From: small Pox on
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oNo2kDkstBo
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jNuGBCAAg8
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9C4umi2eMrM

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PR6s_Ib0I-M
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivTcmbqQCFg
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6JzupsT-8Sc

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubacHhs8RUA

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4NmwNE4qps

If confirmed Elena Kagan will be impartial and if not then she wont
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCUo6cORArA


On Jun 29, 10:18 am, nanothermite911fbibustards
<nanothermite911fbibusta...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> YanQui  cry babies using old RACIST formula of Harassment !!!
>
> To Harass Muslims :- Make a Movie of Bin Laden from a Studio in
> Langley Virginia with an actor with SILICONE mask
>
> and release on the internet
>
> with FBI working on AUTHENTICATING it.
>
> Hey YANK Bustards , NO ONE trust you. You have DESTROYED your OWN
> CREDIBILITY with your own ODIOUS HANDS !!!!
>
> Hey YANK Bustards , NO ONE trust you. You have DESTROYED your OWN
> CREDIBILITY with your own ODIOUS HANDS !!!!
>
> Hey YANK Bustards , NO ONE trust you. You have DESTROYED your OWN
> CREDIBILITY with your own ODIOUS HANDS !!!!
>
> They cry HOARSE on Abdul Qader Khan, while its a FACT
>
> that CENTRIFUGE technology was STOLEN by GERMANS from RUSSIA. It was
> RUSSIA which invented the centrifuge running on a single ball. The
> DUTCH and BRITISH stole it under URENCO.
>
> USA stole it from LIBYA.
> USA stole it from LIBYA.
> USA stole it from LIBYA.
>
> The concept of CENTRIFUGE as the possibility was PROLIFERATED by MAD
> JEWS of New York Times, Washington POST and the NEOCONS. I learnt the
> CONCEPT from the NEWSPAPERS and before that the books were LYING about
> the Gas DIFFUSION PLANT or some Reactor Reprocessing Plant. The word
> KRYTRON was also PROLIFERATED by MAD Neocons.
>
> ==========
>
> Hey FBI BUSTARDS, I ask you a POINTED QUESTION in PUBLIC ?
>
> If you are SO competent, tell me where is the ANTHRAX MAILER and where
> are his sound and VIDEO TESTIMONIALS ?
>
> Where is the trail leading from nanothermite residue collected by DR
> STEVEN JONES to the actual 911 perpetrators ?
>
> What about the Testimonials  of  EXPLOSIVES and EXPLOSIONS ???? !!!!!
>
> ==========
>
> http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2010/06/russian_spies_seem_to_have_bee.htmlhttp://nymag.com/daily/intel/2010/06/russian_spies_seem_to_have_bee.html
>
> Russian Spies’ Dumbest Mistakes
> 6/29/10 at 11:00 AM Comment 22Comment 22Comments
> Anna Chapman.
> Photo: Patrick McMullan
> This morning, a lot of the papers said the Justice Department's
> complaint about the Russian spies read like "a Cold War thriller." But
> between their yapping about their work in cafés, their decision to
> write anti-American editorials in newspapers (because no one will
> notice if they're in Spanish!) and the plain fact that, over ten
> years, none of these ten intelligence agents actually gathered any
> intelligence (they're being charged with being unregistered, not with
> obtaining classified materials), it's more like a Cold War–era comedy,
> in the vein of Rocky and Bullwinkle. Let's take a look at some of the
> gang's most awkward moments.
>
> It appears the incompetence came from the top. For instance, someone
> at the S.V.R. actually sent them this directive:
>
> “You were sent to U.S.A. for long-term service trip,” it said. “Your
> education, bank accounts, car, house etc. — all these serve one goal:
> fulfill your main mission, i.e. to search and develop ties in
> policymaking circles and send intels [intelligence reports] to
> C[enter].”
>
> Thanks for the expository dialogue, super-secret agency!
>
> While several of them quite successfully immersed themselves in
> American culture, particularly the Murphys, whom neighbors called
> "suburbia personified" (“They couldn’t have been spies,” one neighbor
> quipped, awesomely, “Look what she did with the hydrangeas”), others
> explained away their weirdness with flimsy excuses, like Tracey Foley,
> of Cambridge. According to a neighbor:
>
> “She said they were from Canada.”
>
> Right, because that worked for the Coneheads.
>
> Then there's the methods they used to conduct their work, which were
> so over-the-top dramatic (briefcase-switching, short-wave-radio-using)
> that they may as well have been wearing signs reading, "We Are SPIES."
> The Post picks up on the following, which it calls a "particularly
> slick spy exchange" between one "Anna Chapman" and a fellow spy.
>
> Chapman pulled a laptop out of a tote bag in a bookstore at Warren and
> Greenwich streets in the West Village while her handler lurked
> outside, receiving her message on his own computer, the feds said.
>
> Wait, how is that slick, exactly? He was standing right outside. If
> she had just gone and told him in person, then the Feds mightn't have
> gotten hold of the e-mail using what according to the complaint was a
> common "commercially available" wireless-connection interceptor that
> even Ali Wise owns.
>
> Chapman, we are sorry to say, seems to be one of the least bright
> bulbs in this box. In addition to the above scenario, she 1)
> registered a cell phone under the preposterous address of "99 Fake
> Street," and in the end, fell hard for a ridiculous scenario posed to
> her by undercover U.S. agents.
>
> The undercover instructed her on how she would recognize her fellow
> spy and how to report back on the handoff, the feds said.
>
> "Haven’t we met in California last summer?" the spy expecting the fake
> passport was supposed to say. Chapman was to respond, "No, I think it
> was the Hamptons," according to the FBI.
>
> Oh, that dialogue. It's like they are making fun of her to her face.
> It gets worse:
>
> Chapman allegedly was also supposed to hold a magazine under her arm
> so her counterpart would recognize her, and plant a stamp on a wall
> map to indicate the handoff was a success.
> Then she was supposed to turn around three times with her finger in
> the air ... God. The Times this morning said Obama was "not happy"
> that this sting occurred so close to his hamburger social with
> Medvedev, and we can imagine why. He must be so embarrassed for him.
>
> Spy ring's 'femme fatale' [NYP]
> In Ordinary Lives, U.S. Sees the Work of Russian Agents [NYT]

From: small Pox on

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cnz5N9OubCQ

On Jun 29, 11:18 am, small Pox <smallpox...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oNo2kDkstBohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jNuGBCAAg8http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9C4umi2eMrM
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PR6s_Ib0I-Mhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ivTcmbqQCFghttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6JzupsT-8Sc
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubacHhs8RUA
>
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4NmwNE4qps
>
> If confirmed Elena Kagan will be impartial and if not then she wonthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCUo6cORArA
>
> On Jun 29, 10:18 am, nanothermite911fbibustards
>
> <nanothermite911fbibusta...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> > YanQui  cry babies using old RACIST formula of Harassment !!!
>
> > To Harass Muslims :- Make a Movie of Bin Laden from a Studio in
> > Langley Virginia with an actor with SILICONE mask
>
> > and release on the internet
>
> > with FBI working on AUTHENTICATING it.
>
> > Hey YANK Bustards , NO ONE trust you. You have DESTROYED your OWN
> > CREDIBILITY with your own ODIOUS HANDS !!!!
>
> > Hey YANK Bustards , NO ONE trust you. You have DESTROYED your OWN
> > CREDIBILITY with your own ODIOUS HANDS !!!!
>
> > Hey YANK Bustards , NO ONE trust you. You have DESTROYED your OWN
> > CREDIBILITY with your own ODIOUS HANDS !!!!
>
> > They cry HOARSE on Abdul Qader Khan, while its a FACT
>
> > that CENTRIFUGE technology was STOLEN by GERMANS from RUSSIA. It was
> > RUSSIA which invented the centrifuge running on a single ball. The
> > DUTCH and BRITISH stole it under URENCO.
>
> > USA stole it from LIBYA.
> > USA stole it from LIBYA.
> > USA stole it from LIBYA.
>
> > The concept of CENTRIFUGE as the possibility was PROLIFERATED by MAD
> > JEWS of New York Times, Washington POST and the NEOCONS. I learnt the
> > CONCEPT from the NEWSPAPERS and before that the books were LYING about
> > the Gas DIFFUSION PLANT or some Reactor Reprocessing Plant. The word
> > KRYTRON was also PROLIFERATED by MAD Neocons.
>
> > ==========
>
> > Hey FBI BUSTARDS, I ask you a POINTED QUESTION in PUBLIC ?
>
> > If you are SO competent, tell me where is the ANTHRAX MAILER and where
> > are his sound and VIDEO TESTIMONIALS ?
>
> > Where is the trail leading from nanothermite residue collected by DR
> > STEVEN JONES to the actual 911 perpetrators ?
>
> > What about the Testimonials  of  EXPLOSIVES and EXPLOSIONS ???? !!!!!
>
> > ==========
>
> >http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2010/06/russian_spies_seem_to_have_bee.h...
>
> > Russian Spies’ Dumbest Mistakes
> > 6/29/10 at 11:00 AM Comment 22Comment 22Comments
> > Anna Chapman.
> > Photo: Patrick McMullan
> > This morning, a lot of the papers said the Justice Department's
> > complaint about the Russian spies read like "a Cold War thriller." But
> > between their yapping about their work in cafés, their decision to
> > write anti-American editorials in newspapers (because no one will
> > notice if they're in Spanish!) and the plain fact that, over ten
> > years, none of these ten intelligence agents actually gathered any
> > intelligence (they're being charged with being unregistered, not with
> > obtaining classified materials), it's more like a Cold War–era comedy,
> > in the vein of Rocky and Bullwinkle. Let's take a look at some of the
> > gang's most awkward moments.
>
> > It appears the incompetence came from the top. For instance, someone
> > at the S.V.R. actually sent them this directive:
>
> > “You were sent to U.S.A. for long-term service trip,” it said. “Your
> > education, bank accounts, car, house etc. — all these serve one goal:
> > fulfill your main mission, i.e. to search and develop ties in
> > policymaking circles and send intels [intelligence reports] to
> > C[enter].”
>
> > Thanks for the expository dialogue, super-secret agency!
>
> > While several of them quite successfully immersed themselves in
> > American culture, particularly the Murphys, whom neighbors called
> > "suburbia personified" (“They couldn’t have been spies,” one neighbor
> > quipped, awesomely, “Look what she did with the hydrangeas”), others
> > explained away their weirdness with flimsy excuses, like Tracey Foley,
> > of Cambridge. According to a neighbor:
>
> > “She said they were from Canada.”
>
> > Right, because that worked for the Coneheads.
>
> > Then there's the methods they used to conduct their work, which were
> > so over-the-top dramatic (briefcase-switching, short-wave-radio-using)
> > that they may as well have been wearing signs reading, "We Are SPIES."
> > The Post picks up on the following, which it calls a "particularly
> > slick spy exchange" between one "Anna Chapman" and a fellow spy.
>
> > Chapman pulled a laptop out of a tote bag in a bookstore at Warren and
> > Greenwich streets in the West Village while her handler lurked
> > outside, receiving her message on his own computer, the feds said.
>
> > Wait, how is that slick, exactly? He was standing right outside. If
> > she had just gone and told him in person, then the Feds mightn't have
> > gotten hold of the e-mail using what according to the complaint was a
> > common "commercially available" wireless-connection interceptor that
> > even Ali Wise owns.
>
> > Chapman, we are sorry to say, seems to be one of the least bright
> > bulbs in this box. In addition to the above scenario, she 1)
> > registered a cell phone under the preposterous address of "99 Fake
> > Street," and in the end, fell hard for a ridiculous scenario posed to
> > her by undercover U.S. agents.
>
> > The undercover instructed her on how she would recognize her fellow
> > spy and how to report back on the handoff, the feds said.
>
> > "Haven’t we met in California last summer?" the spy expecting the fake
> > passport was supposed to say. Chapman was to respond, "No, I think it
> > was the Hamptons," according to the FBI.
>
> > Oh, that dialogue. It's like they are making fun of her to her face.
> > It gets worse:
>
> > Chapman allegedly was also supposed to hold a magazine under her arm
> > so her counterpart would recognize her, and plant a stamp on a wall
> > map to indicate the handoff was a success.
> > Then she was supposed to turn around three times with her finger in
> > the air ... God. The Times this morning said Obama was "not happy"
> > that this sting occurred so close to his hamburger social with
> > Medvedev, and we can imagine why. He must be so embarrassed for him.
>
> > Spy ring's 'femme fatale' [NYP]
> > In Ordinary Lives, U.S. Sees the Work of Russian Agents [NYT]

From: nanothermite911fbibustards on
FBI Bustards - No one believes your ODIOUS LIES !!!

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NLo6Y0weyro


On Jun 29, 11:37 am, small Pox <smallpox...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cnz5N9OubCQ
>
> On Jun 29, 11:18 am, small Pox <smallpox...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oNo2kDkstBohttp://www.youtube.com/watc....
>
> >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PR6s_Ib0I-Mhttp://www.youtube.com/watc....
>
> >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubacHhs8RUA
>
> >http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C4NmwNE4qps
>
> > If confirmed Elena Kagan will be impartial and if not then she wonthttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aCUo6cORArA
>
> > On Jun 29, 10:18 am, nanothermite911fbibustards
>
> > <nanothermite911fbibusta...(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> > > YanQui  cry babies using old RACIST formula of Harassment !!!
>
> > > To Harass Muslims :- Make a Movie of Bin Laden from a Studio in
> > > Langley Virginia with an actor with SILICONE mask
>
> > > and release on the internet
>
> > > with FBI working on AUTHENTICATING it.
>
> > > Hey YANK Bustards , NO ONE trust you. You have DESTROYED your OWN
> > > CREDIBILITY with your own ODIOUS HANDS !!!!
>
> > > Hey YANK Bustards , NO ONE trust you. You have DESTROYED your OWN
> > > CREDIBILITY with your own ODIOUS HANDS !!!!
>
> > > Hey YANK Bustards , NO ONE trust you. You have DESTROYED your OWN
> > > CREDIBILITY with your own ODIOUS HANDS !!!!
>
> > > They cry HOARSE on Abdul Qader Khan, while its a FACT
>
> > > that CENTRIFUGE technology was STOLEN by GERMANS from RUSSIA. It was
> > > RUSSIA which invented the centrifuge running on a single ball. The
> > > DUTCH and BRITISH stole it under URENCO.
>
> > > USA stole it from LIBYA.
> > > USA stole it from LIBYA.
> > > USA stole it from LIBYA.
>
> > > The concept of CENTRIFUGE as the possibility was PROLIFERATED by MAD
> > > JEWS of New York Times, Washington POST and the NEOCONS. I learnt the
> > > CONCEPT from the NEWSPAPERS and before that the books were LYING about
> > > the Gas DIFFUSION PLANT or some Reactor Reprocessing Plant. The word
> > > KRYTRON was also PROLIFERATED by MAD Neocons.
>
> > > ==========
>
> > > Hey FBI BUSTARDS, I ask you a POINTED QUESTION in PUBLIC ?
>
> > > If you are SO competent, tell me where is the ANTHRAX MAILER and where
> > > are his sound and VIDEO TESTIMONIALS ?
>
> > > Where is the trail leading from nanothermite residue collected by DR
> > > STEVEN JONES to the actual 911 perpetrators ?
>
> > > What about the Testimonials  of  EXPLOSIVES and EXPLOSIONS ???? !!!!!
>
> > > ==========
>
> > >http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2010/06/russian_spies_seem_to_have_bee.h....
>
> > > Russian Spies’ Dumbest Mistakes
> > > 6/29/10 at 11:00 AM Comment 22Comment 22Comments
> > > Anna Chapman.
> > > Photo: Patrick McMullan
> > > This morning, a lot of the papers said the Justice Department's
> > > complaint about the Russian spies read like "a Cold War thriller." But
> > > between their yapping about their work in cafés, their decision to
> > > write anti-American editorials in newspapers (because no one will
> > > notice if they're in Spanish!) and the plain fact that, over ten
> > > years, none of these ten intelligence agents actually gathered any
> > > intelligence (they're being charged with being unregistered, not with
> > > obtaining classified materials), it's more like a Cold War–era comedy,
> > > in the vein of Rocky and Bullwinkle. Let's take a look at some of the
> > > gang's most awkward moments.
>
> > > It appears the incompetence came from the top. For instance, someone
> > > at the S.V.R. actually sent them this directive:
>
> > > “You were sent to U.S.A. for long-term service trip,” it said. “Your
> > > education, bank accounts, car, house etc. — all these serve one goal:
> > > fulfill your main mission, i.e. to search and develop ties in
> > > policymaking circles and send intels [intelligence reports] to
> > > C[enter].”
>
> > > Thanks for the expository dialogue, super-secret agency!
>
> > > While several of them quite successfully immersed themselves in
> > > American culture, particularly the Murphys, whom neighbors called
> > > "suburbia personified" (“They couldn’t have been spies,” one neighbor
> > > quipped, awesomely, “Look what she did with the hydrangeas”), others
> > > explained away their weirdness with flimsy excuses, like Tracey Foley,
> > > of Cambridge. According to a neighbor:
>
> > > “She said they were from Canada.”
>
> > > Right, because that worked for the Coneheads.
>
> > > Then there's the methods they used to conduct their work, which were
> > > so over-the-top dramatic (briefcase-switching, short-wave-radio-using)
> > > that they may as well have been wearing signs reading, "We Are SPIES."
> > > The Post picks up on the following, which it calls a "particularly
> > > slick spy exchange" between one "Anna Chapman" and a fellow spy.
>
> > > Chapman pulled a laptop out of a tote bag in a bookstore at Warren and
> > > Greenwich streets in the West Village while her handler lurked
> > > outside, receiving her message on his own computer, the feds said.
>
> > > Wait, how is that slick, exactly? He was standing right outside. If
> > > she had just gone and told him in person, then the Feds mightn't have
> > > gotten hold of the e-mail using what according to the complaint was a
> > > common "commercially available" wireless-connection interceptor that
> > > even Ali Wise owns.
>
> > > Chapman, we are sorry to say, seems to be one of the least bright
> > > bulbs in this box. In addition to the above scenario, she 1)
> > > registered a cell phone under the preposterous address of "99 Fake
> > > Street," and in the end, fell hard for a ridiculous scenario posed to
> > > her by undercover U.S. agents.
>
> > > The undercover instructed her on how she would recognize her fellow
> > > spy and how to report back on the handoff, the feds said.
>
> > > "Haven’t we met in California last summer?" the spy expecting the fake
> > > passport was supposed to say. Chapman was to respond, "No, I think it
> > > was the Hamptons," according to the FBI.
>
> > > Oh, that dialogue. It's like they are making fun of her to her face.
> > > It gets worse:
>
> > > Chapman allegedly was also supposed to hold a magazine under her arm
> > > so her counterpart would recognize her, and plant a stamp on a wall
> > > map to indicate the handoff was a success.
> > > Then she was supposed to turn around three times with her finger in
> > > the air ... God. The Times this morning said Obama was "not happy"
> > > that this sting occurred so close to his hamburger social with
> > > Medvedev, and we can imagine why. He must be so embarrassed for him.
>
> > > Spy ring's 'femme fatale' [NYP]
> > > In Ordinary Lives, U.S. Sees the Work of Russian Agents [NYT]