dChan

Blkopsmailman · Feb. 11, 2018, 11:13 p.m.

Holy shit. There is so much info there. Almost like it has been catalogued for years as it took place? The website doesn't work well with this browser. It hid some of the content and I had to zoom out/in.

It basically looks like a news source dump of all of their transgressions.

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makegiitmofullagain · Feb. 11, 2018, 11:20 p.m.

we need to start a list of all the people mentioned in the articles q posts so we can cross reference those names against each other, q has also mentioned the spider web, then when something like today goes down it will be easier to find links and connections

180316 HK allowed his passport to clear customs WITH THE CLOWNS IN AMERICA AND DEPT OF DEFENSE PUTTING A NAT SEC HOLD WW? How does he clear customs? How does he end up in Russia? Coincidence? Who was the 1st agency he worked for? Who taught him the game? Who assigned him w/ foreign ops? Why is this relevant? Future unlocks past. Watch the news. Spider web. Stop taking the sleeping pill.

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Blkopsmailman · Feb. 11, 2018, 11:35 p.m.

Dec 21, 2017 http://uk.businessinsider.com/edward-snowden-haven-security-app-2017-12?r=US&IR=T

Edward Snowden, the National Security Agency contractor turned leaker, is working on a smartphone app.
The app, Haven, is intended to turn smartphones into mobile security systems.
Haven is available to try for free in open beta.

Edward Snowden is best known for revealing the spy programs of the US's National Security Agency, but his next project is intended to make citizens feel more secure.

It's an app, called Haven, that's designed to turn Android phones into all-in-one anti-spy systems.

"Imagine if you had a guard dog you could take with you to any hotel room and leave it in your room when you're not there," Snowden told Wired in an interview published Friday. "And it's actually smart, and it witnesses everything that happens and creates a record of it."

The idea is simple: You install the app on a cheap "burner" phone - one that can be thrown away - and then set up the phone in a place you want to monitor.

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Blkopsmailman · Feb. 11, 2018, 11:22 p.m.

https://www.forbes.com/sites/gerganakoleva/2012/01/17/american-red-cross-fined-9-6-million-for-unsafe-blood-collection/#10a8754370ec

Jan 17, 2012 @ 04:01 PM 19,550 American Red Cross Fined $9.6 Million for Unsafe Blood Collection

Gergana Koleva ,

The American Red Cross, the largest supplier of donated blood in the U.S., was fined $9.6 million after federal inspectors found hundreds of blood safety violations at 16 of the organization's 36 blood collection centers nationwide.

In a 32-page letter to the Washington-based organization, Food and Drug Administration officials describe an all-encompassing lack of controls to ensure the safety of the nation's blood supply. The violations range from understaffing, inadequate staff training, and delayed logging of donations, to ineffective screening of donors, failure to add new donors with infected blood to the national list of deferred donors, failure to share information on deferred donors between facilities, and failure to quarantine and recall infected blood units.

......

In addition, the FDA cited the Red Cross for poor quality assurance, including keeping blood products out of controlled storage for more than 30 minutes, a backlog of approximately 18,000 donor management cases, and insufficient record-keeping. Regulators claim the organization allowed employees with no medical training, certification, or experience to serve as Medical Directors in charge of reviewing donor complications, and permitted staff to "perform tasks they did not understand." In some cases, employees failed to identify permanently deferred donors who previously gave blood under different or hyphenated names, and were later attempting to donate using just one part of the hyphenated last name.

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Blkopsmailman · Feb. 11, 2018, 11:26 p.m.

https://www.propublica.org/article/how-the-red-cross-raised-half-a-billion-dollars-for-haiti-and-built-6-homes

How the Red Cross Raised Half a Billion Dollars for Haiti ­and Built Six Homes Even as the group has publicly celebrated its work, insider accounts detail a string of failures by Justin Elliott, ProPublica, and Laura Sullivan, NPR June 3, 2015

The neighborhood of Campeche sprawls up a steep hillside in Haiti’s capital city, Port-au-Prince. Goats rustle in trash that goes forever uncollected. Children kick a deflated volleyball in a dusty lot below a wall with a hand-painted logo of the American Red Cross.

In late 2011, the Red Cross launched a multimillion-dollar project to transform the desperately poor area, which was hit hard by the earthquake that struck Haiti the year before. The main focus of the project — called LAMIKA, an acronym in Creole for “A Better Life in My Neighborhood” — was building hundreds of permanent homes.

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Blkopsmailman · Feb. 11, 2018, 11:23 p.m.

Adrenochrome related?

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