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Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - Peter Lemkin - 19-12-2014 As we all know - or should - the intelligence and military communities play a large part in what gets into film and how it is portrayed. Though a 'comedy', how would any country - the UK or USA, for example react to a comedy film on the assassination of their sitting leaders?! I think not well. While it is not 100% if N. Korea is behind the hacking and subsequent threats about showing of 'The Interview', it is possible and they are certainly tag-teaming with whoever is involved. It was stupid and ill-advised to even think of writing a screenplay on that topic - let alone film it. Sony will suffer for their stupidity and being led by the nose by what I presume are intelligence assets who led them to do it. Even worse, is the precedent now of pulling a film [bad as it is] and never showing it due to vague threats. A total debacle - but what can one expect when there is another one-night-stand between intelligence and Hollywood. Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - Peter Lemkin - 19-12-2014 This morning CBS news aired an interview with former notorious computer hacker Hector Monsegur about the cyberattack on Sony's computers and email systems. See: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/sony-hack-former-anonymous-hacker-not-convinced-north-korea-is-responsible/ (http://www.cbsnews.com/news/sony-hack-form...is-responsible/) . This interview left me with a number of questions on my mind. Mr. Monsegur stated that North Korea simply could not have conducted the cyberattack because of the insufficiency of its Internet infrastructure. He also stated that no one could exfiltrate a terabyte of data over a short period of time. He said that it would take weeks, if not months, to do, and it probably could not happen undetected. If North Korea doesn't have the capability to do such a thing, and do it undetected, then who could? The United States government, that's who! Mr. Monsegur speculates that it was a Sony insider who perpetrated the hack on Sony's computers and who then sold the data to someone who presumably passed it on to the media. If this were, in fact, the case, don't you think that the F.B.I. could have tracked things down back to the original perpetrators by now? Of course, if our own government was the perp, then the F.B.I. would let things slide. The next question on my mind is: why would the main stream media disseminate the contents of Sony's email? If it were known that the source was from an alleged hacking incident, then the media would be crazy to trust the admitted dishonest source, but they went with publicizing it all instead. One more thing: Sony is a media company. You'd think that other media companies would be in solidarity with a fellow media company and would respect Sony's privacy as they would be concerned about their own... BUT THE MASS MEDIA HAD NO SUCH RESPECT FOR A FELLOW MEDIA COMPANY!! Who controls... who pulls the strings of the main stream media? Why, the main stream media is known to be government controlled media. If the government wants one media company to stomp on another media company, then this is exactly what will happen. The government, per last report, wants to pin the blame for the cyberattack and its subsequent terror threats against theaters on the North Koreans who have issued a denal. If North Korea was behind the terror threat on theaters, then why in the world would they negate the force of that threat by denying things? This whole episode smacks of a false flag attack. Be on guard for the next shoe to drop meaning the next false flag attack to be attributed to North Korea and the next fraudulent war. Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - Magda Hassan - 19-12-2014 Sony has been the subject of hacking attacks in the past and it has been revealing what sort of a company they are. They are one of the heavy hitters in the TPPI, SOPA and such as an be seen by some of the emails. And they've been very careless with their customer's information which has upset any. Clearly it is not NK as they don't have the where with all to do it even if they wanted. Though the US is setting the up as the patsy with planned cinema atrocity and all. But one has to ask oneself if Russia or NK made a film about assassinating a real and current US president do you think the NSA or CIA or even FBI would just stand by and think it okay? I can see even more draconian paranoid copyright and internet repression laws and a further isolation if not outright hostilities against NK. Big win for the west. Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - David Guyatt - 20-12-2014 Magda Hassan Wrote:I can see even more draconian paranoid copyright and internet repression laws and a further isolation if not outright hostilities against NK. Big win for the west. Big film studios are losing their grip on what has been a captive market and they don't like it. The recent decision in the UK (and elsewhere) not to extend the criminal law to streaming piracy films over the internet must've hit Hollywood and environs hard, as they planned to ensure that a commercial business was protected by the full force of the criminal law - not simply civil law (which big corporations routinely ignore as a matter of policy anyway). It didn't work out for them, and we now know from the recent leaks that the film business has drawn up plans to counter the piracy industry by all means necessary. Tie that together with a chance to engage North Korea with a propaganda campaign making them even more of a outlaw nation and it seems tho tick all the boxes. Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - Magda Hassan - 20-12-2014 Although the US is busy spinning this as an attack on them and a national security matters for the US it is actually an attack on Japan. South Korea doesn't like Japan any more than NK does. And they have the technical means. Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - Albert Doyle - 20-12-2014 Agreed. They've managed to hijack this to a discussion of the alleged hacking of Sony by North Korea. The real issue should be why, after all the crimes and illegal activity CIA has been exposed as doing, is CIA assassination being portrayed as normal and acceptable in a movie? This new generation is moronically unaware that CIA had laws created against it preventing it from doing any further assassinations back in the 1970's. The Sony movie is a psy-ops battle for American minds and the acceptance of CIA as a given assassination enterprise. Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - Richard Coleman - 21-12-2014 Peter Lemkin Wrote:how would any country - the UK or USA, for example react to a comedy film on the assassination of their sitting leaders?! I think not well. Peter: To further your point, if an enemy country like, say Venezuela allowed a major picture showing (i.e. advocating) the assassination of Obama, with an American cast, writers and director to be produced and marketed, (just for laughs, of course!) would our presently outraged first-amendment liberals defend showing THAT? Methinks not. There would be a whole other discussion taking place. Definition of a liberal: "Ten dgrees to the left of center in good times -- ten degres to the right of center when it affects them personally." -- Phil Ochs :: Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - Albert Doyle - 21-12-2014 How would Dallas react to wanted posters for treason for President Kennedy? Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - Lauren Johnson - 21-12-2014 Uh Oh. The State Department was heavily involved in The Interview. This is just lots more of the same shit. From Antiwar.com by Dan Sanchez Quote:Sony's decision yesterday to cancel its release of The Interview after being hacked and threatened by a group that may or may not be tied with the North Korean government has been the top story in the media ever since. Decidedly less-covered, and almost completely obscured by the cancellation, is another revelation made yesterday about the movie that is actually far more important. Who Would Think To Make A Comedy About Assassinating A Current National Leader?! - Peter Lemkin - 21-12-2014 The FBI and other agencies have said that they are 'sure' the hacking and the threats were done by NK - but refuse to offer any substantive proofs [other than saying if follows a pattern of other hacks and threats they also determined were done by NK]. Experts have pointed out that it is extremely difficult and takes a long time of exhaustive research to determine such things - and that this determination came impossibly quickly. Also, that the pieces of malware used by hackers in such attacks are often the same, are available on 'dark parts' of the internet, and thus defy quick identification - as anyone could get and use them. They also claim the attack came from a NK IP address - but that is very easy for any hacker anywhere to do. Remember how long [months] before anyone even ventured to say where the stuxnet attack came from...but this was determined in about 24 hours or less.....it smells bad. It wouldn't even surprise me if we find out that some intel agency had the idea to make a film with this theme to begin with...though I know of no such evidence. Documents released by Snowden showed that the NSA in 2011 alone staged over 400 directed cyber attacks - many of them on N. Korea - but that is never mentioned in the MSM mouthpieces for the Borg. I wouldn't even put it past the NSA to have been behind this cyber attack - making it a false flag attack that can be used to attack NK in some way 'in return'. Whatever the truth of this hall of mirrors, any hint of who was really behind it will not come out for months, at the minimum...if ever. |