John McAfee: Death to #GoogleGestapo

IO Impotency

I am proud to stand with John McAfee (and Julian Assange). They represent the future in which individuals are free and the 1% elite are disenfranchised. I coined #GoogleGestapo and I am very pleased to be involved in creating Internet 2.0 that guarantees each individual the rights of anonymnity, identity, privacy, and security.  Here are John's latest brilliant ethical statements.

Betty Boop: InfoWars teams with Diamond and Silk in lawsuit against Google for discrimination and censorship

Commerce, Corruption, IO Impotency

InfoWars teams with Diamond and Silk in lawsuit against Google for discrimination and censorship

Phi Beta Iota:  #GoogleGestapo is reprehensible.  Time to bury them along with all collaborators in the USA censorship being advertised to China as “suitable” for Communist Chinese censorship needs.

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Jon Rappoport: Australia Bans Truth, Ends Free Speech

07 Health, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government, IO Impotency
Jon Rappoport

Breaking: Interview with Vaxxed producer who was just banned from Australia 

Polly Tommey, producer of the famous documentary, Vaxxed, has been banned from Australia. If that sounds quite insane—it is.

These Orwellian lunatics want to cancel the public's right to have access to information. “Don't think, obey.”
Here is their strategy in a nutshell: they want to equate certain information with shouting fire in a crowded theater and, therefore, claim the right to free speech and free assembly is canceled.

Stephen E. Arnold: The Noisy (Useless?) Internet

#OSE Open Source Everything, IO Impotency
Stephen E. Arnold

Optimizing the Noisy Internet

Humans love to complain, especially the older generations about how their youth was superior to the current day.  Alan Franzoni rants about how the Internet has gotten too noisy in “Stopping The Internet Noise-A Useful Internet Back Again.”  Franzoni complains that the modern Internet is not as useful as the Internet of the 56K modem days.  He lists the ways the old Internet was more productive.  He starts with old Usenet discussion groups and mailing lists.  What he liked about this old discussion boards were that he could subscribe to one application service instead of having to do it multiple times.  He then turns to IRC chatting, citing its superiority because it was a single application with a consistent interface.

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