for instance


[click image]

...

How many filthy-deluded tertiary psychopath fucks are out there working their butts off to "save" us, while not having the first part of a clue about what it takes to get clear enough to begin to deserve our attention and our allegiance? There are a lot of them. It's not just the envious eyelash batter. And how many are taking that tack, not just out of the real need for an abundance of caution on the matter of who merits our solidarity in fact, but — dare I say it? — who are also subconsciously insuring their own safety from the primary and secondary psychopaths by erring on the side of suspicion.

Consult here what I just said about love.

You can't discern this stuff and act effectively for the future of life on earth if you can't connect with the love it takes to prevail.

Ed Snowden did that. No matter what else is true about this matter, if you can't get to the love part, you have to consider that, in actuality, you have your whole life worth of work to do over. If that doesn't seem like anything you want to devote yourself to tackling, no matter what stage of your game you're in, please, get out of the way.

If you can, I submit we need to dwell on this:
Nor is he optimistic that the next election will bring any meaningful reform. In the end, Snowden thinks we should put our faith in technology—not politicians. “We have the means and we have the technology to end mass surveillance without any legislative action at all, without any policy changes.” The answer, he says, is robust encryption. “By basically adopting changes like making encryption a universal standard—where all communications are encrypted by default—we can end mass surveillance not just in the United States but around the world.”

Until then, Snowden says, the revelations will keep coming. “We haven’t seen the end,” he says. Indeed, a couple of weeks after our meeting, The Washington Post reported that the NSA’s surveillance program had captured much more data on innocent Americans than on its intended foreign targets. There are still hundreds of thousands of pages of secret documents out there—to say nothing of the other whistle-blowers he may have already inspired. But Snowden says that information contained in any future leaks is almost beside the point. “The question for us is not what new story will come out next. The question is, what are we going to do about it?”
Don't skip over it. Tack it up on your wall. Get a tattoo. Tape it to the inside of your refrigerator. Have it etched onto some contact lenses. Put it under your pillow. Leave offerings for it on your alter.

Whatever it takes for you to actually get out of your daily pattern to make sure this gets fixed, it's as simple as Ed keeps pointing out.

The technology can be made to keep our privacy, to keep hackers out.

That has always been the case, but nobody's doing it. There's only one reason for this, and it has to do with the gradations of psychopathy popularly and egregiously and stupidly referred to as "human nature".

Stop! Look!


always and any time....