cultural fabric had gone largely unasked and unanswered.

 

But Flynn also offered the intelligence community a way out. The U.S. military had in its databases a "vast and underappreciated body of information," he wrote. Tapped right, that information could form "a map for leveraging popular support and marginalizing the insurgency."

 

Assembling data on how a society functions is a passion of Alex "Sandy" Pentland, the bushy-bearded MIT Media Lab professor and evangelist for a new type of information-gathering dubbed "reality mining."

 

With GPS-enabled cellphones and advanced surveillance cameras now everywhere, it's possible to track almost everyone in a given area at once. That's not creepy, in Pentland's world. It's wonderful. Because all that information can tell you exactly where a town is working and where it's broken, where the traffic piles up and where it flows free.

 

Public actions, when added up, could serve as one of Kilcullen's indirect metrics.

 

"People leave behind digital traces. If you aggregate those traces in the right way, you can see where incomes are dropping, where people feel scared, where the babies are dying," he tells Danger Room. "With technology comes transparency. And with transparency comes an ability to see when things work, and when they go off the rails."