Anonymous ID: fead9c Oct. 8, 2023, 6:52 p.m. No.19697406   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7416

>>19697363

 

clue on C_A stuffs

 

#15603 at 2020-11-27 18:19:21 (UTC+1)

QR Midnight Riders #70: Aboard The Wandering Raider Edition

 

REBELLION DEFENSE - ERIC SCHMIDT Pentagon, Special Operations, Kissinger PT4'

 

https://reportglobalnews.com/2020/05/i-could-solve-most-of-your-problems-eric-schmidts-pentagon-offensive/

 

'I Could Solve Most of Your Problems': Eric Schmidt's Pentagon Offensive

 

At the 2016 World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, Mr. Carter asked Mr. Schmidt to meet. He had a proposal: Could Mr. Schmidt lead the Defense Innovation Board, a civilian advisory group tasked with bringing new technology to the Pentagon?

 

"We were in one of these dumpy hotels, and there he is with his small entourage walking in, and he basically said to me, 'This is what I want to do. You'd be the perfect person to be chairman,'" Mr. Schmidt said.

 

Mr. Schmidt said he turned down the role because he was busy and had no military background. But Mr. Carter argued that Mr. Schmidt's tech expertise was needed, as the U.S. military - which had once been a center of innovation - was falling behind companies like Google and Facebook in software and A.I.

 

Mr. Schmidt ultimately agreed. (Mr. Carter did not respond to requests for comment.)

 

As head of the Defense Innovation Board, Mr. Schmidt began touring military bases, aircraft carriers and plutonium strongholds. The trips, which took Mr. Schmidt to about 100 bases in places like Fayetteville, N.C., and Osan, South Korea, were a distinct break from his well-heeled life in Silicon Valley.

 

"You want to see these things," Mr. Schmidt said. "I got the nuclear missile tour. Things that are hard. I got a tour of Cheyenne Mountain so I could understand what their reality was."

 

One of the first trips was to Tampa to visit General Thomas, who is known as Tony, where Mr. Schmidt saw maps and live video feeds displayed on massive screens. "Eric's observation was that a huge part of what the military does is it sits and watches," said Josh Marcuse, the then executive director of the Defense Innovation Board who was on the trip.

 

The visits made tangible what Mr. Carter had told Mr. Schmidt about how the military was lagging in technology. Mr. Schmidt soon made suggestions to change that.

 

Some of his ideas were impractical. Eric Rosenbach, then the chief of staff to Mr. Carter, recalled Mr. Schmidt once telling him that the Pentagon would be better off if it hired no one but engineers for a year.

 

Others were useful. At an Air Force facility in Qatar in 2016, Mr. Schmidt visited officers who scheduled flight paths for the tankers that refueled planes. They used a white board and dry-erase markers to set the schedule, taking eight hours to complete the task.

 

Mr. Schmidt said he recalled thinking, "Really? This is how you run the air war?" Afterward, he and others at the Defense Department worked with the tech company Pivotal to ship software to the officers.

Anonymous ID: fead9c Oct. 8, 2023, 6:54 p.m. No.19697416   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>19697406

 

#18692 at 2020-12-05 13:19:13 (UTC+1)

QR Midnight Riders #85: Word is Sidney Powell was at Gitmo The Camo Edition

 

>>18691

 

So it looks like the globalists are using the pandemic not just to fugg with our elections, but to establish world wide laws meant to 'protect' the WW population. And Georgetown University is helping. Reminder: Georgetown has received over $420 Million dollars from foreign countries since 2013; the monies are self reported so there could be moar. +$6.5 Million from China, +$9.9 Million from England, +$356 Million from Qatar.