Anonymous ID: 296f3d Jan. 2, 2019, 2:30 a.m. No.4562965   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2972

>>4562959

Not from victoria thank fuck and it couldnt happen to a more deserving city to be honest since they pride themselve on being the intellectual and progressive ideas hub and all.

And crime rates have gone down there because cops tell residents to hand over their property to these gangs so its not classed as theft so happy days all round kek

Anonymous ID: 296f3d Jan. 2, 2019, 2:53 a.m. No.4563047   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3057

>>4563035

Mcarthy and Kohn knew that all these acedemic, hollywood, media and political types were commies or at best sympathetic to the commie cause and it was rampant back then as it is now. They were pushing shit up a hill because they were exposing the cabal agenda and they didnt have the guns - meaning the people in high places to clean house.

Anonymous ID: 296f3d Jan. 2, 2019, 3:50 a.m. No.4563287   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>3328

>>4563269

>>4563239

 

Chinese video surveillance network used by the Australian Government

 

They've been used to identify ethnic minorities and political dissidents in China, and were last month banned by the US due to concerns they were creating a "surveillance network" among federal agencies. Now it appears a pair of Chinese video surveillance companies have become entrenched in Australia's government as well.

 

One camera was used to monitor security threats at a sensitive Australian military base.

 

Another hangs outside the front entrance of the Canberra office complex that houses the Australian government's top lawyers, two federal departments focussed on national security and an Australian intelligence agency.

 

And then there are the hundreds of thousands of surveillance cameras in houses, on street corners, in local council offices, at schools and universities, on buses, in shopping centres and thousands of other public spaces across Australia.

 

Almost all of the cameras are made by two Chinese owned companies, Hikvision and Dahua. Both face long-standing accusations of spying on behalf of the Chinese Government.

 

"Having these sorts of cameras in secure facilities just doesn't make any sense," Fergus Hanson, head of the International Cyber Policy Centre at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, said.

 

"It's a real dereliction of duty to have them in military bases.

 

"But even on the street you've got the potential to inadvertently contribute towards Chinese espionage activity by providing real time information about the situation on the ground, all over the world, and in collective terms, quite an important data feed to China."

 

Last month Hikvision and Dahua were banned from US government use via an amendment to a defence spending bill.

 

"Video surveillance and security equipment sold by Chinese companies exposes the US Government to significant vulnerabilities, and my amendment will ensure that China cannot create a video surveillance network within federal agencies," the architect of the amendment, Republican congresswoman Vicky Hartzler, said.

 

Hikvision and Dahua are, respectively, the largest and the second-largest video surveillance companies in the world.

 

Hikvision grew out of China's military surveillance wing and the Government retains a 42 per cent stake in the company.

 

It is making huge strides in the fields of facial and gait recognition software via advances in artificial intelligence.

 

https://mobile.abc.net.au/news/2018-09-12/chinese-video-surveillance-network-used-by-australian-government/10212600?pfmredir=sm

Anonymous ID: 296f3d Jan. 2, 2019, 4:10 a.m. No.4563369   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>4563350

He could well be the so called spanner in the works for POTUS in the run up for 2020 (senate as well) but i think he will fail. He has so much baggage and many ppl remember especially the Ron Paul crowd of the GOP fuckery that went on in 2012.