Anonymous ID: 9519c7 Aug. 31, 2018, 11:02 p.m. No.2829260   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9285 >>9336

>>2827378 (pb)

Where humble Christianity goes, there follows shelter, food, clothing, safety, liberation. Where Christianity has not entered or has been destroyed or perverted, there follows exposure, famine, nakedness, death, bondage. SA does nothing but prove this once again. My heart is broken tonight.

Anonymous ID: 9519c7 Aug. 31, 2018, 11:47 p.m. No.2829576   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Regarding Surveillance and the internet

 

Richard Henry Bolt, PhD

 

Went to Germany on honeymoon, met scientists, extended his stay 10 months to learn German and study acoustics.

 

German scientists at the time (1933) were preoccupied with trying to convince the world that Germany was not responsible for the prolonged nature of WWI (Q Trip Code book: THE BAD WAR). I wonder if Bolt was exposed to knowledge of the Globalist plan at the time.

 

In 1948, with Leo Beranek and Robert Newman (both fellows at MIT) started an acoustical consulting firm, BBN.

 

Analyzed Dictabelt Evidence of the JFK assassination AND the missing 18.5 minutes from the Nixon tapes.

 

Then BBN went on to build the first routers that enabled ARPANET to go online.

 

With all the Q connections between surveillance:

 

https://www.nsa.gov/news-features/press-room/statements/2017-04-28-702-statement.shtml

 

The Illuminati, Globalism, and the generating of chaos in favor of the NWO, what was the DOD’s true purpose in creating the internet?

 

In a model not dissimilar to C_A’s Lifelog project giving way to the “civilian” Facebook, ARPANET was deemed to have grown beyond the DOD’s needs and NSFNET (National Science Foundation) was given control of “civilian nodes.”

 

My lame and humble impressions: The internet feels like yet another arm of the government given an innocuous civvy veneer. 

Smarter people than I, go ahead and destroy my naïveté. I'm sure you all dug this up years ago.

 

Sauce:

 

https://www.livescience.com/42604-who-invented-the-internet.html

 

http://www.computerhistory.org/internethistory/1960s/

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BBN_Technologies

 

https://www.darpa.mil/about-us/timeline/arpanet