Anonymous ID: d8a997 March 5, 2019, 3:43 p.m. No.5526743   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7262

>>5526682 pb

I had to get involved, I was in the middle of it (collecting notes, not aware quiet baker had signed on). I stay out of stuff too but sometimes you can't. It's all good, all works out in the end. Good comms help, tho. Godspeed, friend. Signing off now.

Anonymous ID: d8a997 March 5, 2019, 4:02 p.m. No.5527133   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>7161 >>7206 >>7353 >>7385 >>7431

>>5525817

saw this posted moar than once but did it ever make notable?

repost from earlier anons >>5515966, >>5525043

 

Controversial NSA phone data collection program shut down, aide says

 

Program that analyzed Americans' calls and texts hasn't been used in six months, according to a senior Republican congressional aide.

 

The National Security Agency has quietly discontinued a controversial program put in place after the September 11 terrorist attacks that collected and analyzed millions of Americans' domestic calls and texts, according to a senior Republican congressional aide.

 

The NSA hasn't used the system in months, and the Trump administration might not seek to renew its legal authority, Luke Murray, the national security advisor for House minority leader Kevin McCarty (R-Calif.), said in a podcast Saturday.

 

Under a controversial national security policy put in place by the Patriot Act in 2001, the NSA had been collecting large amounts of metadata, the digital information that accompanies electronic communications. That information included what phone numbers were on the call, when the call was placed and how long it lasted, which was then saved in a database.

 

Former NSA contractor Edward Snowden intensified already heated debate over the Patriot Act programs in 2013 when he leaked documents detailing the ways in which the secretive US government agency was collecting data. A new system put in place by Congress in 2015 required federal agencies to seek a court order on a case-by-case basis to obtain call data from telephone companies.

 

The USA Freedom Act of 2015, legislation designed to curtail the federal government's sweeping surveillance of millions of Americans' phone records, is set to expire at the end of year, if the Trump administration doesn't ask Congress to renew its authority to continue the program.

…………….

 

https://www.cnet.com/news/controversial-nsa-phone-data-collection-program-shut-down-aide-says/#ftag=COS-05-10aaa0j

Anonymous ID: d8a997 March 5, 2019, 4:06 p.m. No.5527219   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5527180

Coincidence, just tapped in to post the reply just above….this new MSM attack is pretty significant. I haven't collected all the articles yet, but there are a bunch. MSNBC got special treatment because of the viciousness of Ben Collin's attach in a TV interview. Left me reeling.

Anonymous ID: d8a997 March 5, 2019, 4:11 p.m. No.5527315   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5527111

I posted on the MSNBC interview with Ben Collins last bread, if you are interested.

 

>>5526186 (You) , >>5526275 (You) New Q Book and call to dig

Good to have this link, as well, I collect them for a report.

 

Trying to get a dig going, really important!

 

>https://www.nbcnews.com/nightly-news/video/amazon-under-fire-as-qanon-book-climbs-best-seller-list-1452665411522

Anonymous ID: d8a997 March 5, 2019, 4:18 p.m. No.5527454   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>5526954

>>5527392

>>5527396

MSM likes to juxtapose Q group with other "conspiracy" groups, to suggest we are all the same. But many reporters have literally equated us with Pizzagate, have SAID we're the same, or w're the inheritors, or stuff like that. Outright falsehoods.