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List of words the government monitors on the social media
Right here. I guess the real question is: if North Korea had to evacuate a nuclear reactor due to anthrax, would radiation attack and assassinate the spores before they went pandemic?
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The readers of this blog might be interested to know that my sources tell me that a navy transport plane has just been scheduled for a flight from David Hardy's home state of Arizona to Guantanamo Bay late tonight. Other sources tell me that there is a large gathering of government looking guys on a farm just outside of David's home town.
But I wouldn't worry if I was David, because the new law passed recently that gives the military the authority to abduct anybody secretly in the middle of the night and lock them up in a military prison for life without trial because somebody said they're a terrorist, didn't actually change current federal law on the issue, at least according to the what the new law claims.
And if David is taken to Guantanamo, he needn't worry about having a confession tortured out of him because the US doesn't torture people. The US only uses harsh interrogation techniques where the person is subjected to suffering so intolerable that they would confess to a death penalty offense just for the possibility that the torture, uh, I mean interrogation, might pause.
Releasing the list of words is actually a clever trick. Now they just have to look for the rare person who is careful to never use any of those words, and they've got their terrorist. :)
(You must be careful to always use the acronym MDA and never the full name on this site or you will summon the demon.)
Unless someone really took the initiative, it would be a disaster. Management of the facility would launch a response and attempt mitigation, but might be held hostage by their fears. Worse still, the underfunded DPRK authorities might just be shooting from the hip.