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Play Nice Random Chat Thread: Episode III

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Apparently the Mongrel Mob turned up at a mosque for friday prayers, did a haka then stood guard.

And they and their biggest rivals (Black Power) held a meeting to determine what they'd do in response to the attacks.
 
Wow, that's nice of them. :think:

I know, so considerate....

Tho its apparently always been something they did to stick it up civil society, gang members do that sort of thing to differentiate themselves all over the place, not cos they genuinely love Hitler. Most Maori don't like real Nazis. Cos of the White Supremacist stuff.
 

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Mongrel Mob are idiots, and overrated as hard men too.

They originally tried to set up shop in the softest city in the country (Perth) and were closed down by the Coffin Cheaters.

I think its a bit different over there as opposed to here. Hence so many Kiwi's running around the place with no cares over the last 2 decades, with bounties on their heads.
 
I think its a bit different over there as opposed to here. Hence so many Kiwi's running around the place with no cares over the last 2 decades, with bounties on their heads.

There's plenty of them sitting in the clink waiting to be deported too. The MM types in Australia are just posers.

Maori's are capable bar room sluggers, but that's where their criminal capabilities start and end. Ever wondered why very few of them make it anywhere as boxers or MMA fighters? They also tend to be light on in the brains department.
 
There's plenty of them sitting in the clink waiting to be deported too. The MM types in Australia are just posers.

Maori's are capable bar room sluggers, but that's where their criminal capabilities start and end. Ever wondered why very few of them make it anywhere as boxers or MMA fighters? They also tend to be light on in the brains department.

Christ Snake that’s racist as ****
 
Christ Snake that’s racist as ****

Really?

It's also honest.

When I am referring to Maori's I am referring to the criminal element.

As far as that lot go, they are sluggers and they are dumb.
 
I had a 6' 10" Boer mate from South Africa and his best mate from Tonga take apart nearly a dozen Kiwis in front of me once.

It was pretty phenomenal. Took about 2 and a half minutes.
 
I had a 6' 10" Boer mate from South Africa and his best mate from Tonga take apart nearly a dozen Kiwis in front of me once.

It was pretty phenomenal. Took about 2 and a half minutes.

Now you're talking, and some of the Samoans are flat out dangerous also.

Even crews like the Crips & Bloods in the states don't mess with these people.
 

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Has anyone else noticed that the new hipster thing is for men to wear women’s clothes but still look like men? I’m talking men in velvet jump suits with mullets and beards long earrings and Birkenstock’s with socks.

There’s a hipster den/cafe near where I was working in Brunswick and it seemed the newest trend was to look as ridiculous as possible.
 
Anyway a few pages back GG was banging on about censoring the internet.

He did have a point actually. You can keep your news safe by installing the app Newsguard.

This is a list of the board of advisors:

  • Tom Ridge, the first Secretary of Homeland Security (George W. Bush administration)
  • Richard Stengel, former editor of Time magazine and Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy (Obama administration)
  • (Ret.) General Michael Hayden, former Director of the CIA, former Director of the National Security Agency and former Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence (George W. Bush administration)
  • Don Baer, chairman of Burson, Cohn & Wolfe and former White House Communications Director (Clinton administration)
  • Elise Jordan, political analyst, NBC, and former speechwriter for Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
  • John Battelle, co-founding editor of Wired and founding chief executive of Industry Standard magazines
  • Jessica Lessin, founder and editor-in-chief of The Information

All of those people in red will be advising Newsguard as to whether or not stories are appropriate and "true".

First Homeland security secretary, former head of the CIA and media people from all of the previous admins back until last century.

At least you can be sure the US Government approves what you'll be reading.
 

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Anyway a few pages back GG was banging on about censoring the internet.

He did have a point actually. You can keep your news safe by installing the app Newsguard.

This is a list of the board of advisors:

  • Tom Ridge, the first Secretary of Homeland Security (George W. Bush administration)
  • Richard Stengel, former editor of Time magazine and Undersecretary of State for Public Diplomacy (Obama administration)
  • (Ret.) General Michael Hayden, former Director of the CIA, former Director of the National Security Agency and former Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence (George W. Bush administration)
  • Don Baer, chairman of Burson, Cohn & Wolfe and former White House Communications Director (Clinton administration)
  • Elise Jordan, political analyst, NBC, and former speechwriter for Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
  • John Battelle, co-founding editor of Wired and founding chief executive of Industry Standard magazines
  • Jessica Lessin, founder and editor-in-chief of The Information

All of those people in red will be advising Newsguard as to whether or not stories are appropriate and "true".

First Homeland security secretary, former head of the CIA and media people from all of the previous admins back until last century.

At least you can be sure the US Government approves what you'll be reading.
Well said. The app 1.1.1.1 is another that is useful.

Brave browser > Google. Brave browser uses duckduckgo as the search engine and also has Tor integrated. Created by Mozilla co-founder. When you use it you definitely know the difference. It blocks trackers, ads, and it's a smooth integration with Google (your bookmarks etc with a couple of clicks) and now even chrome extensions can be used. A number of computer techs I know have moved over to Brave because of the privacy features. An added bonus soon is you'll be able to turn on a feature that lets ads run while browsing and you get the rewards (BAT, which will be used to buy online items or can be converted to your currency of choice. Not Google selling them to line their pockets).

Get a good VPN too (one that doesn't sell your data). Don't use Dropbox or onedrive, used MEGA. Not only do you get 50GB free cloud storage but it is encrypted so only you can access the data (they don't keep your passwords). I use it for my phone, ipad, computer and it has been super helpful. I know people like to paint the picture that if you care about privacy = you're selling drugs, laundering money, terrorist, etc. (I know because they've been saying that about Monero and other cryptocurrencies for years) but the idea of Dropbox and other cloud storage providers being able to access your data whenever they like under the "you could be a terrorist so give it to me" protocol is lunacy. You could have sensitive research data on there and those companies could be selling it before you even publish it. Or the Australian "comply when we ask for all of your passwords etc. or we'll throw you in jail for 10 years" :drunk:

Even if you don't agree with privacy or you don't care, you should be able to profit from your data. Enigma Protocol is another example of a privacy layer developed by MIT grads to hopefully in the future safeguard your information. Once safeguarded you'll be able to enter a data marketplace where you can sell it safely and with complete anonymity. With everything moving to digital (if it hasn't already) we are extremely vulnerable if security and privacy aren't up to scratch.

There are other measures you can take from server options right through to faraday cages lol
 
Well said. The app 1.1.1.1 is another that is useful.

Brave browser > Google. Brave browser uses duckduckgo as the search engine and also has Tor integrated. Created by Mozilla co-founder. When you use it you definitely know the difference. It blocks trackers, ads, and it's a smooth integration with Google (your bookmarks etc with a couple of clicks) and now even chrome extensions can be used. A number of computer techs I know have moved over to Brave because of the privacy features. An added bonus soon is you'll be able to turn on a feature that lets ads run while browsing and you get the rewards (BAT, which will be used to buy online items or can be converted to your currency of choice. Not Google selling them to line their pockets).

Get a good VPN too (one that doesn't sell your data). Don't use Dropbox or onedrive, used MEGA. Not only do you get 50GB free cloud storage but it is encrypted so only you can access the data (they don't keep your passwords). I use it for my phone, ipad, computer and it has been super helpful. I know people like to paint the picture that if you care about privacy = you're selling drugs, laundering money, terrorist, etc. (I know because they've been saying that about Monero and other cryptocurrencies for years) but the idea of Dropbox and other cloud storage providers being able to access your data whenever they like under the "you could be a terrorist so give it to me" protocol is lunacy. You could have sensitive research data on there and those companies could be selling it before you even publish it. Or the Australian "comply when we ask for all of your passwords etc. or we'll throw you in jail for 10 years" :drunk:

Even if you don't agree with privacy or you don't care, you should be able to profit from your data. Enigma Protocol is another example of a privacy layer developed by MIT grads to hopefully in the future safeguard your information. Once safeguarded you'll be able to enter a data marketplace where you can sell it safely and with complete anonymity. With everything moving to digital (if it hasn't already) we are extremely vulnerable if security and privacy aren't up to scratch.

There are other measures you can take from server options right through to faraday cages lol

All VPN's must bow to a lawful summons, packet sniffers are your friend. Go full bore with Ubuntu/TOR & encryption and become untraceable and undecipherable. Drop right off the grid.

GG, Alex Jones and I have weekly group discussions this way.
 
All VPN's must bow to a lawful summons.

Go full bore with Ubuntu/TOR & encryption and become untraceable and undecipherable. Drop right off the grid.
There are still a few decent ones that have integrity, but you're right, 99.9% of them are just a gimmick and would fold like a house of cards if a person wearing a suit knocked on their door.

The issue I have is when sites ban access through TOR. Youtube is an example. People need to learn how to protect their privacy because Australia always seems to be the testing ground for blocked sites and invasion of privacy. We went nuts on torrent sites. If US pass the net neutrality law I guarantee AUS will follow suit. EU and Article 13...:drunk:

Gene was right...and that was over 20 years ago now!

1553305987645.png
 
When I was young and sitting in the back seat of the car when mum was driving, I used to notice the Tenants Cars Only sign at a number unit complexes. I always thought who the hell is this Tenant person? How important is this person to be the only one allowed to park his or her car at all these different places. Well didn't I feel like a dill when I actually found out the meaning of the word Tenant.
 
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