John Podesta’s Email “Hack” Revealed To Be A Phishing Scam And The Reality Of Weak Cybersecurity

By Stephanie Shepard

Let me start off by clarifying a simple concept to anybody who doesn’t understand internet security or black hat hacking; a phishing scam IS NOT A HACK!

A hack is when somebody exploits the weaknesses and vulnerabilities of a internet security system. This can be the security system of a website, a company, an organization etc. A phishing scam is when somebody exploits the weaknesses and vulnerabilities of a person’s mind.

Most hacks are actually phishing scams in disguise. We now live in a world with high tech con artists and they’re finding ways to perfect old confident schemes. As the saying goes, “The more things change, the more they stay the same”.

Continue reading “John Podesta’s Email “Hack” Revealed To Be A Phishing Scam And The Reality Of Weak Cybersecurity”

IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT

As some frequent visitors to this site are aware, I have been the reigning “TBP Thumbs-Down Champion” for about four or five years. My views on illegal drugs are not popular and have been received by, shall we say, less than overwhelming support.

All that changed recently with the article, “LLPOH: Getting Out of Dodge.” One person posted a comment that achieved an incredible 108 thumbs-down, last time I looked. In all my years of visiting this site, I have NEVER seen a comment that broke the triple-digit barrier. But here it is ……

“Wow, what a fucking coward. I guess it is easier to be a chicken shit running away to another country than staying to take a stand. I have absolutely no respect for you.”

The author of that comment went on to post 4 more consecutive comments that went on to a majority of thumbs-down votes. Unfortunately, a 6th comment received a slim majority thumbs-up, which left my record of 10 consecutive majority thumbs-down comments intact. Nonetheless, the initial comment of 108 thumbs-down votes smashes the TBP record by a huge margin.

I therefore declare that person as a “TBP Thumbs-Down Co-Champion.” And the winner is ……………… Stephanie Shepard!!!! Congratulations, Stephanie. You are in rarified company.

Jim, tell the audience what Stephanie has won for this stunning achievement.

 


THE UNITED STATES OF EMBARASSMENT

By:Stephanie Shepard
www.timeofcalamity.com

 

http://i3.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/newsfeed/000/617/119/50f.jpg

 

We the people, in order to form a more perfect union, must hold those who set to destroy the nation accountable. After the War in Iraq, we the people, were outraged. After the fraud on Wall Street was revealed, we the people, were outraged. After the Bailouts, we the people, were outraged. After the announcement of Quantitative  Easing, we the people, were outraged. After the NDAA was signed, we the people, were outraged. After Edward Snowden turned whistle blower on the NSA, we the people, were outraged.

“We the people” are the most powerful three words in the history of the United States. Those three words have the power of conviction. The group alignment of small individual power being pulled into the fold of collective power. Those on the top are a few. Though they hold the most sway individually, they are weak in comparison of the collective. It is not the Federal Government that decides the direction of the country. It is the people. Without the people there is no Union. The Federal Government is only as powerful as we acknowledge.

 

“Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction. We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream. It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same, or one day we will spend our sunset years telling our children and our children’s children what it was once like in the United States where men were free.” – Ronald Reagan

http://9.media.dorkly.cvcdn.com/82/91/27112c3f541272d4c50dc0645805cf60.jpg

Excerpt from “Not everybody wants to be Free” by Didact:

Freedom, you see, is a very fragile thing. You cannot simply give freedom to people who are not willing to fight and sacrifice for it. As you go through life, you’re going to come across a lot of people- I would argue the majority of people- who just don’t want to be free. And why would they? If you think about it, freedom is actually bloody terrifying to most people.

When you have freedom- true freedom- you, and you alone, are responsible for your destiny. You can’t pass the buck for your failures as a human being over to your parents, or your church, or your government, or your children. You have to take responsibility for your actions. You have to fend for yourself. You have to accept that although many things are outside your control, those things that are within your control are difficult to deal with. You have to be willing to defend yourself- you can’t rely on anyone else to do it for you. You have to earn for yourself- you can’t mooch off the efforts of others. You have to exercise self-restraint and live in a manner that is consistent with your own principles- you can’t just bend or break them for a whim. You have to refuse the temptation to impose your desires upon others- because you don’t want them to do the same to you. You have to accept that when you screw up, it’s your damn fault and you need to fix it. You have to accept that you, and you alone, are responsible for your health, your body, your well-being, your money, your life, your family, and your relationship with God.

Put in these stark and simple terms, is it therefore at all surprising that most people would not want to be free at all? Are you then surprised that most people would rather choose, quite happily, to stay dumb and contented their entire lives?

The reality is that freedom is hard. It is work. It requires sacrifice, and very often pain, in order to thrive. And we as a species have evolved through that last n-million years to view pain as a Very Bad Thing that needs to be avoided. Is it any surprise at all, then, that if you give the average person a choice between a life of blissfully contented stupidity and then proceed to rob and rape him blind in return, or a life of hardship and toil in which he is master of his own destiny and answerable to none but the Almighty, said average person will almost always choose the former?

The upsides of freedom are tremendous, which is why you’ll still find people willing to pay the price to be free. But make no mistake- just like rights come with responsibilities attached, you can’t have freedom for free. You have to earn it. And if you’re not prepared to earn it, then don’t bitch when you realize, belatedly, that you don’t have it

http://img.pandawhale.com/post-20500-Congress-This-is-why-we-cant-h-RFVj.jpeg

Project Starve the Beast

Starving the beast is not as simplistic as “voting with your dollars” to create change. It is not calling your representative complaining for change. It is not voting once every four years wishing for change. Starving the Beast is aligning your own personal beliefs with necessary action. Looking at the prospect of discomfort and embracing it, despite the intentional challenge. Hard work has taken on a different meaning in the last decades. It has been manipulated to mean “Physically working hard for profit”. That is not hard work. At best, that is the minimum requirement of functioning in society. You are still relying on someone enduring the hard work of establishing where you contribute “hard work”. You are latching on to someone who came before you who laid the foundation of innovation through pain, sacrifice, education, investment, and opportunity; instead of seeking your own.

We the people, like to believe, we just inherit a working system. That we just get to continue the joyride and talk a big game. That is the worst assumption that is leading us astray. Yes, we inherit the foundation of our Founding Fathers. Yes, we are handed down the teachings of pain from our Veterans. Yes, we are given the means to be educated, written down by thinkers that came before us. Yes, we pass on the remaining wealth of our family, as a platform, to acquire our own livelihood. The present is handed to us, not the future. The idea of being owed the future you want, regardless of age or status, is entitlement.

So, how do you starve the beast? How do you embrace pain? How do you embody your power as the individual? How do we collectively become “We the People” once again? How do we align our personal beliefs with action?

Continue Reading at Time of Calamity>>>>

SOLVE FOR X, SOLVE FOR Y

Guest Post by Stephanie Shepard

In the 1990’s Neil Howe and William Strauss wrote the best selling books on generational theory. They created a new historical theory and proved that history was not linear, as most would believe, but it was a cycle. An 80 year cycle, the average time of a human life span, of four different generations interacting with one another throughout history. Their expertise has been hailed as accurate and prophetic interactions of the generations.

I don’t agree with Howe that I am a Millennial. The defining characteristic seem very off to me, they always have. I am suppose to be civic minded and a team player. I have never identified with those groups. I was suppose to be a over protected child and given trophies for showing up. I never identified with those childhoods. I am suppose to be a digital native who has always the internet and instant connectivity. I remember a childhood of playing outside.

Through my own observations and nostalgia, I can attest there is another generational cusp. A big one. Generation X and Millennials are a bigger cusp than any of the generations. Estimated I would say by two decades. A solid generation right in the middle. Generation Xers are estimated between 1964-1982, and Millennials are estimated between 1982-2002. Of course there is back and forth bickering of these dates. It still doesn’t change my theory of a full generation in the middle, starting in the mid 1970s and ending in the mid 1990s.

Generation X and Millennial Cusp

In the 1970’s the first no fault divorce law was passed in California, it gave couples the right to divorce without explanation, and seemingly with little consequence. The social and economic structure went unharmed for a few years. The consequences bore out of the new mass divorce rates would take a decade to effectively observe.  Largely they were swept under the rug as just a sign of “troubled adolescence” of the teenage Gen Xers.

https://encrypted-tbn1.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcThvYBwZ5353I5fCenaQeHm6AenvPyY3iOxet0yyAzcv8p5FD6KuA

 

“As my bones grew they did hurt,
They hurt really bad.
I tried hard to have a father,
But instead I had a dad.”
“I just want you to know that I.
Don’t hate you anymore.
There is nothing I could say,
That I haven’t thought before.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The first rise of the teenage angst culture started in 1991 with the release of “Smells like Teen Spirit”. The early wave of Gen X were getting out on their own, to only realize there was nothing waiting for them. Much like their childhoods, their was no warm embrace in the real world. They were on their own to figure out and survival mode would be the generational characteristic that would forever stay. The Nomad Generation was fulfilling their roles in the generation scheme.

Following Nirvana’s long shot success, many other Seattle grunge bands began to emerge in mainstream music. A new genre was born out of childhoods of being in the shadows of their parents’ vanity. They grew up raising themselves, going home to empty houses, and watching wholesome value programming of the Brady Bunch. Never knowing a two parent household and homemaker mothers. The wave of the latchkey childhood had begun and would continue for decades.

When Neil Howe wrote about the Millennials there were a few characteristics that he did not anticipate lingering from the Gen X childhood. For over two decades birth control, abortion, and divorce would define a huge cusp generation. Many of the Millennial predictions have not come true because of not taking into account how culturally changing the effect have been. Gen X childhood alienation was not an abnormal trend. The same traits that stirred contempt in their generation carried over to the Millennials.

http://www.vanneman.umd.edu/socy441/trends/divorce.jpg

Generation X and Millennials have an odd connection. The cusp I am referring to is one of a generation raising itself. While many of the Millennials had single moms or working moms, their entertainment was largely unguided. Millennials grew up with Generation X writing and producing the very same entertainment. The music, television programming, movies, video games, and cartoons were written and produce by older generation Xers. Older Millennials were the target audience in the late 1980s and early 1990s.  The cultural influence of entertainment during the time had a lasting impact.

The Alternation Rock and Rap during the 1990s, written by Xers, were the storytellers of the pain Millennials were facing while growing up. My parents are divorced. They got divorced in 1991, I was five years old. The first memories I have of my childhood were of my Dad working and never around. My mom stayed at home with me, while my brother went to school. When my Dad was home I heard screaming, intensified anger on both sides, and being woken in the middle of the night to my Mom packing bags. There was even one morning I woke up to the living room destroyed along with ranch dressing drying to the walls of the kitchen.

When it comes to divorce my family is saturated in it. My parents both grew up in divorced households. Both of my parents were raised by their mothers and had part time Dads. My grandparents were born on the Silent/Baby Boomer cusp, and they loved their divorce. Most of my grandparents were divorced multiple times. This cycle didn’t end  until they started to age. Now my parents get to suffer the burden of their final expenses. No houses to inherit or funds to pay for their debts. All the money was spent on divorces and child support payments.

The Divorce Burden

Prior to the popularity of divorce, couples remained together, and accumulated wealth over the course of their lifetimes. Many were quite successful in paying off their mortgages, building savings, aquiring health insurance, life insurance, and making plans for retirement. When divorce came into the picture, that structure was demolished. Nobody owned houses outright by the end of their career. Both parties were left poorer, single moms started applying in mass for welfare and fathers had to pay the expenses two separate households. Instead of building savings, a debt fueled lifestyle because the norm.

Now as many Boomers are at the age of retirement they have nothing. After multiple divorces and starting multiple families, they have no wealth security. They cannot collect pensions and benefits from their spouses, they cannot pay off their homes, and they are not able to pay off the debts they accumulated in their lifetimes.

This saddles the younger generations to pay for their parents and grandparents carefree attitude. A generation who never thought they would get old. Now as they age they have no plan B. Their children are not better off either. With no wealth accumulation, most of Generation X and Millennials have a student loan bubble and multiple credit card debits. I heavily doubt Generation X or Millennials will be lining up to pay for their parents retirements.