https://americanstasi.com/the-american-stasi-executes-the-ceo-of-united-healthcare/
This guy nails it cold. Excellent understanding of how a coven hit is arranged.
Revealing that which is concealed. Learning about anything that resembles real freedom. A journey of self-discovery shared with the world. Have no fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them - Ephesians 5-11 Join me and let's follow that high road...
https://americanstasi.com/the-american-stasi-executes-the-ceo-of-united-healthcare/
This guy nails it cold. Excellent understanding of how a coven hit is arranged.
I get these too, but from a different kind of burglar. The 3 letter agency kind. And they do it better. They plant them in tree bark and take bark from the tree they intend to place the camera, doll up the device, then come again later to place it. Blends perfectly. And they put it above reachable height so you just can't walk up and yank it off - you need a small ladder. Like they used to install it.
I've got them on telephone poles, neighbor's properties whom are coven, on trees, rocks, you name it. They use low volt wifi to link to a repeater that then boosts the signal back to a local router, again a neighbor. I have purchased spy gear at detecting this stuff, so the signal, is detectable and there.
If you look, the tell is bark missing from the backside of your trees, so it's less likely you'll stumble over that fact.
Audio and video, on every angle, inside and out.
The life of a many decade, gang stalked victim, still walking around to tell the tale.
Your messages, communication requests (e.g., "Alexa, call Mom"), and related instructions are "Alexa interactions," as described in the Alexa Terms of Use. Amazon processes and retains your Alexa Interactions and related information in the cloud in order to respond to your requests (e.g., "Send a message to Mom"), to provide additional functionality (e.g., speech to text transcription and vice versa), and to improve our services. -Amazon Terms of UseDoes Alexa record everything? Not according to Amazon, which says that devices such as the Echo only begin "listening" when it hears its wake word, "Alexa." Could Alexa be remotely switched on or hacked to surveil a target? Well - we know they've been hacked to eavesdrop, and we know the government has been using personal cell phones as "roving bugs" for years - so it stands to reason that an Amazon listening device could be used against its owner.
Two weeks ago a New Hampshire judge ordered Amazon to turn over two days worth of Amazon Echo recordings in a January, 2017 double murder of two women, for example, in the hopes that it may yield useful evidence in the case. The search warrant, obtained by Tech Crunch, says that there is "probable cause to believe" that the Echo picked up "audio recordings capturing the attack."Alexa, are you spying on me?— Wrong, Brian (@leonidasmoderus) May 25, 2018
Alexa: *coughs* No, of course not.
So how to delete what Amazon has recorded?"Ok Google, ask Alexa if Siri is listening in on my conversations"— StockCats (@StockCats) May 25, 2018
Cortana - "if you aren't doing anything wrong there's nothing to worry about"
You can listen to and delete this information through the Amazon Alexa app on your iPhone or Android phone. Here's how:You may or may not get a visit from a Bezos robot dog if you do this, so proceed at your own risk.
You'll see a list of all of your interactions with Alexa, just like the picture above. You can tap each one to listen to the recording, or to delete the recording from Amazon's cloud.
- Open the Alexa app on your phone.
- Tap the menu icon on the top-left corner of the app.
- Tap "Settings" at the bottom.'
- Tap "Alexa Account" at the top of the page.
- Select "History."
Unfortunately, if you use Alexa as frequently as I do, the list of recordings is prohibitively long to actually move through and delete each voice request one by one. So, if you want to delete everything at once, do this:
- Visit Amazon's Device page
- Select the menu button to the left of the Echo device you'd like to manage. (The menu button looks like three little dots stacked on top of one another.
- Tap "Manage Voice Recordings" You'll see a prompt like this:
This lets you delete all of the recordings sent to Amazon by a specific Echo. -CNBC
- Tap "Delete."