Welcome to our New Forums!

Our forums have been upgraded and expanded!

Welcome to Our New Forums

  • Our forums have been upgraded! You can read about this HERE

China is installing surveillance cameras outside people's front doors ... and sometimes inside their homes

Joined
Nov 17, 2018
Messages
2,342
Location
We are the future gods of our people. Start acting
This will be a waking reality all over the entire globe without our spiritual and online intervention. Keep up the RTRs and online warfare. Aliens trying to enslave humanity and install a global slave-state of ceaseless surveillance is not some science fiction movie here.

China has always been the first step to everywhere else when it comes to the enemy. What goes on there will spread everywhere else if we don't work to stop it.

----


https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2020/04/27/asia/cctv-cameras-china-hnk-intl/index.html?via=webuproar

By Nectar Gan, CNN Business
Updated 7:42 AM EDT, Tue April 28, 2020

(CNN Business)The morning after Ian Lahiffe returned to Beijing, he found a surveillance camera being mounted on the wall outside his apartment door. Its lens was pointing right at him.

After a trip to southern China, the 34-year-old Irish expat and his family were starting their two-week home quarantine, a mandatory measure enforced by the Beijing government to stop the spread of the novel coronavirus.

He said he opened the door as the camera was being installed, without warning.

"(Having a camera outside your door is) an incredible erosion of privacy," said Lahiffe. "It just seems to be a massive data grab. And I don't know how much of it is actually legal."

200427205533-ian-camera-exlarge-169.jpg

A surveillance camera was installed outside Ian Lahiffe's front door the morning after he returned to Beijing.

Although there is no official announcement stating that cameras must be fixed outside the homes of people under quarantine, it has been happening in some cities across China since at least February, according to three people who recounted their experience with the cameras to CNN, as well as social media posts and government statements.

China currently has no specific national law to regulate the use of surveillance cameras, but the devices are already a regular part of public life: they're often there watching when people cross the street, enter a shopping mall, dine in a restaurant, board a bus or even sit in a school classroom.

More than 20 million cameras had been installed across China as of 2017, according to state broadcaster CCTV. But other sources suggest a much higher number. According to a report from IHS Markit Technology, now a part of Informa Tech, China had 349 million surveillance cameras installed as of 2018, nearly five times the number of cameras in the United States.

China also has eight of the world's 10 most surveilled cities based on the number of cameras per 1,000 people, according to UK-based technology research firm Comparitech.

But now the pandemic has brought surveillance cameras closer to people's private lives: from public spaces in the city right to the front doors of their homes — and in some rare cases, surveillance cameras inside their apartments.

CNN has requested comment from China's National Health Commission. The Ministry of Public Security did not accept CNN's faxed requests for comment.


Evolution of tactics


China is already using a digital "health code" system to control people's movements and decide who should go into quarantine. To enforce home quarantine, local authorities have again resorted to technology — and have been open about the use of surveillance cameras.

A sub-district office of the government in Nanjing, in eastern Jiangsu province, said it had installed cameras outside the doors of people under self-quarantine to monitor them 24 hours a day — a move that "helped save personnel expenditures and increased work efficiency," according to its February 16 post on Weibo, China's twitter-like platform.

In Hebei province, the Wuchongan county government in the city of Qianan also said it was using surveillance cameras to monitor residents quarantined at home, according to a statement on its website. In the city of Changchun in northeastern Jilin province, the quarantine cameras in Chaoyang district are powered with artificial intelligence to detect human shapes, the district government said on its website.

In the eastern city of Hangzhou, China Unicom, a state-owned telecom operator, helped the local governments install 238 cameras to monitor home-quarantined residents as of February 8, the company said in a Weibo post.

On Weibo, some people posted photos of cameras they said were newly put up outside their doors, as they went into home quarantine in Beijing, Shenzhen, Nanjing and Changzhou, among other cities.

Some appeared to accept the surveillance, although it remains unclear how much criticism against the measure is tolerated on the country's closely monitored and censored internet. A Weibo user, who went into home quarantine after returning to Beijing from Hubei province, said she was told in advance by her neighborhood committee that a camera and an alarm would be installed on her front door. "(I) fully respect and understand the arrangement," she wrote.

200415135041-david-culver-health-qr-code-exlarge-169.jpg


Another Beijing resident said he did not think the camera was necessary, "but since it is a standard requirement, (I'm) happy to accept it," wrote a person who identified himself as Tian Zengjun, a lawyer in Beijing.

Others, worried about the virus' spread in their communities, called for local authorities to install surveillance cameras to ensure people obey quarantine rules.

Jason Lau, a privacy expert and professor at Hong Kong Baptist University, said people across China had grown accustomed to prevalent surveillance long before the coronavirus.

"In China, people probably already assume that the government has access to a lot of their data anyway. If they think the measures are going to keep them safe, keep the community safe and are in the best interest of the public, they may not worry too much about it," he said.

Cameras inside homes

Some people say cameras have even been placed inside their homes.

William Zhou, a public servant, returned to the city of Changzhou, in eastern Jiangsu province, from his native Anhui province in late February. The next day, he said a community worker and a police officer came to his apartment and set up a camera pointing at his front door -- from a cabinet wall inside his home.

Zhou said he did not like the idea. He asked the community worker what the camera would record and the community worker showed him the footage on his smartphone.

"I was standing in my living room and the camera captured me clearly in its frame," said Zhou, who asked to use a pseudonym for fear of repercussions.

200427210313-william-zhou-camera-1-exlarge-169.jpg

William Zhou, who was home quarantined in the city of Changzhou, said a camera was installed inside his apartment.

Zhou was furious. He asked why the camera couldn't be placed outside instead, but the police officer told him it might get vandalized. In the end, he said the camera stayed on the cabinet despite his strong protest.

On that evening, Zhou said he called the mayor's hotline and the local epidemic control command center to complain. Two days later, two local government officials turned up at his door, asking him to understand and cooperate with the government's epidemic control efforts. They also told him the camera would only take still images when his door moved and wouldn't record any video or audio.

But Zhou remained unconvinced.

"(The camera) had a huge impact on me psychologically," he said. "I tried not to make phone calls, fearing the camera would record my conversations by any chance. I couldn't stop worrying even when I went to sleep, after I closed the bedroom door."

Zhou said he would have been fine with having the camera placed outside his front door, because he wouldn't open the door to go out anyway.

"Installing it inside my home is a huge invasion of my privacy," he said.

200427211140-william-zhou-camera-2-exlarge-169.jpg


Zhou said two other residents who were under quarantine in his residential compound told him they also had cameras installed inside their homes.

The epidemic control command center of the district Zhou lives in confirmed to CNN the use of cameras to enforce home quarantine, but declined to give further details.

In the eastern city of Nanjing, the Chunxi sub-district government posted photos on Weibo showing how authorities were using cameras to ensure quarantine. One photo showed a camera standing on a cabinet inside an apartment. Another showed a screenshot of footage of four cameras, some of which appeared to have been shot from inside people's homes.

The Chuxi sub-district government declined to comment. The epidemic control command center in the district said the installation of cameras was not a mandatory policy, and some sub-district governments have chosen to adopt the measure themselves.

200428001359-chunxi-camera-exlarge-169.jpg

A photo released by the Chunxi government showed a camera standing on a cabinet inside an apartment.

How do the cameras work?

There is no official tally on the number of cameras installed to enforce home quarantine across China. But the Chaoyang district government in Jilin, a city of four million people, said in a statement that it had installed 500 cameras as of February 8.

Around the world, governments have adopted less intrusive technologies to track whether a person leaves their apartment. In Hong Kong, for example, all international arrivals undergoing a two-week home quarantine must wear an electronic bracelet, which connects to a smartphone app that alerts authorities if they stray from their apartments or hotel rooms. South Korea uses an app that tracks locations with GPS and sends alerts when people leave quarantine. Last month, Poland launched an app that allows people under quarantine to send selfies to let authorities know they're staying home.

Even in Beijing not everyone in home quarantine has a camera outside their home. Two residents, who recently returned to the city from Wuhan, said they had a magnetic alarm installed to their apartment doors, which would notify community workers if they stepped outside. CNN has reached out to Beijing authorities for comment.

200427212440-hong-kong-qaurantine-wristband-exlarge-169.jpg

Passengers receive quarantine tracking wrist bands at Hong Kongs international airport on March 19.

Lahiffe, the Irish expat who lives in Beijing, believes the footage from his camera is being monitored by the community workers at his residential compound, who are charged with making sure he stays home and doesn't have visitors -- all from a smartphone.

"The guy's phone has an app which (shows) all the doors," Lahiffe said of one of the community workers who had come to install the camera. "You can see all the doors of the different cameras that have been installed," he said, adding that he saw more than 30 doors on the app, all from his residential complex which he says is lived in by "mostly foreigners."

In China, every urban residential community is managed by a neighborhood committee, a communist legacy from the Mao era that has now become the foundation of a "grid management" system of social control supported by high tech and big data. Officially, these are self-governing bodies that manage and educate residents. But they also serve as the governments' eyes and ears at the grassroots level, helping to maintain stability by watching over millions of residents nationwide and reporting suspicious activities.

Since the outbreak, community workers have been given great leeway and tasked with epidemic control in residential compounds, enforcing home quarantine, as well as helping quarantined residents with basic needs, such as delivering food and groceries to their doors and taking out their trash.

200427213003-lina-ali-camera-exlarge-169.jpg

Lina Ali said the camera installed outside her front door would shine a bright light whenever she opened the door to get food delivery.

Whenever Lina Ali, a Scandinavian expat living in the southern city of Guangzhou, opened her front door to receive food deliveries, she said a bright light shone from the camera that was trained on her apartment door while she was in quarantine.

She said her apartment building's property management staff came to install a surveillance camera outside her front door on the first day of her home quarantine earlier this month.

"I hated when the camera would shine a bright light, they told us that it connects to the police station," said Ali. CNN agreed to refer to her with a pseudonym to protect her safety. "It made me feel like I truly was a prisoner in my own home."

CNN has reached out to Guangzhou authorities for comment.

In Shenzhen, the cameras used to monitor quarantined residents in one district were connected to the smartphones of police officers and community workers, according to a report on the district government's website.

If someone breached their quarantine, the report said,"police and community workers will receive an alert immediately notifying them something is wrong."

200427213351-shenzhen-nanshan-camera-exlarge-169.jpg

A phone screenshot of an app used by authorities to monitor the footage of cameras installed for people under home quarantine in Nanshan district, Shenzhen.

Maya Wang, a senior China researcher at Human Rights Watch, said there was a wide range of measures governments can take to protect public health in the pandemic, but "they don't necessarily have to blanket society with surveillance devices."

"If you look at China's surveillance measures during the coronavirus outbreak, from the development of health codes to installation of surveillance cameras to enforce quarantine, we're seeing an increasingly intrusive use of surveillance technologies that were previously only seen in particularly repressed regions, like Xinjiang," she said, referring to the far western region home to China's Uyghur minority.

"The surveillance measures being implemented during Covid-19, are unfortunately — if not pushed back — going to live with us for a very long time."

The legal stance

China currently has no specific national law to regulate the use of surveillance cameras in public spaces. The Ministry of Public Security released a draft regulation on security cameras in 2016, but the ordinance is still waiting to be approved by the country's national legislature. In recent years, some local governments have issued their own regulations on the cameras.

Tong Zongjin, a lawyer based in Beijing, said installing cameras outside a person's front door has always been in a legal gray area.

"The area outside a person's front door is not part of their private residence and is considered a communal space. But the camera can be monitoring something personal, such as when the individual leaves and comes home," he said.

Adding to the complexity of the issue is that these cameras are installed by authorities during a public health emergency for epidemic control purposes, so an individual's privacy has to be balanced against public interest and safety, Tong said.

200428002149-tiananmen-beijing-surveillance-camera-exlarge-169.jpg

A worker adjusts security cameras on the edge of Tiananmen Square in Beijing on September 30, 2014.

On February 4, the Cyberspace Administration of China issued a directive, calling on regional cyberspace authorities to "actively make use of big data, including personal information, to support epidemic prevention and control work," while protecting people's personal information.

The directive bans the collecting of personal data for epidemic control without consent from organizations that have not received the approval from health authorities under China's cabinet, the State Council.

It also said the collection of personal information should be limited to "key groups" such as confirmed or suspected Covid-19 patients and their close contacts, and that the information collected should not be used for other purposes, or be made public without consent. Organizations that collect personal information should adopt strict measures to protect data from being stolen or leaked, the document said.

Lau, the privacy expert, said under Chinese law, organizations with the authority to collect and report personal information concerning public health emergencies include national and regional health authorities, medical institutions, disease prevention and control authorities, as well as local authorities such as townships and resident committees authorized by the government and emergency command headquarters.

"Of course, the government will try to collect as much data as they can to help stop the spread of the virus," he said. But the government needs to consider if the collection of data is appropriate, necessary and proportionate, and assess if there are other less privacy intrusive methods to do the same thing, he added.

200415141532-china-health-qr-code-wuhan-exlarge-169.jpg

A passenger wearing a face mask uses a smartphone to scan a Wuhan city health QR code before entering the Tianhe Airport.

A new era of digital surveillance?

Earlier this month, over 100 rights and privacy organizations around the globe issued a joint statement to call on governments to ensure the use of digital technologies to track and monitor citizens during the pandemic is carried out in line with human rights.

"States' efforts to contain the virus must not be used as a cover to usher in a new era of greatly expanded systems of invasive digital surveillance," the statement said.

"Technology can and should play an important role during this effort to save lives, such as to spread public health messages and increase access to health care. However, an increase in state digital surveillance powers, such as obtaining access to mobile phone location data, threatens privacy, freedom of expression and freedom of association, in ways that could violate rights and degrade trust in public authorities -- undermining the effectiveness of any public health response," it said.

For now, it appears that the surveillance cameras on people's front doors are not there to stay. After Ali and Zhou finished their quarantine, they said the cameras were taken down.

The community workers told Zhou he could keep the camera for free. But Zhou was so furious about having to live under its gaze for two weeks that he said he took out a hammer and smashed the device in front of the community workers.

"If surveillance cameras are placed in public places, there's no problem -- they can monitor and deter unlawful acts. But they shouldn't appear in our private spaces," he said.

"I can't bear the thought that our everyday lives are completely exposed to the government's scrutiny."
 
This is goddamn fucking war against humanity and whomever does not understand it is clinically retarded.

Onto the spiritual and information arms, we must spread these things far and wide until every person globally is aware.

We have done tremendous progress and many are already questioning and know answers about what is going on as is, which
will prevent these psychotic filth of spreading this insanity to other parts of the world. People have also already been reacting to these reptilian false pretexts to impose alien measures.
 
They do this in the rest of the world too. They call it amazon alexa, google echo, facebook portal, Ring doorbell camera, and almost every kind of surveillance camera and baby monitor also report back to israel and china. They already have Wifi door locks that you can lock and unlock with your phone. Put that together with the ring doorbell camera, and they can just decide to lock specific people outside of their home when it sees them, or lock them inside and not let them out.

They have refrigerators with a screen on the outside of the door so people can go on facebook using the refrigerator as a computer, and it has full video and audio recording every moment.

They have "smart faucets" that constantly listen to and record all audio and it is connected to joole artificial intelligence, so it knows to turn your sink on when you tell it to. You can tell it a specific measurement, and it gives you just that amount of water.

They have "smart TVs" with camera and microphone built in. Microphone is so you can tell it what channel to go to. And the excuse for the camera is that it is to watch your eyes to see when you pay attention and when you look away, so they can know how to make advertisements more interesting to get you to watch them.

And the phone in everyone's pocket has all that and more, even things like heartbeat sensors. I have had my phone's cameras covered with tape since the day I got it. If I want to take a picture, it's easy to move the tape out of the way so the back camera can see. No reason to have it watching you all the time, or ever. Can't block the microphones so there is an audio recording somewhere of every moment.

What do you think the "internet of things" is? It is making everyone in the world replace every appliance in their home with these ridiculous spy things, and all of them linked together with the web of artificial intelligence.

So if you are sitting in your home and you say "Jews did 9/11" or something like that, then they lock you in your house, lock the fridge door whenever you walk in front of it, refuse to let any water out of the sink, and just wait a couple days for you to dehydrate and starve to death. It's exactly that simple and easy.

Just like those self driving cars, that are also linked with google echo. They hear somebody is a bad goy, and they just push one button on the computer from the other side of the world. And your car locks you inside and accelerates straight into a big tree at 100 Mph. Then the news never mentions it, or they say you were the one driving and you were drunk.
 
It is not their home, China is a communist country. People don't really "own" buildings, it's more like long-time rent, even if you "buy" a building
 
Ol argedco luciftias said:
And the phone in everyone's pocket has all that and more, even things like heartbeat sensors. I have had my phone's cameras covered with tape since the day I got it. If I want to take a picture, it's easy to move the tape out of the way so the back camera can see. No reason to have it watching you all the time, or ever. Can't block the microphones so there is an audio recording somewhere of every moment.
Is the phone recording all the time even when you unistalled Google or Facebook from your phone? Or when you do not give any app permission to camera or microphone? By this I mean that is recording 24/7, not only when you use it. If so, is there any way to verify or stop this? Or it's built in the phone's hardware?
 
Jerusalem: Jews, Christians and Muslims united in prayer.
At 3 p.m. (local time), in a ceremony broadcast live streamed worldwide
24 April 2020

Depositphotos_2698116_s-2019.jpg


The three monotheistic faiths, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, against the coronavirus in a common prayer in Jerusalem, the City three times holy. The invocation was written by the two Chief Rabbis of Israel - the Sephardic Yitzhak Yosef and the Askenazite David Lau - in light of the "terrible world situation" and saw the convinced adhesion of the heads of the Christian Churches in the Holy Land - the Greek Orthodox Patriarch Theophilos III, the Latin Patriarch Archbishop Pierbattista Pizzaballa - of Imam Gamal el Ubra and Agel Al-Atrash and the Druze spiritual leader Mowafaq Tarif. At 3:00 p.m. (local time), in a ceremony broadcast live around the world, the religious found themselves in the "neutral" place of the King David hotel to ask together - but according to today's health rules - "all the citizens of the world to join forces and lead a joint prayer for health and unity. Recalling Psalm 121, the religious then invoked the Lord not to abandon their children. "In these turbulent days, we continue to hear - they added referring also to racism and anti-Semitism - growing voices against entire communities. This terrible new reality has affected all humanity without distinction of religion, gender or race. Archbishop Pizzaballa stressed that "all over the world people are suffering from the coronavirus and we must pray. Especially here, because Jerusalem is the city of all peoples who pray here and it is the city that represents all peoples, since this disease knows no boundaries. We are all united to pray to the One to have mercy on us".

They rounded up the slaves. The rabbis wrote the prayer and of course also the affirmations to benefit from the energy of the slaves, who must pray to their pastor.
 
This is the original George Orwells; 1984 film. It's black and white as its the first 1956 film. Great sound and quality. One hour thirty minutes which looked like a large time investment but the film flew by and I was disappointed it seemed to be over so soon.

They had cameras everywhere even in people's homes. And they were spoken to from the cameras. Slaves.

It was chilling to consider the book nineteen eighty four was written in 1948. It just goes to show that they had this planned from a very long time ago.

And knowing about the earth being under occupation from an outer influence that has advanced technology. All the dots how all of this Orwellian surveillance state could have been so accurately forecasted long before such technology even existed.

https://www.impartialtruth.com/video/informative/we-have-entered-a-stage-when-conspiracy-theories-become-reality-1984/

There are two nineteen eighty four films on that site. The other is from the year 1984 but of course the original 1956 is best.
 
China's tyrannical system is a model for the global elite. Only at the end is much rougher than the current Chinese system. China is also very much a part of the Deep State, maintaining artificial tensions in the bipolar world order and until the global world order is established on the basis of Chinese methods. China has been maintained by the global elite to experiment there what they want to bring to the whole world /global communism/. That is why has not been and never will be a war with China, as it is only a deep state of trouble and beans under the rule of the global elite.
 
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
This is goddamn fucking war against humanity and whomever does not understand it is clinically retarded.

Onto the spiritual and information arms, we must spread these things far and wide until every person globally is aware.

We have done tremendous progress and many are already questioning and know answers about what is going on as is, which
will prevent these psychotic filth of spreading this insanity to other parts of the world. People have also already been reacting to these reptilian false pretexts to impose alien measures.

I have noticed that allot of people are unfortunately clinically retarded. The more I advance the more my disgust grows for ignorance and stupidity. People are afraid of taking responsibility for their own lives. Well, luckily for us
There are also many people that are waking up and letting their voices be heard :twisted: . Finding new friends is really hard these days as many people are low life "goyim" scum, who stab you in the back if they see your kindhearted. We are definitely making a huge impact on destroying the enemies plans Cobra commander! :cool: Everybody stay positive and keeping spamming as much as possible Final RTR'S!!! I am motivated like never before.

Hail Satan and all Gods/Goddesses of Duat!!!!
 
The Alchemist7 said:
Ol argedco luciftias said:
And the phone in everyone's pocket has all that and more, even things like heartbeat sensors. I have had my phone's cameras covered with tape since the day I got it. If I want to take a picture, it's easy to move the tape out of the way so the back camera can see. No reason to have it watching you all the time, or ever. Can't block the microphones so there is an audio recording somewhere of every moment.
Is the phone recording all the time even when you unistalled Google or Facebook from your phone? Or when you do not give any app permission to camera or microphone? By this I mean that is recording 24/7, not only when you use it. If so, is there any way to verify or stop this? Or it's built in the phone's hardware?

Without Google and Facebook on a specific device, all of these dangers are greatly nullified. That should do it for the most part and for large scale general surveillance by these two bad actors.
 
Satanswarlord666 said:
I have noticed that allot of people are unfortunately clinically retarded. The more I advance the more my disgust grows for ignorance and stupidity. People are afraid of taking responsibility for their own lives. Well, luckily for us
There are also many people that are waking up and letting their voices be heard :twisted: . Finding new friends is really hard these days as many people are low life "goyim" scum, who stab you in the back if they see your kindhearted. We are definitely making a huge impact on destroying the enemies plans Cobra commander! :cool: Everybody stay positive and keeping spamming as much as possible Final RTR'S!!! I am motivated like never before.

Hail Satan and all Gods/Goddesses of Duat!!!!

In this modern day retardism these kinds of posts give me hope. Thank you and keep the light going strong!

Hail Satan!
 
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
Without Google and Facebook on a specific device, all of these dangers are greatly nullified. That should do it for the most part and for large scale general surveillance by these two bad actors/

There are programs that allow you to remotely access your phone from a computer and wipe out apps that are normally `built-in` in the phone's software, the basic apps that the phone is coming with, google and facebook are part of this as well. I think if one is uninstalling google and facebook apps from the settings is not enough because the apps remain in the phone but they are inactive. Or this is what we would think when unistalling them, that they are not in use anymore but they keep tracking or recording our activity.
 
Henu the Great said:
Satanswarlord666 said:
I have noticed that allot of people are unfortunately clinically retarded. The more I advance the more my disgust grows for ignorance and stupidity. People are afraid of taking responsibility for their own lives. Well, luckily for us
There are also many people that are waking up and letting their voices be heard :twisted: . Finding new friends is really hard these days as many people are low life "goyim" scum, who stab you in the back if they see your kindhearted. We are definitely making a huge impact on destroying the enemies plans Cobra commander! :cool: Everybody stay positive and keeping spamming as much as possible Final RTR'S!!! I am motivated like never before.

Hail Satan and all Gods/Goddesses of Duat!!!!

In this modern day retardism these kinds of posts give me hope. Thank you and keep the light going strong!

Hail Satan!

Your welcome Henu the great. Also allot of thanks for creating the paintable Final RTR. It really helps when you have trouble visualizing at times.

HS/88!
 
With android smart phones the only reliable way to be somewhat sure of no app surveillance is to root the phone and install every packet yourself from non jew-store sources. Of course even then one is under surveillance from network towers, as is everyone else.

I could not do this, cuz using banking app will not work on a rooted phone. Thank you jews, lul. I guess it is a neccessary evil at the moment, huh?

Keep calm and do the rtr...
 
Satanswarlord666 said:
Your welcome Henu the great. Also allot of thanks for creating the paintable Final RTR. It really helps when you have trouble visualizing at times.

HS/88!

Heyy, no thanking me! Not my work. I simply use it daily and wanted to share it on my signature. Good tool for sure!

Hail Satan! :)
 
Satanswarlord666 said:
HP. Hoodedcobra666 said:
This is goddamn fucking war against humanity and whomever does not understand it is clinically retarded.

Onto the spiritual and information arms, we must spread these things far and wide until every person globally is aware.

We have done tremendous progress and many are already questioning and know answers about what is going on as is, which
will prevent these psychotic filth of spreading this insanity to other parts of the world. People have also already been reacting to these reptilian false pretexts to impose alien measures.

I have noticed that allot of people are unfortunately clinically retarded. The more I advance the more my disgust grows for ignorance and stupidity. People are afraid of taking responsibility for their own lives. Well, luckily for us
There are also many people that are waking up and letting their voices be heard :twisted: . Finding new friends is really hard these days as many people are low life "goyim" scum, who stab you in the back if they see your kindhearted. We are definitely making a huge impact on destroying the enemies plans Cobra commander! :cool: Everybody stay positive and keeping spamming as much as possible Final RTR'S!!! I am motivated like never before.

Hail Satan and all Gods/Goddesses of Duat!!!!

It is because the society is build that if there is a problem, that it can be shoved up to the higher ups, if its the case in example of products.. Just rules and regulations..
I am not sure about other countries, but it is like this in the NL.

This kind of stuff makes one weak and stops one from taking the responsibility for their own lives.. but you know what, you are the only person that can actually decide whats good for you. You yourself are the only person that can truly make a change in your life.

Instead of the 'Together we are strong' poster they should have said 'together we are responsible'. Because taking responsibilities instead of shoving it to others or blaming it on outside influences all the time is not going to help anyone become a strong person.

And with NL you have a lot of potards.. like that is anything new under the sun. Great advertising overseas (not really).
 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Satan

Back
Top