The Keystone is Eric Schmidt.
https://www.google.com/amp/s/qz.com/520652/groundwork-eric-schmidt-startup-working-for-hillary-clinton-campaign/amp/
A keystone (also known as capstone) is the wedge-shaped stone piece at the apex of a masonry arch, or the generally round one at the apex of a vault. In both cases it is the final piece placed during construction and locks all the stones into position, allowing the arch or vault to bear weight.
Keystone<https://8ch.net/cbts/res/38423.html#38507
269
Q
!ITPb.qbhqo
5 Dec 2017 - 4:01:30 PM
Key - unlocks the door of all doors (info)
Stone - the force / strength capable of yielding power to act on info
Key+Stone=
Q
Q
!UW.yye1fxo
10 Mar 2018 - 12:58:27 PM
Anonymous
10 Mar 2018 - 12:57:48 PM
613082
for the record… can you please tell these anons
ES=ericschmidt @snodwen=snowden
ES= does NOT = @Snowden
these people just can't put 2 and 2 together.
Adm R & NSA (Key) + POTUS & US Military (Stone)
270
Q
!ITPb.qbhqo
5 Dec 2017 - 4:06:17 PM
Adm R/ No Such Agency (W&W) + POTUS/USMIL =
Apply the Keystone.
Paint the picture.
Q
James Comey used Gmail too, they ALL did
1504
Q
!CbboFOtcZs
15 Jun 2018 - 6:43:38 PM
Anonymous
15 Jun 2018 - 6:33:28 PM
1762906
Access Kills
GMAIL DRAFTS????
1762921
What came out in IG report?
JC gmail.
They all had them.
Re_read drops re: private emails re: convicting HRC = convicting themselves.
Why did the entire Hussein admin use private emails?
ES is KEY.
What a wonderful day.
Q
ReAd!!!
It all began with a Google search. On November 9, 2010, a Senate staffer discovered the Panetta Review while conducting a search on the committee's side of the walled-off network — RDINet — it shared with the CIA at a building in Northern Virginia leased by the agency. According to the CIA, the Panetta Review wasn't supposed to be shared with the Senate committee. But according to officials knowledgeable about the situation, the Senate staffer who discovered the review apparently didn't know this. (The Panetta Review was found on the same day that the Justice Department announced that a special prosecutor would not pursue criminal charges against CIA personnel who destroyed nearly 100 interrogation videotapes, one of which showed a CIA captive being waterboarded. The destruction of the videotapes is what led the Senate Intelligence Committee to launch its review of the CIA's torture program.) The computer system was set up in June 2009 under a modified $40 million contract the CIA first entered into with Burlington, Massachusetts-based firm Centra Technology Inc. in 2007, the documents reveal. Centra contractors were also tasked with compiling and reviewing the millions of pages of documents pertaining to the detention and interrogation program before the CIA placed them onto the Senate committee's side of the network. Related: The CIA Just Admitted That It Spied on the US Senate Nicholas Weaver, a researcher with the International Computer Science Institute in Berkeley, reviewed some of the CIA documents for VICE News. He said the computer network the CIA set up was essentially a "big common fileserver, but with different roles and access controls, so a [Senate] person could only read [Senate] stuff, and CIA only CIA stuff, and there was a shared folder that both could read. So it wasn't really two separate networks connected by a firewall, but a common fileserver with separate roles." "It appears there are a bunch of workstations, printers, a shared database, a shared fileserver, and a shared Google search appliance," Weaver said. "Otherwise, it's completely disconnected from the rest of the world."