Anonymous ID: f3eded Nov. 23, 2018, 4:27 a.m. No.4003497   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4000371 Mystery infection may be cause of Sen. Jose Peralta death, widow says Notable from #5090.

 

A good Lawfag friend of mine has been fighting the good fight against the swamp for many years. At the height of his effective lobbying work in DC, he came out of his office on the west coast and at first didn't notice two men following him. After a couple of blocks, they closed in and said his name. He turned and said 'yes?' They came on each side of him. One of them sprayed something in his ear. He got sick as hell. His doctor told him it was a very rare antigen –virus/bacteria (can't remember which.) He was strong, healthy as a horse and survived, but barely.

Anonymous ID: f3eded Nov. 23, 2018, 5:33 a.m. No.4003714   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>4003710

>>>4003647

>I meant this explanation:

>White rabbits symbolize the people who lure children into pedophilia. Alice (in Wonderland) represents the child (not necessarily a girl) who follows the white rabbit into a life of sex slavery with their mind manipulated using drugs, hypnotism and other psychologically manipulative techniques. The White rabbits are the bait, or the pied piper figure. And yes, they do use other children in the role of white rabbits.

Anonymous ID: f3eded Nov. 23, 2018, 5:37 a.m. No.4003727   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Yes. Another anon said HOMESCHOOL to fight this shit. >>4003692

"Over a decade ago, and a world away from the 77th Brigade, there were people who already knew that the internet was a potent new tool of influence. They didn’t call what they did “information warfare”, media operations, influence activities, online action, or any of the military vernacular that it would become. Members of the simmering online subcultures that clustered around hacker forums, in IRCs, and on imageboards like 4chan, they might have called it “attention hacking”. Or simply lulz.

 

In 2008, Oprah Winfrey warned her millions of viewers that a known paedophile network “has over 9,000 penises and they’re all raping children.” That was a 4chan Dragon Ball-themed in-joke someone had posted on the show’s messageboard. One year later, Time magazine ran an online poll for its readers to vote on the world’s 100 most influential people, and 4chan used scripts to rig the vote so that its founder – then-21-year-old Christopher Poole, commonly known as “moot” – came first. They built bots and “sockpuppets” – fake social media accounts to make topics trend and appear more popular than they were – and swarmed together to overwhelm their targets. They started to reach through computers to change what people saw, and perhaps even what people thought. They celebrated each of their victories with a deluge of memes.

 

The lulz were quickly seized upon by others for the money. Throughout the 2000s, small PR firms, political communications consultancies, and darknet markets all began to peddle the tactics and techniques pioneered on 4chan. “Digital media-savvy merchants are weaponising their knowledge of commercial social media manipulation services,” a cybersecurity researcher who tracks this kind of illicit commercial activity tells me on condition of anonymity.