The future I predicted, has arrived. The Rose of the World blog is the Gideon Computer. Gideon was a Nazarite. ISIS preaches the coming of Armageddon, an End Time, that constitute the bulk of my posts. Many have called me mad for predicting the End Time prophecies will be self-fulfilling. Jews and Christians thought they had easy scapegoats in Liberals and Islamic Terrorists. Now, they take from this blog. They have taken over key components of the internet and prophecy. How interesting that Helle Thorning-Schmidt is of the bloodline of Rena and Mary Ann Tharaldsen, who I have identified as Shield-Maidens. Am I talking about the protection of the World Wide Web from a virus?
Jon the Nazarite
The global hacker collective known as Anonymous is storming the international political scene with a brash hacking campaign against the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
One of the senior officials of terror group ISIS has shared in an interview that it was the American Camp Bucca prison in southern Iraq that facilitated the birth of the terror group, as it gave jihadists the unique opportunity to congregate and build their plans and ideology.
The shadowy anarchist group, which is known for waging online attacks on everyone from the U.S. government to the Church of Scientology, is trying to dismantle the vast social media operation that helps ISIS recruit new followers.
By exposing and disabling hundreds of Twitter accounts, email addresses and websites purportedly affiliated with ISIS, hackers with Anonymous are all but inviting the notoriously Web-savvy terrorist group to an online war.
“In an interesting way, they are set up as perfect nemeses,” said Gabriella Coleman, anthropologist and author of Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy: The Many Faces of Anonymous. “There are a lot of similarities in terms of how they use social media. It doesn’t surprise me that they would battle each other online.”
Anonymous first became a force online in 2003, when like-minded users of the website 4chan began staging pranks on social media networks. In 2008, its efforts turned to “hacktivism” when the Church of Scientology riled Internet users by trying to suppress a widely scorned promotional video for the religion that featured the actor Tom Cruise.
The subsequent hacking campaign against the church would be the first of many by Anonymous to gain support from Internet users opposed to censorship.
The group’s motto, “Expect us,” signaled that no offending company or organization would be safe from cyberattacks, and its logistical support for movements like the Arab Spring garnered praise.
But as Anonymous grew into a global movement, the group symbolized by the Guy Fawkes mask also became a cultural lightning rod, at times stirring controversy in Washington.
Anonymous appears to be firmly on the side of the United States when it comes to the conflict with ISIS, however.
The hacking group made headlines this week when it took to a public forum to post hundreds of social media accounts and websites that it claimed were affiliated with the jihadist group.
As of Wednesday, many of the ISIS sites remained inaccessible or disabled after members of Anonymous launched denial-of-service attacks, flooding the pages with traffic. Many of the Twitter accounts appeared to be suspended.
The attacks came the same day that hackers claiming affiliation with ISIS took over a variety of U.S. media feeds, including the Twitter account of Newsweek magazine.
During the 14 minutes that hackers were in control of the Newsweek account, they draped it in images of a masked man and posted a message threatening first lady Michelle Obama. The message quickly grabbed attention online.
If authentic, the attack on Newsweek reaffirms ISIS’s taste for spectacle — something it shares with Anonymous — as well as its ability to harness the power of social media for attention.
“The thing to know about ISIS and social media is that they are old hands at this,” said William McCants, director of the Project on U.S. Relations with the Islamic World at the Brookings Institution.
“They were one of the first and most effective jihadist groups in getting their propaganda out through discussion boards. They’ve evolved along with social media, and have been doing this a long time.”
ISIS’s aggressive use of social media has been apparent to Web users bombarded almost weekly with reports and videos of vicious killings.
In a particularly sadistic example, ISIS recently posted video of a Jordanian pilot being burned alive in a cage.
Intelligence officials have used the terror group’s prominent online presence to track its activities, and some suspect U.S. spies have created fake jihadist websites to attract its members.
This has led some foreign policy experts to criticize Anonymous’s campaign on the grounds that it could hurt intelligence gathering. Others question the effectiveness of the hacks, because ISIS can easily revive Web activities under new accounts.
And yet the increasingly savage displays by ISIS have also brought a certain heroic quality to Anonymous’s efforts, even if the group is viewed as potentially dangerous.
The campaign against ISIS started last summer but intensified after the terrorist attack on satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo in Paris on Jan. 7. With the hashtag “OpISIS,” Anonymous has claimed to have disabled thousands of sites with ISIS ties.
“This is something everyone can get behind,” Coleman said. “Certainly the general public can support cutting off [ISIS’s] propaganda wing. It might not wipe them out, but given how important that online presence is to ISIS, a momentary dent can mean a lot.”
Here is a right-wing Christian propaganda message. False prophets are put to death.
“Most take Obama as an imbecile when in reality, the ones who accuse him as such are being imbeciles. Obama is making sure that the U.S. led coalition will loose against ISIS at Kobani near Dabiq for a reason and while you think he is a dummy, think again. He too with the liberal media, are a part of a very cunning master plan.
During September, we wrote on how Dabiq, a place near Aleppo in Syria in which the war between the U.S. led coalition and ISIS is a central theme for Muslim prophecy regarding the ends of days. Now CNN in English published a silly small report which discusses the topic but only discloses enough for the liberal mindset about how ISIS views the prophecy about Dabiq as regarding the enslavement of “women” as prophesied for the ends of days. That this is ISIS’s version of Islamic end times. But the same report on CNN Arabic was a much different story which included the full truth, the type of truth that will entice Muslims everywhere to join the battle against U.S led western coalition. From CNN Arabic, the story includes the true scoop which they will never translate into English, lest the American connect the dots into how this issue of the clash between Islam and the West is, in reality, would be accepting the fulfillment of Bible Prophecy. Such a message by CNN will cause much backlash from the liberals whose goal is to eliminate only a specific religion (Christianity) totally from western society.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prime_Minister_of_Denmark
she was appointed Prime Minister by Queen Margrethe II. Thorning-Schmidt holds degrees in political science from the University of Copenhagen and the College of Europe.[1]
Although Thorning-Schmidt has been baptized, she is not confirmed. She occasionally goes to church and does not believe in eternal life, salvation, heaven, and hell.[33]
http://www.cnn.com/2015/02/15/europe/denmark-shooting/
http://shoebat.com/2014/10/15/isis-obamas-master-plan-usher-armageddon/
One of the senior officials of terror group ISIS has shared in an interview that it was the American Camp Bucca prison in southern Iraq that facilitated the birth of the terror group, as it gave jihadists the unique opportunity to congregate and build their plans and ideology.
The revelations came in an extensive interview The Guardian conducted with a man who chose to identify himself by the name of Abu Ahmed. The man admitted that he has grown disillusioned with many of the extreme actions ISIS has taken over the past year.
Bucca, established in the wake of the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 to take down the government of Saddam Hussein, provided an ‘extraordinary opportunity’ for the growing number of jihadists imprisoned there, Ahmed shared.
“We could never have all got together like this in Baghdad, or anywhere else,” he said. “It would have been impossibly dangerous. Here, we were not only safe, but we were only a few hundred metres away from the entire al-Qaida leadership.”
It was also at Bucca where Ahmed first met Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, who has been identified in several reports as the top leader of ISIS.
“Even then, he was Abu Bakr. But none of us knew he would ever end up as leader,” Ahmed revealed.
ISIS has captured a number of cities across Iraq and Syria, and has committed atrocious acts of violence, including beheading soldiers, western captives and even children, often on camera.
The U.S. has led an airstrikes operation against terror targets across the region, and the battle for control of the two countries continues.
Ahmed revealed that it was the American invasion that prompted him to help organize ISIS, convinced he was fighting against a forced power shift in Iraq that backed the nation’s Shia population over the Sunnis.
The militant admitted, however, that he is having second thoughts about ISIS. He said that the group’s increasingly violent actions are at odds with his own views, as he now takes a less literal interpretation of the Qu’ran, the Islamic holy book.
Ahmed, who shares a notable portion of his life’s story in the interview, noted that he remains an active part of ISIS’ operations in Iraq and Syria, finding himself both reluctant to stay with the militants, but also unwilling to attempt to leave.
“The biggest mistake I made is to join them,” Ahmed said, and added that he and his family would be killed if he does attempt to leave.
“It’s not that I don’t believe in Jihad,” he continued. “But what options do I have? If I leave, I am dead.”
He suggested that there are many others like him in the terror group who do not identify with ISIS’ extremism, but also have no choice but to continue fighting.
“There are others who are not ideologues,” he said. “People who started out in Bucca, like me. And then it got bigger than any of us. This can’t be stopped now. This is out of the control of any man. Not Baghdadi, or anyone else in his circle.”
As the U.S.-led war on ISIS continues, news earlier this week suggested that members of the terror group are seeking to sell the body of American journalist James Foley, who they beheaded on video back in August. The jihadists are reportedly asking for $1 million so that Foley’s body can be ransomed, in order to continue funding their operations in Iraq and Syria.








Leave a comment