Geeks Everywhere, The Freedom Of The World Depends On You
Fri 8:26 am +00:00, 10 Dec 2010Earlier Wikileaks had exposed the frauds committed by the individuals behind the thefts from deposit holders in Iceland’s failing banks –
These exposures have changed events. Iceland has wised up to the treachery of the central banking system and people there and elsewhere are learning not to trust banks and bankers. The climate change summit in Copenhagen was a fiasco largely due to Wikileaks’ revelations, and the reversal of public interest in the global warming deception is making it harder to fleece populations with climate taxes.
The next major revelations from Wikileaks will be financial –
from Political Pundits UK –
It will give a true and representative insight into how banks behave at the executive level in a way that will stimulate investigations and reforms, I presume. You could call it the ecosystem of corruption..But it’s also all the regular decision making that turns a blind eye to and supports unethical practices: the oversight that’s not done, the priorities of executives, how they think they’re fulfilling their own self-interest.’
This was before Assange’s arrest. He is only a figurehead at Wikileaks. If the only way the world can fight back against the secret networks of the New World Order is through such releases, then it is vital that the revelations continue. Geeks everywhere, the freedom of the world needs you. Hack them and expose their lies everywhere.
The group called Anonymous is doing exactly that –
http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/1f596aa4-048d-11e0-a99c-00144feabdc0.html#ixzz17q9Ywenj
Internet subcultures rarely make front page news. But when the mysterious forces of Anonymous took it upon themselves to attack opponents of WikiLeaks, the whistle-blowing website, their success took everyone – not least victims such as Visa, MasterCard and PayPal – by surprise.
This year has seen military and security experts often warn about the prospects of “cyberwarfare”. Few expected the most prominent assaults against large companies to come from a scattered group of anarchists and idealists with no identifiable leader, membership or nationality.
The loose internet grouping that calls itself Anonymous has been notorious in web circles for years, particularly for its apparently random attacks on the music industry, Kiss singer Gene Simmons, YouTube and the Scientologists. Its wilfully illiterate grammar and black humour has permeated the internet far beyond the 4chan messageboard, which originally spawned it.
Even as the more serious matters of attacks on big companies were plotted this week, Anonymous followers in 4chan’s open chat rooms chimed in with insults and jokes. But with what it has dubbed “Operation Payback” the group has mounted its most ideological crusade yet.





