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Thread: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

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    Australia Avalon Member bluestflame's Avatar
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    Default National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    http://wemustknow.net/2010/12/nation...ns-of-the-u-s/

    "A lawsuit filed against the U.S. National Security Agency reveals a frightening array of technologies and programs designed to keep tabs on individuals.
    .

    John St Clair Akwei
    vs
    National Security Agency
    Ft George G. Meade, MD, USA
    (Civil Action 92-0449)
    .

    The following document comprises evidence for a lawsuit filed at the U.S. Courthouse in Washington, DC, by John St Clair Akwei against the National Security Agency, Ft George G. Meade, Maryland (Civil Action 92-0449), constitutes his knowledge of the NSA’s structure, national security activities proprietary technologies and covert operations to monitor individual citizens Ed. "

    "Signals Intelligence (SICINT)
    The Signals Intelligence mission of the NSA has evolved into a program of decoding EMF waves in the environment for wirelessly tapping into computers and track persons with the electrical currents in their bodies. Signals Intelligence is based on fact that everything in the environment with an electric current in it has a magnetic flux around it which gives off EMF waves.

    The NSA/DoD [Department of Defense] developed proprietary advanced digital equipment which can remotely analyze all objects whether manmade or organic, that have electrical activity. "

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    Default Re: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    http://www.telegraph.co.uk/science/8...a-machine.html

    "We're in the Institute for Cognitive Neuroscience, in Queen Square in London, the nerve centre – if you will – of British brain research. Prof Haggard is demonstrating "transcranial magnetic stimulation", a technique that uses magnetic coils to affect one's brain, and then to control the body. One of his research assistants, Christina Fuentes, is holding a loop-shaped paddle next to his head, moving it fractionally. "If we get it right, it might cause something." She presses a switch, and the coil activates with a click. Prof Haggard's hand twitches. "It's not me doing that," he assures me, "it's her."

    The machinery can't force Prof Haggard to do anything really complicated – "You can't make me sign my name," he says, almost ruefully – but at one point, Christina is able to waggle his index finger slightly, like a schoolmaster. It's very fine control, a part of the brain specifically in command of a part of the body. "There's quite a detailed map of the brain's wiring to the body that you can build," he tells me.

    I watch as Christina controls Prof Haggard's fingers like a marionette. The mechanical nature of it is unsettling. A graph on a screen shows his muscle activity plotted by time; 20 milliseconds after she clicks the button, it depicts an elegant leap and drop, like a heartbeat on an ECG. That 20 milliseconds is how long it takes for the signal to travel down his nerves. "The conduction time would be less from my jaw muscles, more from my leg muscles," he says. And as many of us will recognise, the process gets less effective as we age: "As I get older, the curve will move slowly to the right on the graph."

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    Default Re: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    People as individuals are rarely evil. But put them in a 3 letter agency and they are capable of anything. Fill them with political or religious ideology and there is little hope.

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    Default Covert ops of National Security agency

    an astonishing array of technologies to influence us

    A lawsuit filed against the U.S. National Security Agency reveals a frightening array of technologies and programs designed to keep tabs on individuals.
    .

    John St Clair Akwei
    vs
    National Security Agency
    Ft George G. Meade, MD, USA
    (Civil Action 92-0449)
    .

    The following document comprises evidence for a lawsuit filed at the U.S. Courthouse in Washington, DC, by John St Clair Akwei against the National Security Agency, Ft George G. Meade, Maryland (Civil Action 92-0449), constitutes his knowledge of the NSA’s structure, national security activities proprietary technologies and covert operations to monitor individual citizens Ed

    http://wemustknow.net/2010/12/nation...ns-of-the-u-s/

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    Default Re: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    http://www.raven1.net/

    "Microwave Ray Gun Controls Crowds with Noise
    By DAVID HAMBLING

    July 4, 2008

    A US company claims it is ready to build a microwave ray gun able to beam sounds directly into people's heads.

    The device dubbed MEDUSA (Mob Excess Deterrent Using Silent Audio) exploits the microwave audio effect, in which short microwave pulses rapidly heat tissue, causing a shockwave inside the skull that can be detected by the ears. A series of pulses can be transmitted to produce recognisable sounds.

    The device is aimed for military or crowd-control applications, but may have other uses.

    Lev Sadovnik of the Sierra Nevada Corporation in the US is working on the system, having started work on a US navy research contract. The navy's report states that the effect was shown to be effective.

    Scarecrow Beam?

    MEDUSA involves a microwave auditory effect "loud" enough to cause discomfort or even incapacitation. Sadovnik says that normal audio safety limits do not apply since the sound does not enter through the eardrums.

    "The repel effect is a combination of loudness and the irritation factor," he says. "You can't block it out."

    Sadovnik says the device will work thanks to a new reconfigurable antenna developed by colleague Vladimir Manasson. It steers the beam electronically, making it possible to flip from a broad to a narrow beam, or aim at multiple targets simultaneously.

    Sadovnik says the technology could have non-military applications. Birds seem to be highly sensitive to microwave audio, he says, so it might be used to scare away unwanted flocks.

    Sadovnik has also experimented with transmitting microwave audio to people with outer ear problems that impair their normal hearing.

    Brain Damage Risk

    James Lin of the Electrical and Computer Engineering Department at the University of Illinois in Chicago says that MEDUSA is feasible in principle.

    He has carried out his own work on the technique, and was even approached by the music industry about using microwave audio to enhance sound systems, he told New Scientist.

    "But is it going to be possible at the power levels necessary?" he asks. Previous microwave audio tests involved very "quiet" sounds that were hard to hear, a high-power system would mean much more powerful and potentially hazardous shockwaves.

    "I would worry about what other health effects it is having," says Lin. "You might see neural damage."

    Sierra Nevada says that a demonstration version could be built in a year, with a transportable system following within 18 months. They are currently seeking funding for the work from the US Department of Defence. "

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    Default Re: Covert ops of National Security agency

    http://www.camero-tech.com/xaver_vid.html

    through wall radar , portable
    Xaver 800

    " * Code name EPIC through wall coordination/balance disruptor weapon may become technology #6, once it has been announced as having been successfully demonstrated. (Article, dated May 21, 2007)

    Electronic harassment targets have reported suddenly having their balance and coordination disrupted.

    The CLASSIFIED equipment, coming into wider use in the 1980s, operates at a much more invasive performance level. Our group as yet does not have solid information as to how these classified devices work. "

    http://www.raven1.net/epicweapon.txt

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    Default Re: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    Interesting stuff, BUT, as I understand it, according to Bill Cooper, The NSA is not answerable to ANY law that doesn't specifically state in the text of that law that it applies to the NSA, decree of the President of the United States. A President 'could' change that over night but I wonder what would happen the President on the way to sign the order?
    ..................................................my first language is TYPO..............................................

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    Default Re: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    http://www.hightech-edge.com/darpa-t...nication/4208/

    "Soldiers of the future will communicate using the power of the mind...

    The Pentagon’s Defense Advance Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is currently developing technology that will allow the soldiers of the future to communicate via telepathic mind signals.

    The aim is to “allow user-to-user communication on the battlefield without the use of vocalized speech through analysis of neural signals.”

    The agency plan to invest $4 million of its budget for next year into the startup program called Silent Talk."

    "Before being vocalized, speech exists as word-specific neural signals in the brain. Researchers hope to develop a device able to detect these signals, analyze them, and transmit a translation to an intended interlocutor.

    DARPA plan to use Electroencephalography (EEG) sensors to read the brainwaves, a technique also being tested in a project to develop mind-reading binoculars that alert soldiers to threats faster the conscious mind can process them.

    The Silent Talk project has three major goals: First, try to map a person’s EEG patterns to his or her individual words; then, see if those patterns can be generalized — if everyone has similar patterns; last, “construct a fieldable pre-prototype that would decode the signal and transmit over a limited range.”

    The military has been funding a handful of mind-tapping technologies recently, including last years project at the University of California to investigate the potential of computer-mediated telepathy.

    It is thought that telepathy my provide advantages other than covert communication. Last year, the National Research Council and the Defense Intelligence Agency released a report suggesting that neuroscience might also be useful to “make the enemy obey our commands.”

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    Default Re: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    Quote Posted by bluestflame (here)
    John St Clair Akwei
    vs
    National Security Agency
    Ft George G. Meade, MD, USA
    (Civil Action 92-0449)
    Update: https://projectavalon.net/forum4/show...l=1#post890582

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    Default Re: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    Ask Andrew Breitbart if microwave weapons really work.

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    Default Re: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    Diane Roark is a former congressional staffer who was assigned to the intelligence committee. Undaunted by FBI raids on her home and others who also served on that committee, she now comes forward to reveal NSA secrets that she learned of.


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    Default Re: National Security Agency (NSA) – Covert operations of the U.S.

    ‘Oops, we did it again!’ NSA caught illegally collecting Americans’ phone data
    Published time: 27 Jun, 2019 00:22
    https://www.rt.com/usa/462770-nsa-ca...-surveillance/

    The NSA has been caught improperly collecting Americans’ phone data yet again, just months after a similar incident forced them to (supposedly) purge hundreds of millions of records captured without FISA authorization.

    The agency unlawfully slurped up a “larger than expected” volume of call and text records from one US telecom provider under the metadata-collection program known as Section 215, according to a document obtained by the American Civil Liberties Union as part of its ongoing lawsuit against the agency. The heavily redacted file does not reveal which company was affected, or how many of its “call detail records” were illegally collected between October 3 and 12, 2018.



    “These documents further confirm that this surveillance program is beyond redemption and a privacy and civil liberties disaster,” ACLU National Security Project staff attorney Patrick Toomey told the AP. “There is no justification for leaving this surveillance power in the NSA’s hands.”

    Revealingly, the NSA in its own internal documents assesses the blunder’s “impact on national security or international relations” to be “none.” Critics of the program, formerly known as StellarWind, have pointed to its acknowledged failure to stop a single terror event – the agency’s official rationale for eavesdropping on 3 billion phone calls every day – as one of many reasons it should be scrapped.

    The agency “will assess the scope of the civil liberties and privacy impact of this incident upon completion of the investigation,” the report promises, though an “initial assessment is that the impact was limited given the quick identification, purge processes, and lack of reporting.”



    “Why is there no penalty? Why is there no consequence for doing this? This is illegal behavior - if it is illegal, what is the accountability for those who are collecting it?” journalist Ben Swann asked, referring to both the telecoms providing excess information and the government agency that has made at least three such “mistakes” in the last year.

    “The NSA never outs themselves and admits ‘We made a mistake’ - it only comes to light when the ACLU or some group sues,” Swann told RT.

    The NSA is reportedly in favor of discontinuing Section 215 altogether, allowing congressional authorization to lapse when it expires at the end of 2019, though President Donald Trump has declared he wants to keep it running indefinitely.

    While the documents received by the ACLU suggest previous rumors about the agency’s use of the program – a security adviser to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy claimed the NSA hadn’t used it since June, the last time it was forced to purge millions of improperly-collected records – were false, former NSA chief William Binney confirms the agency is only letting it go because they have something much more sinister going on.

    “There is no oversight of the upstream program,” Binney told RT, referring to an NSA program that collects not only phone records but emails, “chatter,” and “everything on the fiber optic network.” Upstream is “the major program that’s copying the collection of bulk data on everybody, not just in the United States but on the planet.”

    The Ending Mass Collection of Americans’ Phone Records Act, a bipartisan bill to end NSA bulk collection of US phone data and prevent the agency from restarting it which was introduced in the Senate earlier this year, appears to have come a bit too late.

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