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| FAKE cellphone towers; spying on you | |
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| Tweet Topic Started: Sep 4 2014, 11:12 AM (2,297 Views) | |
| t3ragtop | Sep 8 2014, 04:00 PM Post #31 |
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Turbo3 and Twincam Tweaker
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here's a synapsis of a discussion held on 'coast2coast' radio last night. ![]() Cell Phone Interception: First hour guest, private investigator Roger Tolces , commented on the discovery of mysterious fake cell towers. The towers were detected by people using the CryptoPhone 500, which can issue notifications to users when their calls are not encrypted (normal mobile calls are encrypted by cell towers). Tolces finds it more likely that if law enforcement is behind the interception of calls, they would not use a stationary location, but rather a van that could be placed in an area of interest. If your calls are being intercepted, the record of them won't show up on your bill, he revealed. |
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| Bad Bent | Sep 9 2014, 02:09 AM Post #32 |
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Facetious Educated Donkey
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We watched an hour long Area 51 special a few years back. In the end, the fellow they interviewed for most of the hour said, and I quote: "Our best source of knowledge is speculation."
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| myredvert | Sep 9 2014, 02:48 AM Post #33 |
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myredvert
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That applies exactly to those things that may or may not be hidden in hangars or 10 stories underground or whatever and have been kept amazingly secret for many years, but it doesn't apply at all to very simple things that are commonly known in the industry, like runway and overrun orientation and lengths. The runways can easily be identified and measured on Google maps, as well as seen from the air when flying at altitude near the edges of the restricted airspace, and that has been fairly well documented quite a bit over the years. That type of stuff is anything but speculation. I have an interest in the new military aircraft projects, so I do allow myself a little speculation now and then for fun, but also believe I know squat until those aircraft projects are made "public." One of the coolest "recent" things are the reports of our newest, hypersonic aircraft, and there have been several satellite images that captured contrails that were tracked over extraordinary distances and speeds. |
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| Old Man | Sep 9 2014, 09:19 AM Post #34 |
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We have a tower that has nothing on it in our little town. City planning/building department approved building the tower. Its completed ready to rent out space and put in use. Everyone who lives close to "the tower" put on their tinfoil hats and protested it to the city council. City council intimidated the planning/building department and they will not issue a 'completed, ready for use' permit----so tinfoil hats are happy with their almost useless non-reception on their cell phones cause they won the 'battle'. Meanwhile the company who built the 'tower' sued the city. City won. Ugly tower in the edge of town still there. big business pissed. courts confused. Planning department on the verge of getting fired. 1/2 of city council replaced at last election. City lawyer flush with monies, city broke. tinfoil hats still big, dumb and happy.-----"Ghost Tower" a joke. |
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| Freeman | Sep 9 2014, 11:07 AM Post #35 |
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The Family Man
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Pretty crumby, old man. It sucks that private interests over rules the greater good. But it's like that everywhere. |
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| Cobb | Sep 9 2014, 07:24 PM Post #36 |
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BANNED
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Coast to Coast am? Art Bell? Oh yeah, fun stuff. Had a guy call in about the second MIR space station, his phone cut off mid conversation. Another guy keeps talking about a kill-shot and how you should live under ground in a lava tube and have a years supply food. I use to think all of that was crap, but watched the Mormon station on cable. They too preach to have a year supply food. Makes me think twice.
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| Freeman | Sep 10 2014, 05:48 AM Post #37 |
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The Family Man
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Not gonna lie, I was very close to a Mormon family when I was a child. I was friends with their children and they would invite me over to play paint ball and stuff. Anyway, they had a bomb shelter under ground. A little extreme in my book. |
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| Old Man | Sep 10 2014, 09:37 AM Post #38 |
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When I was growing up in my teens everyone had a "bomb shelter" if they could afford one. If they didn't have the money or place for one they were going to die VERY SOON.
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| Freeman | Sep 10 2014, 09:57 AM Post #39 |
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The Family Man
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This was after 9/11 and a lot of people were terrified. |
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| Old Man | Sep 10 2014, 10:36 AM Post #40 |
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This was after Hiroshima / Nagasaki and most people in this country was thankful and at the same time wanting to 'be prepared' |
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| Bad Bent | Sep 10 2014, 10:38 AM Post #41 |
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Facetious Educated Donkey
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No need to lie. Mormons are human beings also. The live among us. Oh, so 'be prepared' is a possible root of the word paranoia. The Cold War. I lived in Costa Mesa, California, 50 miles south of Los Angeles (obvious ground zero). We figured we might see a flash and then we would be dead. No worries. I live in Moscow, Idaho. We will hear about any bomb dropping, if it's Seattle we are going to get fall out. Then we will have to deal with the consequences. I'm not worth wasting the price of a bomb on. "So I got that goin' for me, which is nice." - Carl."Blessed are the meek: for they shall inherit the earth." Matthew 5:5 But if the earth is destroyed the meek won't have anything to inherit.
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| Freeman | Sep 10 2014, 11:02 AM Post #42 |
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The Family Man
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That's just something I picked up and have been saying lately. "not gonna lie" Most of the Mormons I know are just normal people. I presume they get the negative connotation (I see a lot of Mormon slander) from the hysterical extremists within their 'group'. No different than any group of people I would guess. |
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| Bad Bent | Sep 10 2014, 12:02 PM Post #43 |
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Facetious Educated Donkey
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True. The rest of the "negative connotation" comes from learning about their history of practicing polygamy, popping out a lot of I remember an engineer I worked with years ago. Mormon. He loved white shirts and bow ties. Even polka dot ties. The young Mormons still try to convince me that I'm wrong because they are right. I do see more young ladies as missionaries.
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| Cubey | Sep 10 2014, 12:41 PM Post #44 |
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Well, then there's also the fact that the founder of moronism was a arrested and/or tried and/or convicted for a long list of crimes: Illegal banking, February 1837 Conspiracy to murder Newell, June 1837 Banking fraud, 1838 Threats to Judge Adam Black, August 1838 Missouri treason case, November 1838–39 Arrest for fleeing Missouri, 1841 Conspiracy to murder Governor Boggs, 1842–43 Missouri treason case, June 1843 Perjury, fornication and polygamy, May 1844 Inciting a riot destroying the Nauvoo Expositor, June 1844 Treason against Illinois, June 1844 Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Smith_and_the_criminal_justice_system He was lynched while awaiting trial for the Illinois treason case: "He was killed while jailed in Carthage, Illinois, on charges relating to his ordering the destruction of facilities producing the Nauvoo Expositor, a newspaper whose first and only edition claimed Smith was practicing polygamy and that he intended to set himself up as a theocratic king." Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_of_Joseph_Smith The guy was a psycho, frankly. He ran around the country trying to kill anyone who didn't agree with his claimed prophecies. |
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| Freeman | Sep 10 2014, 12:41 PM Post #45 |
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The Family Man
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Man, these are the Mormons giving them all a bad name. My family 'sheltered' several Mormons on their mission trips. They were sweet guys and they road around on bikes 'spreading the word' or what have you. I don't believe they were pushing their views on anyone. Then again, religion is over bearing in general. I'm not sure where your grasp on the Mormon religion is stemming from, but it could be different than mine. One wife, respect, following 'x' religious beliefs are the only way into heaven, etc were staples of the religion that I saw. Did not seem any crazier than any religion I had seen before or since. EDIT: I see where you guys are coming from. I suppose the Mormons I grew up with were a 'different' religion. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brigham_Young That is whom they are based off of. I guess it is like southern Baptist and the other 9,000 Christianity derivatives. Woopsie? Edited by Freeman, Sep 10 2014, 12:44 PM.
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Oh, so 'be prepared' is a possible root of the word paranoia.
if it's Seattle we are going to get fall out.
Then we will have to deal with the consequences.
The young Mormons still try to convince me that I'm wrong because they are right. I do see more young ladies as missionaries.
9:26 AM Jul 11