Saturday, May 15, 2021

Catching Flak

In Article 154, written just eight weeks ago, I mentioned that YouTube had censored a video that I had uploaded. The footage contained an interview with trial lawyer Dr Reiner Fuellmich, in which he outlined his plans for ‘Nuremberg 2.0’, a vast series of international lawsuits currently being brought against the perpetrators of the COVID scandal. The video was censored simply because it contradicted the advice of the World Health Organization. It was neither libellous nor unsupported by publicly-available evidence.

Today, Blogger followed suit and deleted Article 143. Written in October last year (2020), it contained a single link to the official site of the Great Barrington Declaration, a document signed by eminent doctors and scientists worldwide and endorsed by millions of people. Below (Figure 161.1) is a screenshot of the explanatory email.


Figure 161.1: The link to the official Great Barrington Declaration website – https://gbdeclaration.org – was deemed to contain either malware or viruses, which I believe is untrue. Furthermore, the article was, apparently, ‘flagged’, which I doubt also.

Copyright © 2021 Blogger

Blogger has been owned by Google since 2003. Google owns YouTube also. Join the dots. I know that I am just one of countless individuals to have been censored by tech and news corporations since the COVID program (Figure 161.2) was executed. Such organizations are clearly terrified of those of us with a critical faculty exercising our innate right to freedom of expression.


Figure 161.2: This document, courtesy of the World Bank (controlled by N. M. Rothschild & Sons and a super-rich elite), proves that the COVID project is not an unforeseen natural phenomenon but a five-year plan. Anyone who believes that all the basic liberties snatched from the people (a) are a response to a respiratory virus and (b) will be willingly given back is, frankly, stupid.

Copyright © 2021 World Bank/International Monetary Fund

The saga does not end there. Since I began writing El Escritor Inglés eleven years ago, its readership has remained steady at between 2,000 and 3,000 reads per day. The website also provides me with a series of data analytics, including overall readership, country of reader origin, popularity of each article, and even computer operating systems and referring URLs (web addresses).

On 6th February of this year, however, something changed abruptly. Daily readership more than quadrupled to 10,000 to 12,000 reads (Figure 161.3). I must have struck an unusual chord with someone, somewhere. Ever since, readership has remained steady at this much higher level.


Figure 161.3: I wonder what has suddenly attracted this heightened interest.

Copyright © 2021 Blogger

More intriguingly still, there has never been a moment since that date when there have been no reads at all. Throughout the past eleven years, there have always been periods – sometimes momentary, sometimes for hours – when the website ‘slept’. That is, no one in the world was reading it. That has changed. The ‘baseline’ is now ‘1’, never zero. Therefore, readership never pauses. It equates to 24/7 monitoring – or, if you like, surveillance.

The analytics facility allows me to track the national locations of all readers. Since 2010, the top three nations have been the UK, USA and Canada, which, all being English-speaking, is logical. Since 6th February, though, all the additional readership has originated in France. This is, self-evidently, odd. The key question is, therefore: has the website – written almost exclusively in English – suddenly become the focus of obsessive attention of French speakers, or is this constant monitoring being conducted from the UK via a virtual private network (VPN)? I would surmise that the latter is correct. (Message: I know who you are. Your French disguise is transparent, amateurish and Clouseau-esque. Are people like you the best the Service can recruit these days?)

A standard VPN is never fully anonymous, but it does increase privacy and security by means of tunnelling protocols and encryption techniques. However, there have been cases of VPN providers themselves blatantly accessing clients’ data, which is disgusting but, to a hardened cynic, hardly surprising. The Cambridge Analytica scandal (2018), for example, was an appalling instance of systematic data abuse.

The best VPN, by light years, is Orchid Protocol (Figure 161.4), in which I have been profitably invested since its launch in 2019. Widely used by crypto geeks, this is an open-source, decentralized, surveillance-free VPN protocol providing fully anonymized internet access to the global community. It is the ultimate ‘up yours’ to Big Brother. Long live Orchid.


Figure 161.4: Orchid Protocol tokens are available on most cryptocurrency exchanges. Its unit price has risen an impressive 167% in the last twelve months.


Copyright © 2021 Orchid Labs Inc.

One of my grandfathers, a Royal Air Force serviceman during World War Two, once told me:

‘If you’re catching flak, then you’re definitely over the target.’

My short web articles have caught flak recently – from corporate tech patrol and beyond.

Good. I must be extremely close to a vulnerable target. I know what it is.

Copyright © 2021 Paul Spradbery

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.