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Emperor Kuzco
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They haven't physically printed that much. Apparently at the time the House passed the $1.7 trillion rona hoax bill that only about $1.3 trillion had been physically printed by that time.

They only need to add zeros in a computer.

If I helped I'd be considered an accomplice, sorry.

I really don't think you are.

I think Jay tried to help you out with a sketchy enough analogy because your first reply was pretty left field common core. I did find it creative I guess.

They knew days in advance and you're trying to tell me they didn't have a morning briefing and discuss scenarios and protocols? We all know they did.

Someone (The House Sergeant at Arms and or House Speaker) authorized the opening of the magnetic doors.

That place is massively secure. Shit, they log all the cell phone SEID, EID, Bluetooth, and Wi-Fi mac addresses using both cameras (multiple types to include facial recognition) and real time geo-fencing to determine individual location of an intruder.

They even located a couple people from Alaska (geo-fenced Pelosi's office) thought to have taken Pelosi's laptop.

Pretty funny though when Director Wray testified that he couldn't confirm FBI involvement or had information on Ray Epps.

Money is only a tool for them just like lying. They use either of the tools to achieve control. They don't care about the truth or if you know the truth because a lie is only another tool to achieve their agenda. I'm afraid it's much deeper than just greed when they intentionally taking advantage of people's GOD given right of free will.

Replying to Avatar SatsGodzilla

Those magnetic doors only lock one of probably three ways.

1. Manually

2. Timer

3. AI monitored/perceived threat

Who authorized the unlocking of the doors?

ï»żPro/Con of Privacy Routers

The router you get from your ISP is designed to spy on you. It knows which devices are sending which traffic and what guests are connecting to it. If you don’t use a VPN every second, then when you take the VPN down, you’re vulnerable to hackers first hacking the router, to then install malware on your devices (phones/laptop). For example Wikileaks shows the CIA loves to do this. Ok, so how do you get a “private” router?

A privacy router is just regular hardware with a new operating system. But not all hardware supports flashing a new operating system. So either check the manufacturer’s website, or just ask their support “what routers let me flash my own firmware?”. Then just like a stock Android phone being “DeGoogled”, you flash on a new operating system.

The following list goes over SOME of the more popular open source router operating systems. It’s not complicated, they are grouped into “home router” or “firewall”. The firewall is faster and more secure, but costs a little more and is harder to setup.

DD-WRT

Type: Home Router w/ WiFi

Pro: This OS can be flashed on many home routers including Netgear and Asus. It’s fine for just routing traffic and it has WiFi. Support on forums is great, they are nice and friendly. A VPN can be put on it but


~

Con: These home routers are much slower for VPNs to be put directly on the router. Also the DD-WRT website is volunteer run, so it often will be dated for your model. You’ll have to post on their forum asking for the new version.

Solutions: Use WireGuard instead of OpenVPN on home routers. If the 2-minute logging of WireGuard concerns you, then a home router isn’t for you and get a firewall.

OpenWRT

Type: Home or Travel Router w/ WiFi

Pro: This is similar to DD-WRT, but also has a Tor option. OpenWRT also can be flashed on travel routers (Glinet routers or Rasberry Pi).

Con: For VPNs, it’s a more complex setup than DD-WRT, and not worth it in my opinion unless you are doing a travel router or Tor. Only do Tor if you have fast internet to begin with, otherwise it’s unbearable. Support on OpenWRT forums sucks, these guys are rude.

PfSense

Type: Firewall WITHOUT WiFi

Pro: Enterprise Grade Firewalls have a higher level security than home routers and the ability to handle better hardware for VPN speed. Netgear runs this and they spend a lot of development. Firewalls are much better than home routers with their features and barely more expensive now. The costs for firewall hardware have come down significantly and are now in the $200 or under range! Support on pfSense forums is average.

~

Con: The free open source version is being phased out for a paid version. 2nd con is that pfSense takes more time to setup and learn than the others on the list. Remember, hardware firewalls don’t have WiFi. So you’ll need to do:

pfSense → DD-WRT or OpenWRT for WiFi.

OPNsense

Type: Firewall WITHOUT WiFi

Pro: This is a fork of pfSense, but more consistent with the open source/freedom aspect. This is my current recommendation as pfSense slowly shifts to a paid model . All the same pro as pfSense.

~

Con: Firewalls still mean you’re doing more learning than home routers. OPNsense redid the GUI from pfSense, so if you’re coming from pfSense then they created pointless learning work for similar features. Development wise, Less money is spent on OPNsense than pfSense.

Conclusion

If you want help with configuring or flashing your router, then reach out to us. Don’t accidentally brick or ruin your router. Save yourself hours of headache and hassle, and get the advanced configurations you need for VPNs/Tor, advanced security, and anonymity.

Session ID: Support / Signal #: +855 68 504 905 / SimpleX, email, or protonmail links on site

I also remember others like Asus Merlin and Tomato. Probably just forks of those mentioned above.

I ordered a 1GB Crucial M.2 on Amazon and received a 500TB. I no longer trust them. That simple.

Never trust Amazon for anything computer related other than Blu-rays.

A useful FBI paid idiot that received a slap on the wrist by the multi-tiered "just-us" system. Mafia protecting their own.

Basically the same way I describe the Nostr to friends at work. It's like the old way of the internet when no one knew about the internet. It's like the wide wild west with few rules. Nostr reminds me of the old BBS chat rooms, IRC, and text based forums like 4chan. Back in the old days when everyone would sling *.HTML code in Notepad and upload to your 5MB web space by FTP.

It's like those good times of innovation and creativity are upon us again. Maybe now that we have a more tech based populace that we can focus also on personal privacy.

Back in the day big tech companies either stole the ideas or shoveled special interest money to acquire small intelligent niche groups. The rest of the public didn't even understand the internet.

Maybe this go around programmers can focus more on ethics rather than being a slave to the highest bidder.

Jumped off the side of a dam. It's was a drop in at 90ft. I screwed up by going into my form early and started blowing around in the wind. I had to open back up to rebalance and almost completely straighten up before hitting the water. It was hard and surprisingly only went about 10' under.

I guess I really haven't thought about it much in about 5-6 years. I've been battling stage 4 cancer for that long.

Honestly I'm very naturally curious with almost everything. I guess I have more of a life story at this point than interests. Not that it's a bad thing but I'm very blessed.

Then you have ones like me that do actually like reading the conversations. I've never made a first post or I guess they call them notes but I've made several replies.