Anonymous ID: 052dc3 Feb. 1, 2018, 1:50 p.m. No.239071   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9121 >>9129

americandigitalnews com/2018/01/29/g4s-superbowl-security-company/#.WnOLPZM-dQI

 

What could be better for a hardcore football fan than to help plan wireless coverage for the NFL’s Super Bowls, which has come with the opportunity to attend the events?

 

Thanks to the intersection of technology and sports, Verizon’s Brian Mecum, is living and working a dream that others can only hope for at bedtime. But if you think planning for new and upgraded distributed antenna systems (DAS) for NFL venues both new and older is a light-lifting, walk in the park, think again.

 

Soaring fan video demands have called for Mecum to build brainier and brawnier wireless systems.

For those not versed in wireless tech talk, a DAS What’s a DAS? Part of the answer is with a robust distributed antenna system, (DAS), which is a network of spatially separated antenna nodes connected to a common source that provides wireless service within a geographic area or structure. It’s common for venues to have DAS from multiple wireless providers.

Anonymous ID: 052dc3 Feb. 1, 2018, 1:54 p.m. No.239121   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9183

>>239071

stockboardasset com/insights-and-research/false-flag-rigged-2018-super-bowl-dicey-stuff-going/

Opportunity to hard wire the whole stadium with explosives? May be an fiat accompli?

 

The Twin Cities offer plenty of potential Super Bowl false-flag patsies due to the presence of about 25,000 Somalis.

 

BACKGROUND ON G4S THE NEW SUPER BOWL SECURITY COMPANY

G4S was contracted to provide security for the 2012 Olympic Games in London, but it proved a rough experience. Reports said the company was only able to provide a portion of the 10,400 security guards it promised, forcing the UK Ministry of Defense to deploy additional troops to compensate for the shortfall.

 

G4S’ previous claim to fame in the conspiracy theory space was its role as the employer of alleged lone shooter Omar Mateen, who carried out the Orlando Pulse massacre shooting on June 12, 2016. G4S come under scrutiny for “clerical errors” in their security assessment of Mateen as an employee. Mateen worked for G4S for nine years and up to the night of his alleged death at Orlando Pulse. Ultimately, the company was fined$151,400 for use of false psychological forms.

 

Meanwhile, there are work crews on site repairing about 30,000 square feet of metal panels at US Bank Stadium. Listen to the reporter at minute 1:40 in the video below state that the question of who is paying for the repairs is a mystery. Why is that? The stadium is heavily tax-payer funded, and they’ve made other cost disclosures throughout the process.

 

Also note the major use of glass in this stadium, which was finished in summer, 2016.

 

TNN Takeaway: Rancid as hell. Wouldn’t want to be anywhere near the Super Bowl in Minnesota. Be prepared for an event large enough to change the whole equation.