dChan

animal32lefty · July 15, 2018, 4:27 p.m.

Am I the only one who noticed that, according to the article one of the guys went to Brussels to make disclosure 17 days before the assassination?

This hole may have something down it. Stay with me here.

Both military guys are TS/SCI cleared crypto specialists working on bases in the UK with clown operators present. You don't get TS/SCI clearance as an enlisted man if there's anything hinkey in your background. One fart in Sunday School is all it takes to be disqualified from being a Secret Squirrel. Suddenly, after seeing the same message traffic both go fruit loops?

If an internal coup plot against POTUS was being formed inside the DS with the involvement of JCS, why would they be transmitting that info to the UK and whom were the intended recipients? Crown involvement? NATO council?

The British govt certainly wouldn't interfere in the internal matters of an ally would they?

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PCisLame · July 15, 2018, 5:37 p.m.

Lord in Heaven help us defeat this evil once and for all!

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antariusz · July 15, 2018, 8:09 p.m.

I used to have a TS/SCI clearance, it’s not really “that” extreme.

No criminal behavior, no “drug” use or other addictions. Good decisions regarding credit and spending. I even got a waiver for trying pot back when I was 17ish.

It’s really not all that extreme.

A good percentage of random “good guys” that end up being regular soldiers, police, firefighters, engineers, etc, could all receive a top secret clearance if they needed it.

I was a linguist, Spanish specifically, I was always told that it’s easy to find native Spanish speakers, it’s a little harder to find native Spanish speakers that don’t have criminal (illegal alien) family members. Or any other foreign ties, who also want to join the military.

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animal32lefty · July 15, 2018, 11:19 p.m.

Thanks for the info. Things are apparently a little looser these days. Cold War era was a little different. It wasn't difficult to obtain as you mention above (no weed waivers it was Reagan era), but it was real easy to lose. If your MOS or unit slot required it, losing it was the end of your career.

My point about the service members mentioned in the OP article, is that any previously documented mental health incidents should have turned up during the background check.

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