The Master Reb000t Key

Hey! Fella’s! Look what the Royal Czech Elves made Uncle Samaclaus! That’s right! It’s the Master Reboot Key. Thought you could outsmart me, did you! You’re looking at one of the First Hip-Eaze! We gave the U.S. Government a bad time for twenty years. They spent $200,000,000,000 dollars trying to eradicate – ME! They failed! We fucked with them. We will fuck with you. All it takes, is one! We Hippies invented the Internet!

July 17th. was a very bad day for America. CNN and MSNBC – blew it! They went crazy about N’T in WOULDN’T. All day they went for the bait. They preached to the choir for twenty four hours – without real proof!  They let swing voters off the hook. They ignored the rest of the news conference text. I pointed this out to Rachel Maddow and others. I posted this all over facebook. They finally got it. The Liberal Press and Congress has to REBOOT. So does our National Security folks. They dropped the ball. Coats got blindsided and embarrassed on T.V. WE need to team up – behind a closed door. Sub-Rosa.

I suspect Putin leant Trump his Best Troll Farmers!  Trump is being helped by a Russian Think Tanks! WAKE UP! WE are at WAR! They came up with N’T.

John Presco

John Ambrose <braskewi
To:rachel@msnb.com
‎Jul‎ ‎17 at ‎10‎:‎16‎ ‎PM
Don’t forget Putin offered to help Mueller – then Trump offers this as proof Russian is innocent.
“Why would it be Russia?”
John Presco

Definition of reboot

transitive + intransitive

1 a T/I : to shut down and restart (a computer or program)

  • … the annoyance of having to reboot the computer to switch operating systems …
  • —Robert Weston
  • If anything ever happens to the original drive, you can reboot using the cloned drive and be up and running in minutes.
  • —Dan Frakes

b I : to start up again after closing or shutting down : to boot up again

  • waiting for a computer/program to reboot

2 a T : to start (something) anew : to refresh (something) by making a new start or creating a new version

  • It’s probably not an overstatement to say Sandberg is embarking on the most ambitious mission to reboot feminism and reframe discussions of gender since the launch of Ms. magazine in 1971.
  • —Belinda Luscombe
  • reboot an old TV series

b I : to start anew : to make a fresh start

  • The interior designer’s heart was telling her to reboot and downsize …
  • —Susan Heeger
  • A person man uses a laptop. (Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/dpa/AP)

    Key cyber-security officials leave the Trump admin at a difficult time

    07/20/18 11:21AM Director of National Intelligence Dan Coats has made no secret of his concerns about cyber-security threats. In fact, the nation’s top intelligence officer raised more than a few eyebrows last week when he said in the months leading up to 9/11, the “system was blinking red,” adding, “Here we are, nearly two decades later, and I’m here to say the warning lights are blinking red again.”

    It’s against this backdrop that the Wall Street Journal  reports on some important departures from the Trump administration.

    Three of the top cybersecurity officials at the Federal Bureau of Investigation are retiring from government service, according to people familiar with the matter — departures that come as cyberattacks are a major concern for the country’s security agencies.

    Senior U.S. intelligence officials warn that the country is at a “critical point” facing unprecedented cyberthreats, including Russia’s ongoing attacks on the American political system. The retirements also come as the FBI is facing regular criticism from President Donald Trump and his supporters, and is working to attract and retain top cyber talent.

    The WSJ  noted that Scott Smith, who runs the FBI cyber division, is leaving this month, and his deputy, Howard Marshall, has already moved on. Their supervisor, David Resch, is also stepping down.

    They’re joined by Carl Ghattas, executive assistant director of the FBI’s national security branch, who’s also leaving, following Jeffrey Tricoli, “a senior FBI cyber agent who oversaw a Bureau task force addressing Russian attempts to meddle in U.S. elections,” out the door.

    According to Politico, Tricoli was replaced by someone who “knows absolutely nothing about cyber.”

    Of course, all of this follows Donald Trump’s decision in May to eliminate the job of the nation’s cyber-security czar, as part of John Bolton’s reorganization of the National Security Council.

  • Sanctions law behind Putin’s request to Trump for former U.S. officials

    WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Russian President Vladimir Putin’s request to U.S. President Donald Trump for a joint investigation of former U.S. officials sought by the Kremlin for “illegal activities,” including a U.S. ambassador to Russia, is just the latest effort in a years-long campaign to undermine a U.S. law that imposes financial sanctions on Putin’s officials.

    U.S. President Donald Trump and Russia’s President Vladimir Putin talk during the family photo session at the APEC Summit in Danang, Vietnam November 11, 2017. REUTERS/Jorge Silva

    Putin and advocates for the Kremlin’s position had had no success with the campaign – until Trump became president. The Magnitsky Act of 2012 is the backdrop of Putin’s proposal to Trump at the Helsinki meeting earlier this week that the United States give Russian officials access to former U.S. ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul, in exchange for allowing the FBI to question 12 Russian agents recently indicted for interfering with the 2016 U.S. presidential election.

    Trump was receptive to the suggestion, calling it “an interesting idea.” That created a fire storm of criticism among Republican and Democratic lawmakers alike. But on Thursday, the White House reversed course with spokeswoman Sarah Sanders saying, “It is a proposal made in sincerity by President Putin, but President Trump disagrees with it.”

    By then the Russian Prosecutor-General’s office had informally proposed that the United States turn over a U.S. National Security Agency employee, a CIA agent and State Department officials, among others.

    PUTIN’S IRE

    The Magnitsky Act was the reaction to the 2009 suspicious death in prison of a Russian lawyer, Sergei Magnitsky, who worked for Bill Browder, a British hedge fund manager who invested in Russian companies. Magnitsky was arrested after accusing Russian law enforcement officials of a $230 million tax hoax.

    Sponsored

    ADVERTISING

    U.S. government officials have long contended that Magnitsky’s arrest and prison death were retaliation against Browder for revealing state theft conducted by Kremlin officials.

    The financier drew Putin’s ire after he successfully advocated in 2012 for the economic sanctions. The law freezes the bank accounts and bars entry to the United States of Russian officials who U.S. authorities said were responsible for the Russian lawyer’s suspicious death. Browder has repeatedly dismissed the Kremlin’s claims as propaganda intended to punish him for speaking out against Putin.

    The law outraged Putin, who barred American adoptions of Russian children as retaliation.

    UNDERMINING BILL BROWDER

    By 2015, Washington lobbyist Rinat Akhmetshin, a former Soviet counterintelligence officer, and Russian lawyer Natalia Veselnitskaya began pushing a different narrative to U.S. lawmakers and journalists, according to their congressional testimony and people familiar with their advocacy.

    They said Browder was the perpetrator of the fraud. Browder, they argued, had then tricked lawmakers and the Obama White House into imposing sanctions to distract and cover up his own tax fraud. And Magnitsky had not been beaten to death, they argued, saying the bruises found on his body were self-inflicted.

    “NOT A SINGLE person in us government has EVER checked the magnitsky story,” Akhmetshin told Reuters in a text message Thursday.

    Veselnitskaya has said she is an independent Russian lawyer who has conducted a private investigation into the Magnitsky issue because of her concern over the adoption ban. But in an April interview Veselnitskaya told NBC she has been an active informant for Russian authorities since 2013. She could not be reached for comment.

    Their advocacy had no impact, and lawmakers expanded the Magnitsky sanctions in 2016.

    TRUMP TOWER MEETING

    In the U.S. presidential campaign that year, Akhmetshin and Veselnitskaya appeared to gain traction. At Trump Tower, they met with the Republican candidate’s oldest son, Donald Trump Jr., and Jared Kushner, Donald Trump’s son-in-law and now a senior adviser to the president – a meeting now under scrutiny in Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election.

    The conversation straddled the same subjects they had repeatedly raised with journalists and lawmakers.

    Six months into his presidency, Trump was discussing the Magnitsky issue with Putin himself, during a private meeting at the Group of 20 conference in Hamburg. “I actually talked about Russian adoption with him, which is interesting because it was a part of the conversation that Don had in that meeting,” Trump told The New York Times in July 2017.

    Browder denies the Kremlin’s claims. He told Reuters this week, “I’m always worried about Putin taking extrajudicial actions against me. I’m always worried about assassination and other renditions.”

    But he does not think the U.S. government would give Putin what he wants. “That’s the last thing that is going to happen,” Browder said

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.