Anonymous ID: 369581 Aug. 28, 2023, 3:06 p.m. No.19449879   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9885 >>9903 >>9907 >>9936 >>0036 >>0177 >>0297 >>0383

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene

@RepMTG

 

If your last name is Biden, the law doesn’t apply to you.

 

That’s what we’ve found time and time again thanks to the investigative work of the House Oversight Committee.

 

We won’t stop working until the full extent of the Biden family’s crimes and corruption are exposed for the American people.

 

Read the full letter:

 

https://judiciary.house.gov/sites/evo-subsites/republicans-judiciary.house.gov/files/evo-media-document/2023-08-28-jdj-js-jc-to-garland-re-weiss-appt-to-special-counsel.pdf

 

Aug 28, 2023, 1:27 PM

 

https://truthsocial.com/@RepMTG/posts/110969124526075443

Anonymous ID: 369581 Aug. 28, 2023, 3:34 p.m. No.19450066   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0070 >>0086 >>0177 >>0297 >>0383

Thousands of Garmin Smartwatches Being Used to Test Space Force Fitness Program

Aug 28, 2023

 

More than 6,000 Garmin smartwatches will be distributed to Space Force Guardians as the service tests how it can use wearable fitness technology for its new fitness program, according to the company.

 

In May, the Space Force, which is part of the Department of the Air Force, announced it would conduct a two-year testing period with the Air Force Research Laboratory, or AFRL, to see how wearable fitness trackers might regularly monitor the fitness and wellness of Guardians.

 

Garmin announced in a press release Monday that its Instinct 2 Solar and Forerunner 55 smartwatch models were chosen for the Space Force's program due to their battery life and the biometric data the devices gather. They were also chosen because they have the ability to disable GPS functionality – an important feature as the military has raised privacy and security concerns over wearable technology in the past.

 

"Enrollment has been robust, with over two-thirds of the 8,400-strong Space Force signing up since the program was announced in May," Garmin's press release said. "To date, more than 6,000 Garmin smartwatches have been or will be issued to active military members who have agreed to log workouts and complete monthly surveys provided by AFRL, and a second wave of enrollment is expected to begin in October."

 

Another incentive for Guardians to sign up is that they will be exempt from the Air Force's physical fitness assessment, which the Space Force has been using while it develops its own program. It consists of pushups, situps and a 1.5-mile run.

 

In 2022, Space Force leaders promised a revolutionary fitness program called the Holistic Health Approach that would use fitness wearables to help track exercise, diet and sleep instead of conducting a physical test like the other services have embraced for decades.

 

Details of the program were released by the service this past May. It will be composed of three elements: the voluntary continuous fitness assessment study, which involves wearable fitness technology; performance health optimization, which includes preventive medicine; and education, which is aimed at teaching Guardians good health habits.

 

"By tracking two basic metrics cardiorespiratory fitness and physical activity we can quickly verify that a Guardian has met their physical requirements and is ready for duty," Dr. James Christensen, a product line lead with the AFRL's 711th Human Performance Wing, said in the release. "We hope that continuous fitness assessment, implemented via wearable technology, will promote a higher, more consistent level of fitness across the force with expected outcomes like reduced injury and stress, improved resilience and higher overall operational performance."

 

Military.com reported last year that there were worries among Guardians that the Space Force's data tracking would lead to micromanagement and punishment for not working out enough, despite being pitched as a nonpunitive fitness program.

 

Guardians also expressed fears that their personal data could be used against them.

 

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Anonymous ID: 369581 Aug. 28, 2023, 3:34 p.m. No.19450070   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0177 >>0297 >>0383

>>19450066

Wearables such as smartwatches have raised privacy and security concerns throughout the military. In 2018, a Department of Defense memo asked service members in deployed areas and at high-profile bases not to use their fitness trackers for fear of revealing compromising location data to adversaries.

 

"The rapidly evolving market of devices, applications and services with geolocation capabilities presents significant risk to DoD personnel both on and off duty, and to our military operations globally," the 2018 memo said.

 

When unveiling the details of the program in May, the Space Force said that it "addressed data security and privacy concerns regarding the use of wearable devices to monitor fitness by ensuring all metrics collected from Guardians will be only fitness related."

 

Garmin, in Monday's press release, said its devices are compliant with "federal privacy and cybersecurity standards" when it comes to data encryption.

 

"We were pleased that the Garmin wearable ecosystem went through a rigorous U.S. Air Force

 

cybersecurity and privacy review," said Scott Burgett, senior director of Garmin Health Engineering. "The U.S. military has high security standards, and our system is designed end-to-end to protect sensitive user data."

 

Military.com also reported in May that the Pentagon was also looking into expanding the use of wearable fitness trackers to help predict outbreaks of infectious diseases such as COVID-19.

 

If the Air Force Research Laboratory's study proves successful, it "could be adopted by other branches of the armed services and include broader Department of Defense requirements such as musculoskeletal injury risk," according to Garmin's press release.

 

https://www.military.com/daily-news/2023/08/28/thousands-of-garmin-smartwatches-being-used-test-space-force-fitness-program.html

 

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Anonymous ID: 369581 Aug. 28, 2023, 4:04 p.m. No.19450231   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0233 >>0297 >>0383

Operation Popeye: How the US government turned the weather into a weapon of war…

August 28, 2023

 

During the Vietnam War, the U.S. was up against the ropes. Anti-war protests were growing louder, and our military was taking heavy losses. It was crunch time, and that’s when the U.S. government rolled out one of their wildest cards: “Operation Popeye.” What was it? A secret plan to turn the weather into a weapon to make it rain and flood out the Ho Chi Minh Trail — the Viet Cong’s main thoroughfare.

 

Popular Science:

Though it cycled through several names in its history, “Operation Popeye” stuck. Its stated objective—to ensure Americans won the Vietnam War—was never realized, but the revelation that the U.S. government played God with weather-altering warfare changed history. The Nixon administration distracted, denied, and, it seems, outright lied to Congress, but enterprising reporters published damning stories about rain being used as a weapon, and the Pentagon papers dripped classified details like artificial rain. Eventually, the federal government would declassify its Popeye documents and international laws aimed at preventing similar projects would be on the books.

 

But the public would, more or less, forget it ever happened. Given the rise of geo-engineering projects, both from municipal governments and private companies, some experts believe Popeye is newly relevant.

 

Operation Popeye relied on a technique called “cloud seeding,” where crystals are dropped into clouds to induce rainfall.

 

The Popular Science article continues:

At first, no one seemed to consider the wartime applications of cloud seeding, but on March 20, 1967, the “operational phase” of Popeye began. Pilots and their crew would soar over select regions of Vietnam with a canister of silver or lead iodide, which were, by the 1960s, considered two of the primary sources of water condensation nuclei. The plane crew would ignite the canisters and release particle-rich smoke into an existing storm. If all went well, the jolt of artificial nuclei would reverberate through the system, forcibly spurring additional precipitation.

 

Despite 80 years of cloud seeding efforts, rigorous research aimed at proving (or disproving) its efficacy is still underway. During their top secret briefing on Popeye, Senators Pell and Case were told that though U.S. taxpayers paid, without their knowledge, some $3.6 million a year for such operations over Vietnam (or about $23 million a year in today’s dollars), Popeye’s success was “certainly limited” and also fundamentally “unverifiable.”

 

As he digested these facts—processed the full extent of the secret wartime weather manipulation project—Senator Pell seemed increasingly indignant, as documented in the official meeting report. Why, he asked, was it kept secret? And what other secrets were there? “The thing that concerns me,” Pell said, “is not rainmaking per se, but when you open Pandora’s box, what comes out with it?” When the details of Operation Popeye were made public a two months later, on May 19, 1974, many Americans—as well as our allies and enemies abroad—were left pondering the same question.

 

Here’s an even deeper dive into Operation Popeye:

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mJqFxArpy0

 

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Anonymous ID: 369581 Aug. 28, 2023, 4:04 p.m. No.19450233   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0297 >>0383

>>19450231

When news about Operation Popeye broke, public outrage came fast and furious. Leaders responded by quickly throwing together a treaty that supposedly banned the use of weather as a weapon. However, much like other instances where the U.S. government self-regulates, this move was symbolic and lacked teeth. The Popular Science article continues:

 

Environmental Modification Convention, the international treaty bars any action undertaken by military or otherwise hostile forces that could result in “earthquakes, tsunamis; an upset in the ecological balance of a region; changes in weather patterns (clouds, precipitation, cyclones of various types and tornadic storms); changes in climate patterns; changes in ocean currents; changes in the state of the ozone layer; and changes in the state of the ionosphere.” The convention is, in effect, so comprehensive it bans many forms of weather modification that, at least according to publicly-available knowledge, do not yet exist. While there’s an elaborate 12-step WikiHow for a tornado in a bottle, storms don’t appear to be that easy to create—or, for that matter, stop—in the real world. Cloud seeding, if and when it works, is successful only because it piggybacks on existing weather, rather than creating new storm fronts from scratch.

 

But Deborah Gordon, director of the energy and climate program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, says the convention is ultimately toothless. “You don’t even know where to look,” she says of current weather manipulation efforts. “There’s a lack of transparency in the research. We don’t even know what people are working on. You can’t govern something you can’t see. And that’s for peaceful applications.” Without the ability to measure these modifications, the Environmental Modification Convention or any other weather-related treaty is nearly impossible to enforce. “How will we know that there aren’t Operation Popeyes… going on or not?” she asks.

 

Given our inability to monitor these activities, there’s reason to be concerned that the United States or other nations could quietly violate the terms of the convention. But, Gordon says, the more pressing question is whether thousands of small-scale environmental modification projects already underway will eventually add up to global impact. “It didn’t matter [that there was no transparency], because there were so few projects,” Gordon says of the 20th century. But “in the last decade,” she says, “the uptick in experimentation in terms of climate engineering has not only picked up from the government’s point of view… it’s now picked up in the private space.”

 

In recent years, Gordon says, we’ve also seen the move beyond privately-led weather-altering schemes to climate-altering ones. Big corporations like Shell, as well as dozens of smaller startups like Carbon Engineering, have developed and begun to implement carbon capture technology. While these peacetime projects are all intended only to benefit the local community, they’ve become so widespread they could have an affect at a planetary scale. “If there’s enough local weather modification,” she asks, “at what point does that add up to more than the sum of its parts?”

 

Do we really trust globalist governments, who are relentlessly promoting their climate change agendas, to hold the power to control the weather? Can we be confident they won’t engineer extreme weather disasters just to validate their doomsday climate predictions?

 

Additionally, can we really trust our leaders not to introduce strange chemicals into artificially produced rain, which could potentially affect our food, water supply, and even our own bodies?

 

Harnessing the power to control the weather is essentially taking charge of crops, animals, and the entire human population. Such authority should be reserved for God, not handed over to maniacal weirdos like Bill Gates who could potentially treat us all like lab rats to further their own ghoulish agendas. With this in mind, we can’t help but wonder how much of the crazy weather we’re experiencing is actually Mother Nature’s doing, and how much could be orchestrated by Uncle Sam?

 

https://revolver.news/2023/08/operation-popeye-how-the-us-government-turned-the-weather-into-a-weapon-of-war/

 

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