codrus's avatar
codrus
npub1uk70...zjsj
Voluntaryist Agorism Freedom Nature
codrus's avatar
codrus 1 year ago
We see red blood cells clumping in the vaxxed. This is another thing you can do to try and fight some of the effects. Even healthy people benefit from this, what's happening is electrons are flowing up from the earth to replace ones you've lost to oxidative stress and other factors. Anti-oxidants are another method to try and recover lost electrons, but grounding is so much better because you know you're getting all you need. Personally, I sleep grounded, using a 'static charge' bracelet clipped to a copper wire that runs out the window and into the earth. That way my electrons are topped off during the full sleep period. https://bastyon.com/index?v=b9ab03d3a603e1c0b676bb576909ce80eb8e1ae6f6362ffb2c433d82a832bf9c&video=1
codrus's avatar
codrus 1 year ago
Listen to this statement by Alexander Trubanov, a Russian-Israeli who was released recently. He was held prisoner by the Palestinian people for 498 days. It is a must-listen. -- Everyone should hear this.
codrus's avatar
codrus 1 year ago
It's looking like Mossad and Israel had a strong hand in the assassination of JFK. https://bastyon.com/index?v=4b51b99914d8895aed891758ed0dd3b415d9ec8e139c68fecad4c0f95681469f&mpost=true People might ask, 'Well, then, why wasn't any of this in the 1991 movie JFK?' The 1991 film "JFK" was funded by Arnon Milchan, an Israeli billionaire businessman and film producer. As such, he had the last say on what would be in the movie. Who was Arnon Milchan? An admitted Mossad agent and arms dealer.
codrus's avatar
codrus 1 year ago
In a jaw-dropping argument, the Department of Justice claims seizing $50,000 from a small business doesn’t violate property rights because money isn’t property. The DOJ gave three rationales for the argument, all packed into a doorstopper of a footnote: (1) the government creates money, so you can’t own it; (2) the government can tax your money, so you don’t own it; and (3) the Constitution allows the government to spend money for the “general welfare.”
codrus's avatar
codrus 1 year ago
Is this just a bizarre coincidence? image
codrus's avatar
codrus 1 year ago
I'm starting to understand the very real danger CDN's (content delivery network) pose to internet security, privacy, and anonymity. Someone correct me if I'm wrong in the following: You've probably noticed those cloudflare windows that popup. Cloudflare is a popular CDN. So, imagine you're doing this: home computer->vpn->youtube. Well, you're actually going through cloudflare in there, so it actually is: computer->vpn->cloudflare->youtube. You're still pretty anonymous, but cloudflare creates a fingerprint ID of your browser's settings. So you go on and visit a bunch of other sites through your vpn, assuming all of it is anonymous. It is, still, but you're also going through cloudflare for many of those sites as well, and cloudflare is attaching that fingerprint ID to each. And this is where your anonymity and privacy can be broken: When you then log into any website that holds any real, personal identifying information (gmail, youtube to earn money, twitch to earn money, bank account, telegram which you opened using a phone number thus attaching your real identity), cloudflare may now possibly acquire that personal identifying information. You may say, 'But I connected through an SSL or HTTPS tunnel!' Okay, but how does that work? There are two kinds of encrypted tunnels: end-to-end and terminated tunnels. And it is the WEBSITE that determines which will be used for any given content it sends. So, you have to trust that that website is using end-to-end when real identifying information is being sent. Let's say the website lets you log in using an end-to-end encryption tunnel, but then for the rest of the session it uses a terminated encryption tunnel, meaning the information is sent to the CDN which then decides which content (pictures, video, etc.) to deliver, encrypts and sends on to you. So, in this situation, the CDN is able to see your real name and other personal identifying information which passes through it from the website. It can then go and append that real identifying information to all your other connections via the fingerprint ID it made identifying your browser. So, the question becomes: how can I minimize this privacy, security threat posed by websites using CDNs? Installing a browser extension like Decentraleyes may help. Although, I'm not sure how much. The other is to use a vpn that actively helps your efforts to fight these types of identifying tricks. I haven't done a lot of research in this, so I currently know only of: I'm sure there must be others?
codrus's avatar
codrus 1 year ago
I'm starting to understand the very real danger CDN's (content delivery network) pose to internet security, privacy, and anonymity. Someone correct me if I'm wrong in the following: You've probably noticed those cloudflare windows that popup. Cloudflare is a popular CDN. So, imagine you're doing this: home computer->vpn->youtube. Well, you're actually going through cloudflare in there, so it actually is: computer->vpn->cloudflare->youtube. You're still pretty anonymous, but cloudflare creates a fingerprint ID of your browser's settings. So you go on and visit a bunch of other sites through your vpn, assuming all of it is anonymous. It is, still, but you're also going through cloudflare for many of those sites as well, and cloudflare is attaching that fingerprint ID to each. And this is where your anonymity and privacy can be broken: When you then log into any website that holds any real, personal identifying information (gmail, youtube to earn money, twitch to earn money, bank account, telegram which you opened using a phone number thus attaching your real identity), cloudflare may now possibly acquire that personal identifying information. You may say, 'But I connected through an SSL or HTTPS tunnel!' Okay, but how does that work? There are two kinds of encrypted tunnels: end-to-end and terminated tunnels. And it is the WEBSITE that determines which will be used for any given content it sends. So, you have to trust that that website is using end-to-end when real identifying information is being sent. Let's say the website lets you log in using an end-to-end encryption tunnel, but then for the rest of the session it uses a terminated encryption tunnel, meaning the information is sent to the CDN which then decides which content (pictures, video, etc.) it to deliver, encrypts it and sends on to you. So, in this situation, the CDN is able to see your real name and other personal identifying information that passes through it from the website. It can then go and append that real identifying information to all your other connections that it knows of via the fingerprint ID it made identifying your browser. So, the question becomes, how can I minimize this privacy, security threat posed by websites using CDNs? Installing a browser extension like Decentraleyes may help. Although, I'm not sure how much it helps. The other is to use a vpn that actively helps your efforts to fight these types of identifying tricks. I haven't done a lot of research for in this, so I currently know only of: I'm sure there must be others.
codrus's avatar
codrus 1 year ago
Is this just a weird coincidence by a segment that makes up only 0.02% of the population? image