Anonymous ID: c5f3ab May 29, 2020, 10:24 p.m. No.9372990   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9372794 lb

Monitor cell phone signals and pinpoint people and their movements from place to place

Tap into all cellphone traffic.

Watch high res video and direct cops to perps who think they are lost in the crowd.

Detect arson while fire is still tiny.

Anonymous ID: c5f3ab May 29, 2020, 10:32 p.m. No.9373112   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3215

Give me a head with hair, long beautiful hair

Shining, gleaming, streaming, flaxen, waxen

Give me down to there, hair, shoulder length or longer

Here baby, there, momma, everywhere, daddy, daddy

Hair, flow it, show it

Long as God can grow it, my hair

Anonymous ID: c5f3ab May 29, 2020, 10:50 p.m. No.9373345   🗄️.is 🔗kun

A reminder… over the next hour or so

The Gannett syndicated feed comes out at about 2am Eastern, 11pm Pacific.

Since the purpose of the feed is to PUBLISH stories,

You can pick it up from a major MSM source within an hour or so later. Gannett-owned USA Today might be the purest source, but any of the big ones will do.

 

Daily Talking Points

6am GMT = 2am Eastern = 11pm Pacific

 

https://twitter.com/USATODAY

 

http://rssfeeds.usatoday.com/usatoday-NewsTopStories

 

Or maybe CNN is the key source?

 

https://www.apptools.com/phptools/xml/rssclient.php?feed=cnn

 

And BBC for across the pond…

 

https://www.apptools.com/phptools/xml/rssclient.php?feed=bbc

 

Patriots Talking Points Feed

This feed can come out at any time throughout the day.

Go to Twitter and watch@realDonaldTrump

When he tweets ALL IN CAPITAL LETTERS

That is a talking point.

Sometimes it has an obvious hashtag

And other times you need to wing it

Keep an eye on how things trend on Twitter

If your choice of hashtag is not as popular as another,

The tweet the message again with the trending hash tags.

 

And don't forget to feed other social media

If everybody posts a few messages every day

Then the hashtag will trend high and displace the MSM narrative.

Anonymous ID: c5f3ab May 29, 2020, 10:53 p.m. No.9373378   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3455

Military Intel is clearly a core part of the plan

Which has been underway for 20 years or more

How do they relate to civilian ABC agencies?

 

Military-Intelligence Convergence and the Law of the Title 10/Title 50 Debate

 

https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1945392

Anonymous ID: c5f3ab May 29, 2020, 11:02 p.m. No.9373482   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9373392

>>9373380

 

Kellie is the sister of Officer Tou Thao

Who is Hmong from Laos

Many of them are traditional pagans, not witches or wiccans

In other words their religion is southeast Asian

Not connected with the pagan religion of England and Europe.

Definitely very far removed from Freemasonry.

 

But you never know because the Cabal recruits all sorts.

Protestant ministers, devout Catholics, they all bow to the Lord of the White Fire (Invisible Light)

Anonymous ID: c5f3ab May 29, 2020, 11:08 p.m. No.9373539   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>9373421

 

Words of wisdom

This Anon has been paying attention

And doing his homework

Because nobody can really wake up in the Great Awakening

Unless they have skin in the game

And that requires sleepless nights of digging

Unable to sleep as revelation after revelation unfolds

And you realize it was all right in front of our faces all the time

But we let ourselvesbe hypnotisedby trivial nonsense.

Anonymous ID: c5f3ab May 29, 2020, 11:12 p.m. No.9373594   🗄️.is 🔗kun

The 6 C’s Process

To make the process simple to remember, I’ve broken the process into six steps named the 6 C’s: Clarify, Contemplate, Critique, Counter, Consequence and Conclusion. I’d recommend writing through the steps when starting out as it allows you to see and think about the issue. As you become more proficient, the process can be done mentally but there’s always a danger of getting distracted or going off on irrelevant tangents. The first part will explain the process while the second section will illustrate a personal example from my past.

 

  1. CLARIFY THE ISSUE

Confusion on a topic is often due to a lack of focus on what the issue is fundamentally about. Our first response to something is an automatic reaction, and it’s vital to recognise it for what it is: an impulse. To clarify understanding, we need to specify the one thing that’s underlying an issue. Don’t get distracted by extraneous noise and drama, focus on the main topic.

 

  1. CONTEMPLATE ASSUMPTIONS

Do you have any pre-conceived assumptions about the issue that’s clouding your judgement? Often, we have a subconscious bias that may dictate how we react. What might that be? Can you work it out and consider it before going further? Is it a fear, a memory, a preference, an alliance? Recognise and put it aside for now as it’s clouding your judgement.

 

  1. CRITIQUE THE EVIDENCE

Is there any tangible proof of the issue you’re considering or is it an opinion or hearsay? If the issue is intangible, like an idea, is there historical evidence of its application? Are there arguments from earlier thinkers on the subject? Can you gather data to support your hypothesis?

 

  1. COUNTER

Are there counter-arguments? Can you plan a counter-argument? Is your current opinion rational or wishful thinking? If a friend had your current opinion, how would you talk them out of it? Is there evidence to disprove your hypothesis?

 

  1. CONSEQUENCES?

Consequences are the ultimate result to consider any decision. Often, the long-term impact isn’t immediately clear. Will your words have perceptual consequences? Will consequences be immediate or latent; local or global; personal or to other people; small or large; simple or have a potential domino effect? Nothing exists in isolation. Every action has an inevitable reaction. Think about what that is.

 

  1. CONCLUSION

Is the conclusion right or wrong; good or bad; probable or improbable; possible or impossible; worth it or not?

 

Anyone can learn to think like Socrates. All you need to do is repeat the 6 C’s on as many ideas or issues as possible until it becomes a habit. I suggest writing through the process for a while to stop becoming distracted or confused. Eventually, the process becomes natural and instinctive. With practice, you’ll be ripping through problems like the greatest minds throughout history.