These tyrants tell you that if you value your rights, you must not care about catching criminals. They say that if you have nothing to hide, you shouldn't worry about this. Don't fall for it. The state continues to use fake or exaggerated emergencies to take away your rights. The war on drugs The war on terror Covid Illegal Immigration Protecting children from social media and porn Mass shootings What's next? Probably a massive false flag cyber attack that leads to you having to scan your fucking eyeballs just to log on to the internet. It wouldn't surprise me in the least. #news #politics
Never spending your #Bitcoin and getting Bitcoin backed loans for bills works great.....until the value of Bitcoin drops below your liquidation price and you become a forced seller at low prices. ☹️
Doesn't look like there were any #Monero people in the #Epstein files.... 🤔
Anarchia is my new favorite word.... "Anarchia, defined as an excess of the passion for liberty, was a term coined by Benjamin Rush, a signer of the Declaration of Independence and a founding figure in American psychiatry. In the aftermath of the American Revolution, Rush observed that the revolutionary fervor had unleashed widespread social upheaval—challenging established hierarchies of class, gender, and authority. He diagnosed this phenomenon as a mental disorder, naming it Anarchia, which he believed stemmed from an unchecked enthusiasm for liberty that threatened social order. This concept reflects how elite revolutionaries of the time feared the democratic and egalitarian excesses of the revolution, viewing them not as progress but as a dangerous descent into chaos. Rush’s use of Anarchia illustrates a historical tension between liberty and order. While the term was originally a medical diagnosis for revolutionary unrest, it has since been reclaimed and reinterpreted by anarchists and critical theorists. For instance, Lucy Parsons, a radical anarchist, saw liberty as a revolutionary force against exploitation and oppression, advocating for freedom to discover truth and live naturally. Similarly, Dennis Fox notes that Rush’s diagnosis of anarchia as a form of insanity was part of a broader pattern of using psychology to justify social control—e.g., labeling resistance to authority as pathological. Today, the idea of an excess of the passion for liberty continues to provoke debate. Some, like Tom Cutterham, argue that the American Founders feared anarchy not just as political collapse but as a breakdown of social relations. Others, such as Crispin Sartwell and Saul Newman, critique both state power and certain anarchist visions, suggesting that true freedom must be non-dominating and self-affirming, not merely the absence of restraint. The term Anarchia thus remains a powerful symbol of the enduring struggle between liberty, authority, and social cohesion. "
A good PSA courtesy of L0laL33tz for anyone taking a look at the #EpsteinFiles "PSA: please use TOR Browser to access these files. Akamai, the content delivery system hosting the documents, is suspected to be a bulk surveillance tool that was tied up in the NSA's foreign spying scandal."
"The FBI was able to access Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson's Signal messages because she used Signal on her work laptop. The laptop accepted Touch ID for authentication, meaning the agents were allowed to require her to unlock it." This is another great example of why securing your devices with biometrics is almost as bad as not securing them at all. Passwords are protected in the USA, whereas law enforcement can force you to unlock with fingerprints or faces. It's not worth the tiny bit of extra convenience. #privacy #security #opsec
So #gold is now a memecoin instead of a safe haven, Bitcoin is a pet rock, altcoins are a bad joke, AI stocks could be a bubble, and you have to be retarded to want to own US gov bonds. So the safe haven is what now? Maybe the hardest hard assets, hard liquor and hard drugs? 🤦🤷 image
Just comply and you'll be fine. If you have got nothing to hide, you have got nothing to worry about. For most of America's history you could easily be born, go to school, get a job, and die without the Federal Government even knowing you existed. Then the social security number arrived in 1933. At first it was a "temporary" measure to get government assistance. By the1950s you needed it to get a job. By the1970s you needed it for a bank account. Now the Federal Government is saying you need to be prepared to show proof of citzenship at anytime, anywhere. It's amazing how easily you can enslave millions of people if you just do it gradually. It's time to stop complying and opt out en masse. #privacy #optout #surveillance image