Inside the Military’s Secret Undercover Army

spying secret undercover army signature reduction

Via Newsweek

The largest undercover force the world has ever known is the one created by the Pentagon over the past decade. Some 60,000 people now belong to this secret army, many working under masked identities and in low profile, all part of a broad program called “signature reduction.” The force, more than ten times the size of the clandestine elements of the CIA, carries out domestic and foreign assignments, both in military uniforms and under civilian cover, in real life and online, sometimes hiding in private businesses and consultancies, some of them household name companies.

The unprecedented shift has placed an ever greater number of soldiers, civilians, and contractors working under false identities, partly as a natural result in the growth of secret special forces but also as an intentional response to the challenges of traveling and operating in an increasingly transparent world. The explosion of Pentagon cyber warfare, moreover, has led to thousands of spies who carry out their day-to-day work in various made-up personas, the very type of nefarious operations the United States decries when Russian and Chinese spies do the same.

Newsweek’s exclusive report on this secret world is the result of a two-year investigation involving the examination of over 600 resumes and 1,000 job postings, dozens of Freedom of Information Act requests, and scores of interviews with participants and defense decision-makers. What emerges is a window into not just a little-known sector of the American military, but also a completely unregulated practice. No one knows the program’s total size, and the explosion of signature reduction has never been examined for its impact on military policies and culture. Congress has never held a hearing on the subject. And yet the military developing this gigantic clandestine force challenges U.S. laws, the Geneva Conventions, the code of military conduct and basic accountability.

The signature reduction effort engages some 130 private companies to administer the new clandestine world. Dozens of little known and secret government organizations support the program, doling out classified contracts and overseeing publicly unacknowledged operations. Altogether the companies pull in over $900 million annually to service the clandestine force—doing everything from creating false documentation and paying the bills (and taxes) of individuals operating under assumed names, to manufacturing disguises and other devices to thwart detection and identification, to building invisible devices to photograph and listen in on activity in the most remote corners of the Middle East and Africa.

Special operations forces constitute over half the entire signature reduction force, the shadow warriors who pursue terrorists in war zones from Pakistan to West Africa but also increasingly work in unacknowledged hot spots, including behind enemy lines in places like North Korea and Iran. Military intelligence specialists—collectors, counter-intelligence agents, even linguists—make up the second largest element: thousands deployed at any one time with some degree of “cover” to protect their true identities.

The newest and fastest growing group is the clandestine army that never leaves their keyboards. These are the cutting-edge cyber fighters and intelligence collectors who assume false personas online, employing “nonattribution” and “misattribution” techniques to hide the who and the where of their online presence while they search for high-value targets and collect what is called “publicly accessible information”—or even engage in campaigns to influence and manipulate social media. Hundreds work in and for the NSA, but over the past five years, every military intelligence and special operations unit has developed some kind of “web” operations cell that both collects intelligence and tends to the operational security of its very activities.

In the electronic era, a major task of signature reduction is keeping all of the organizations and people, even the automobiles and aircraft involved in the clandestine operations, masked. This protective effort entails everything from scrubbing the Internet of telltale signs of true identities to planting false information to protect missions and people. As standard unforgettable identification and biometrics have become worldwide norms, the signature reduction industry also works to figure out ways of spoofing and defeating everything from fingerprinting and facial recognition at border crossings, to ensuring that undercover operatives can enter and operate in the United States, manipulating official records to ensure that false identities match up.

Just as biometrics and “Real ID” are the enemies of clandestine work, so too is the “digital exhaust” of online life. One major concern of counter-terrorism work in the ISIS age is that military families are also vulnerable—another reason, participants say, to operate under false identities. The abundance of online information about individuals (together with some spectacular foreign hacks) has enabled foreign intelligence services to better unmask fake identities of American spies. Signature reduction is thus at the center of not only counter-terrorism but is part of the Pentagon’s shift towards great power competition with Russia and China—competition, influence, and disruption “below the level of armed conflict,” or what the military calls warfare in the “Gray Zone,” a space “in the peace-conflict continuum.”

One recently retired senior officer responsible for overseeing signature reduction and super-secret “special access programs” that shield them from scrutiny and compromise says that no one is fully aware of the extent of the program, nor has much consideration been given to the implications for the military institution. “Everything from the status of the Geneva Conventions—were a soldier operating under false identity to be captured by an enemy—to Congressional oversight is problematic,” he says. He worries that the desire to become more invisible to the enemy not just obscures what the United States is doing around the world but also makes it more difficult to bring conflicts to a close. “Most people haven’t even heard of the term signature reduction let alone what it creates,” he says. The officer spoke on condition of anonymity because he is discussing highly classified matters.

Military operators hollowing out vehicle rear

The secret life of Jonathan Darby

Every morning at 10:00 a.m., Jonathan Darby embarks on his weekly rounds of mail call. Darby is not his real name, but it is also not the fake name on his Missouri driver’s license that he uses to conduct his work. And the government car he drives, one of a fleet of over 200,000 federal vehicles owned by the General Services Administration, is also not registered in his real or his fake name, and nor are his magnetically attached Maryland state license plates really for his car, nor are they traceable back to him or his organization. Where Darby works and the locations he visits are also classified.

Darby’s retired from the Army, and he asks that neither his real nor his cover name be used. He served for 20 years in counterintelligence, including two African assignments where he operated in low profile in Ethiopia and Sudan, masquerading as an expat businessman. Now he works for a Maryland-based signature reduction contractor that he asked Newsweek not to identify.

As Darby makes his rounds to some 40 or so post offices and storefront mailbox stores in the DC Metropolitan area, he picks up a trunk full of letters and packages, mailing a similar number from rural addresses. Back at the office, he sorts through the take, delivering bills to the finance people and processing dozens of personal and business letters mailed from scores of overseas locations. But his main task is logging and forwarding the signature reduction “mechanisms” as they are called, passports and State driver’s licenses for people who don’t exist, and other papers—bills, tax documents, organization membership cards—that form the foundation of fake identities.

To register and double-check the authenticity of his daily take, Darby logs into two databases, one the Travel and Identity Document database, the intelligence community’s repository of examples of 300,000 genuine, counterfeit and altered foreign passports and visas; and the other the Cover Acquisition Management System, a super-secret register of false identities where the “mechanisms” used by clandestine operators are logged. For false identities traveling overseas, Darby and his colleagues also have to alter databases of U.S. immigration and customs to ensure that those performing illicit activities can return to the United States unmolested.

For identity verification, Darby’s unit works with secret offices at Homeland Security and the State Department as well as almost all 50 states in enrolling authentic “mechanisms” under false names. A rare picture into this world came in April 2013 when an enterprising reporter at Northwest Public Broadcasting did a story suggesting the scale of this secret program. His report revealed that the state of Washington alone had provided hundreds of valid state driver licenses in fictitious names to the federal government. The existence of the “confidential driver license program,” as it was called, was unknown even to the governor.

Before the Internet, Darby says—before a local cop or a border guard was connected to central databases in real time—all an operative needed to be “undercover” was an ID with a genuine photo. These days, however, especially for those operating under deep cover, the so-called “legend” behind an identity has to match more than just a made-up name. Darby calls it “due diligence”: the creation of this trail of fake existence. Fake birthplaces and home addresses have to be carefully researched, fake email lives and social media accounts have to be created. And those existences need to have corresponding “friends.” Almost every individual unit that operates clandestinely—special operations, intelligence collections, or cyber—has a signature reduction section, mostly operated by small contractors, conducting due diligence. There they adhere to what Darby calls the six principles of signature reduction: credibility, compatibility, realism, supportability, verity and compliance.

Compliance is a big one, Darby says, especially because of the world that 9/11 created, where checkpoints are common and nefarious activity is more closely scrutinized. To keep someone covert for real, and to do so for any period of time, requires a time consuming dance that not only has to tend to someone’s operational identity but also maintain their real life back home. As Darby explains it, this includes clandestine bill paying but also working with banks and credit card security departments to look the other way as they search for identity fraud or money laundering. And then, signature reduction technicians need to ensure that real credit scores are maintained—and even real taxes and Social Security payments are kept up to date—so that people can go back to their dormant lives when their signature reduction assignments cease.

Darby’s unit, originally called the Operational Planning and Travel Intelligence Center, is responsible for overseeing much of this (and to do so it operates the Pentagon’s largest military finance office), but documentation—as important as it is—is only one piece of the puzzle. Other organizations are responsible for designing and manufacturing the custom disguises and “biometric defeat” elements to facilitate travel. Darby says this is where all the Special Access Programs are. SAPs, the most secret category of government information, protect the methods used—and the clandestine capabilities that exist—to manipulate foreign systems to get around seemingly foolproof safeguards including fingerprinting and facial recognition.

spycraft listening device embedded in shoe

‘Signature reduction’ is a term of art

Numerous signature reduction SAPs, programs with names like Hurricane Fan, Island Hopper and Peanut Chocolate, are administered by a shadowy world of secret organizations that service the clandestine army—the Defense Programs Support Activity, Joint Field Support Center, Army Field Support Center, Personnel Resources Development Office, Office of Military Support, Project Cardinals, and the Special Program Office.

Befitting how secret this world is, there is no unclassified definition of signature reduction. The Defense Intelligence Agency—which operates the Defense Clandestine Service and the Defense Cover Office—says that signature reduction is a term of art, one that “individuals might use to … describe operational security (OPSEC) measures for a variety of activities and operations.” In response to Newsweek queries that point out that dozens of people have used the term to refer to this world, DIA suggests that perhaps the Pentagon can help. But the responsible person there, identified as a DOD spokesperson, says only that “as it relates to HUMINT operations”—meaning human intelligence— signature reduction “is not an official term” and that it is used to describe “measures taken to protect operations.”

Another senior former intelligence official, someone who ran an entire agency and asks not to be named because he is not authorized to speak about clandestine operations, says that signature reduction exists in a “twilight” between covert and undercover. The former, defined in law, is subject to presidential approval and officially belongs to the CIA’s National Clandestine Service. The latter connotes strictly law enforcement efforts undertaken by people with a badge. And then there is the Witness Protection Program, administered by the U.S. Marshals Service of the Justice Department, which tends to the fake identities and lives of people who have been resettled in exchange for their cooperation with prosecutors and intelligence agencies.

The military doesn’t conduct covert operations, the senior former official says, and military personnel don’t fight undercover. That is, except when they do, either because individuals are assigned—”sheep dipped”—to the CIA, or because certain military organizations, particularly those of the Joint Special Operations Command, operate like the CIA, often alongside them in covert status, where people who depend on each other for their lives don’t know each other’s real names. Then there are an increasing number of government investigators—military, FBI, homeland security and even state officials—who are not undercover per se but who avail themselves of signature reduction status like fake IDs and fake license plates when they work domestically, particularly when they are engaged in extreme vetting of American citizens of Arab, South Asian, and increasingly African background, who have applied for security clearances.

‘Get Smart’?

In May 2013, in an almost comical incident more reminiscent of “Get Smart” than skilled spying, Moscow ordered a U.S. embassy “third secretary” by the name of Ryan Fogle to leave the country, releasing photos of Fogle wearing an ill-fitting blond wig and carrying an odd collection of seemingly amateurish paraphernalia—four pairs of sunglasses, a street map, a compass, a flashlight, a Swiss Army knife and a cell phone—so old, one article said, it looked like it had “been on this earth for at least a decade.”

Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
169 Comments
Llpoh
Llpoh
May 22, 2021 8:15 am

Admin – That is an entire cut and paste of a Newsweek article. That is a severe copyright infringement, and specifically breaches their terms and conditions and could get TBP sued. I would delete it immediately.

From Newsweek: “ c) What You May Not Do With Our Content: Unless expressly permitted, you must not, neither manually nor automatically (through any non-human mechanism or device), do any of the following with any content appearing on our site: • Copy, translate, reproduce, extract, adapt, distribute, publish, enter into a database, display, perform, modify, create derivative works from, transmit, archive, store or in any exploit (commercially or otherwise) any content”

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 9:40 am

Did you email him?

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Glock-N-Load
May 22, 2021 9:45 am

I did.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 10:04 am

So how is it possible that she posts articles without being vetted?

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Mygirl...maybe
May 22, 2021 10:17 am

Admin is likely not reading what she submits.

Ghost
Ghost
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 11:19 am

It would be better to select a “block quote” and then provide a “for the full article” link… but, I don’t think the way you posted it is “actionable.”

I don’t think it is the content he objects to, only the attribution and citation. I think “via Newsweek” probably covers it, but I also don’t think anyone follows any law unless it benefits them personally. I can’t imagine Newsweek giving a rats ass about TBP.

anon I
anon I
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 11:58 am

Dear Blondie.
I’m not defending you or Llpoh. He’s as big a Drama Queen as you but this is non news and even he would not be trying to keep it from being discussed.
Bigger underground Armies than this have been working for us for 150 years. In more recent times the Dulles brothers ran a huge Murder Inc. style protection and extortion racket. Our Drug operation alone makes 60,000 pale in comparison.
You need the kind of help only found at Nurse Ratched’s place of employment.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 3:15 pm

Steph,

LLPOH is, admirably trying to protect Jim and the site. How could that be wrong?

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 3:40 pm

I’m interested in your take on the article.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 3:54 pm

You have two maybe three supporters here. You just told one of them to go fuck himself. hahahahaha Great strategy. You should join the Army. They lowered the IQ requirements and they now love lesbians.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 4:12 pm

Obviously not. What you are trying to do is to destroy the fabric of TBP which is something lovingly cultivated over the years. It can take years to build something. Only seconds to destroy it. That’s you. Do you take pride in making others as miserable as your life obviously must be?

RiNS
RiNS
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 4:22 pm

why

August
August
  Mygirl...maybe
May 22, 2021 10:45 am

This posting is contrary to the rule of law.

Ghost
Ghost
  August
May 22, 2021 11:22 am

In Stephanie’s defense, the rule of law is simply not a rule that matters. It is all about opinion.

More than likely, Newsweek won’t give a rat’s ass about the posting, since they are mentioned… it would hardly seem worth their time to harass a blog that operates on a donation budget of less than 50,000 a year! (To Newsweek, a drop in the slop bucket.)

However, if someone gets a hardon for TBP over at Newsweek, they might want to make a fuss just to be annoying.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Ghost
May 22, 2021 12:18 pm

Instead of conjecture, the information regarding Newsweek and what they do and do not allow regarding printing or sharing articles is right there in black and white. For the lazy…

(b) What You May Do With Our Content: Use of our site is strictly on a personal, non-commercial use only basis. So you may share, read, listen to, watch, download or print extracts from the content available on our site for personal, non-commercial use only. As regards printing, you may make one print copy of occasional articles for personal interest only. If you are interested in syndicating or licensing any content from our site, please email us at [email protected]. (c) What You May Not Do With Our Content: Unless expressly permitted, you must not, neither manually nor automatically (through any non-human mechanism or device), do any of the following with any content appearing on our site: • Copy, translate, reproduce, extract, adapt, distribute, publish, enter into a database, display, perform, modify, create derivative works from, transmit, archive, store or in any exploit (commercially or otherwise) any content; •
Use any content whatsoever in such a methodical or ordered way that could be construed as creating a database in any format, whether electronic or otherwise; • Deal with any links to or from our content for a commercial purpose, howsoever remote; We reserve the right to temporarily or permanently suspend, block, or deny you access to our site or any part of it, at any time, without notice, and in our sole discretion. We do not accept any liability or responsibility whatsoever for any loss or damage caused or arising from any such temporarily or permanent suspension or denial of access to our site or any part of it.

https://www.newsweek.com/contact

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Ghost
May 22, 2021 2:10 pm

You defend her at every opportunity. There is something wrong with you.

Ghost
Ghost
  Anonymous
May 22, 2021 2:15 pm

Not every one.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Ghost
May 22, 2021 5:03 pm

Name a time when you didn’t.

Ghost
Ghost
  Anonymous
May 23, 2021 8:12 am

Well, probably the next one because I just realized/remembered how she shat all over me when that bastard was trolling me.

As a matter of fact? Now that I read her replies? I think she was helping that bastard.

Screw you and the horse’s ass you rode in on.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Ghost
May 23, 2021 10:30 am

Who? Hollywood Rob?

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 10:14 am

Internet copyright infringement is a form of intellectual property theft, and it can lead to significant legal penalties and security issues. Common Internet copyright violations include illegally downloading music files and movies as well as pirating certain types of software applications. Posting a copyrighted work, such as a drawing or writing, online without permission from the owner may also constitute Internet copyright infringement

https://www.wise-geek.com/what-is-internet-copyright-infringement.htm#:~:text=Internet%20copyright%20infringement%20is%20a%20form%20of%20intellectual,the%20owner%20may%20also%20constitute%20Internet%20copyright%20infringement..

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 10:17 am

The source is Newsweek, and it clearly says “site”. It is a copyright infringement to copy and post virtually anything without permission, from anywhere. Links are generally ok. Posting the article is a violation of copyright. Not my call if it stays up or not, and not my risk.

That you have not heard of it is neither here nor there. I posted the legal clause. It is enforceable by law. Just because it is on the internet does not mean it is not protected by copyright. Newsweek is a commercial entity, they want to control all their content, and have said so quite clearly.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 10:21 am

Automatic Copyrights

In the United States, federal copyrights begin automatically when a protected work becomes fixed in a tangible form, such as a book or a picture. This right also applies to works saved on computer disks and hard drives as well as on film or tape. Many Internet users unintentionally violate copyright laws on the internet, owing to a mistaken assumption that any work not labeled with a copyright is not protected. Thus, they believe they can use, post, copy or reproduce anything found on the Internet.

The correct form of a copyright notice is “Copyright or © (date) by (name of author or owner)”. However, under the Berne Convention, copyrights for creative works are automatically in force for everything created privately and originally after April 1, 1989 without being asserted or declared. In other words, an author does not need to “register” or “apply for” a copyright and internet material is already covered under the law. As soon as a work is “fixed,” that is, written or recorded in some physical medium, its author is automatically entitled to all copyrights for the work unless and until he or she explicitly grants rights to others or to the public domain.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 10:29 am

You really are a fucking moron. I am not doing this for you. I am doing this for Admin. Here is the link, because you are too stupid to search it yourself.

https://www.newsweek.com/terms-service

Llpoh
Llpoh
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 10:35 am

It is not fucking fine. It is a copyright violation and is illegal. The terms are plain – you posted without permission. You saved the material digitally. You put it on a commercial site. Read the terms. It is chrystal clear. I also posted the general law.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 10:49 am

Um, Stephanie, not that I’m adverse to you self immolating, however, I would pay attention to Llpoh here. He’s been a business man, knows about rules and regulations and probably has forgotten more than you’ll ever know.
This information isn’t secret or special, so I doubt Llpoh is adverse to the information dissemination. His concerns for copyright infringement are valid.

Anon Shill
Anon Shill
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 10:53 am

Mr. Llpoh, please tell SS why you don’t want this information posted. Find something more palpable to her than copyright laws, a concept above her pay grade. If you do not do this she will hound you all day. Maybe even post gayyyyyy memes. Try to not be a shill. Shills trigger her into a convulsive mania.

Another day. Another Stephanie Shit Show. Free speech!! Yes, and you get exactly what you pay for. A cum dumpster that can type.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 3:21 pm

Steph,

You are wrong on this. However, Jim has been notified (this article is a drop in the bucket of all the things posted here re copyright I’d imagine) so, he will make the decision he feels is best.

As far as copyright goes, it is no joke. I know for a fact that an image is owned the moment the photographer presses the “click”/shutter button. BUT, a copyright must be registered if you want full copyright protection.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 3:43 pm

I really don’t see how Jim will incur any problems with this article. He would only need to take it down if asked. I think. 🙂

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Glock-N-Load
May 22, 2021 4:30 pm

She just told you to go fuck yourself and yet you defend her? SMH

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 4:49 pm

Jealousy implies something of worth being coveted. You are so beneath contempt that jealousy isn’t even a consideration. Dog shit has greater value than anything remotely connected to you, you stupid sow.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Mygirl...maybe
May 22, 2021 4:45 pm

I think the issue falls in a non hyper danger area. She’s wrong about copyright, imo, but I do not think Jim needs to panic either. Simply taking it down “should” suffice. No, I’m not a lawyer. We should admit that many articles are submitted exactly as this one was. I want to support anyone who comments and/or submits to TBP is all.

I don’t understand why she thinks anyone would not want this article discussed. If she would explain why she thinks so…

Steph really should step away from the cray cray though. For sure.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 4:51 pm

I didn’t say he would. I didn’t even say he should.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Glock-N-Load
May 22, 2021 5:35 pm

So she called you an asshole, told you to fuck off and still you try to reason with her? Why?

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Anonymous
May 22, 2021 7:14 pm

Good question.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Glock-N-Load
May 22, 2021 7:24 pm

You are a pussy that’s why.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 5:06 pm

Why? You blackmailing him? He’s dumped several for less than the crap that you create.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Mygirl...maybe
May 22, 2021 7:23 pm

He has a Glock. It is loaded. With blanks. Just another “tough” internet poster who is not a real man. He is a pussy who is afraid of a cum dumpster.

Norman Franklin
Norman Franklin
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 11:38 am

Some special people just don’t get it. Its like what we had here last week, a girl bent on self destructing. An unhinged train wreck headed down the tracks at full speed, sans brake.

I don’t always agree with you Lipoh, and I don’t really know shit about copyrights. In this case I would defer to your wisdom on the matter. The article was interesting, that being said I’m beginning to think our little Stephy needs stronger meds.

Norman Franklin
Norman Franklin
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 11:58 am

You’re either one of the best trolls ever, or you are in need of serious help. I had always figured you to be in your thirties. Maybe you started smoking that ganja and you regressed back to junior high. You might want to come up with something new for those who disagree. ‘Your gay, your a shill, and I’m just a gurrrrl, respect my free speech’ shows a lack of creative thinking.

Melty
Melty
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 10:45 am

It is real. I am a member on another forum. Guy posted an entire article and the owner of the site was contacted with a threatening message that it had to be pulled or face legal consequences. Poster got a 1 week ban and a copyright thread opened under the forum rules. Just because it’s out there doesn’t mean you can just start disseminating it verbatim.

I’m starting to think that someone here enjoys playing the victim and needs attention.

Melty
Melty
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 7:30 pm

I took a good dump today, so no. I have no issues with the article you posted. And could give a rat’s ass about copyright infringement. I just said that it does exist. Quinn is fine then so be it. Why would I be against an article from a leftist news rag that points out something nefarious shit about the gub? Lots of Q shit rolling around out there.

I always love vapid key keyboard commandos that resort to saying shit to people that they wouldn’t say face to face. Tyson saying that everybody has a plan till they get punched in the face comes to mind.

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 10:46 am

Right on the article it states FUCKING SHARE you fucking COMMIE bastard. Nice going on high jacking the thread with your nonsense.

I’m with Steph on this one, why are you so scared of her posting this?

You probably work for these parasites.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Senior_Executive_Service_(United_States)

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 11:03 am

We had this guy at work five years ago that fit this profile perfect. He got arrested for raping his sister and he got fired, I was the only one at work that said innocent until proven guilty.

I started researching him and found out he has ties with DHS and he was a master something in the Navy. I guess he was cleared of all charges, very little news coverage on it.

He surfaced again a few weeks ago in my buisness , though I haven’t had to deal with him, I just saw his name and a coworker has been dealing with him.

Strange times.

Hey Llpoh, I have to go pick up a recording device I left in a house last night. I hope it has some good stuff on it I can use for my investigation.

Llpoh
Llpoh
  StackingStock
May 22, 2021 10:54 am

Stacking – share means let people know about the article. It does not mean copy the damn thing and post it to a commercial site. At the bottom of the article it says “REQUEST REPRINT & LICENSING”.

You are dumb as a rock.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 11:13 am

Stop being paranoid or pretending to believe Llpoh or anyone else is afraid of your gnostic secrets. The article was interesting, but posting the whole thing instead of just sharing a link is clearly illegal if done without permission. Newsweek wants the views, the clicks, the ad revenue.

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Iska Waran
May 22, 2021 11:18 am

When did you pass the bar and become a lawyer?

Clearly illegal, fuck off.

ILuvCO2
ILuvCO2
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 2:04 pm

comment image

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 11:23 am

I notice a lot of TBP sheep love riding in the back of the Llpoh cow manure truck.

Llpoh you’ve been outed as a commie bastard today, feel good about it.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  StackingStock
May 22, 2021 10:56 am

No, it doesn’t say share….Here is the policy via sharing Newsweek articles, they have a section devoted just to this very subject. Permission must be obtained to use the article.

4. CONTENT LICENSING, REPRINTS AND BACK ISSUES

For article reprints, permissions, licensing, back/bulk issues, please contact [email protected] .

Newsweek
33 Whitehall St
New York, NY 10004

When you see articles that are based off of another publication’s articles, the article itself isn’t published, instead the author comments on the article, links to the article but doesn’t publish the article verbatim.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 11:12 am

Stephanie, as stated, you aren’t worth stalking, in fact you aren’t worth spit. You are a contentious and vulgar irritant who is going to self destruct all on your own.

There is no distinction from print or internet publication. I know you cannot think but try. I know you cannot abide any facts contrary to what you want to hear and frankly, I don’t really give a shit about you one way or another, you aren’t intelligent, you are mentally ill and a major and unhealthy disruption to this site and you take up time that could be spent profitably elsewhere.

Now, here is information that you won’t pay attention to, but I post it anyways…I am LINKING this article, I am not PUBLISHING it verbatim.

5 Types of Infringement Made Commonplace by the Web

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Mygirl...maybe
May 22, 2021 11:28 am

Your freedom of speech? You didn’t write a damn thing, all you did was post an article that SOMEONE ELSE WROTE. Your freedom of speech ends when you threaten people with violence, death or other forms of harm.

You just threatened me using a figure with guns, implying you personally physically want to harm to me.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 12:37 pm

Newsweek doesn’t even have a paper version. They stopped that in 2012. Is it your belief that they maintain no copyright to anything they publish?

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 12:51 pm

Why does he care so much? Why are you so full of shit? You’re nothing but an attention whore.

DOTR Scheduler
DOTR Scheduler
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 5:19 pm

Why can’t YOU answer the question?
More proof that most women don’t understand logic.

Ghost
Ghost
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 11:28 am

While it might have been better with a block quote followed by a summary with a link, I think the via Newsweek link below the title probably suffices for Admin’s purpose.

Stephanie isn’t the only one who has posted articles this way… probably not from Newsweek, but other places.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 3:28 pm

Steph,

In all seriousness, will you give a synopsis and opinion on this article?

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 3:48 pm

Stephanie Shepard
No. Read it or don’t.

And that right there is why ol’ Steph is a fraud. She whines continually claiming that people are trying to suppress and censor her because they don’t want to know what she’s posting about. Ask her to give a synopsis and she tells you to fuck off.
Seems ol’ Steph doesn’t know what she’s talking about or posting, she just wants to seem important and hijack the site.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Glock-N-Load
May 22, 2021 4:00 pm

In all seriousness, when will you stop kissing her nasty ass? She just basically told you to fuck off. Grow some balls sheep boy.

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Anonymous
May 22, 2021 4:22 pm

Not kissing her ass. I have ripped her ass apart before and will again if I think I should. I “try” to be objective and still think Steph brings some good things to the table.

I really thought she would try to start the commentary she was so disappointed to see didn’t take place.

Once bitten, twice shy.

RiNS
RiNS
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 4:27 pm

comment image

Glock-N-Load
Glock-N-Load
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 4:38 pm

Steph,

Step away from the cray cray. Focus on bringing something to the conversation. This is exactly how and where you go off the rails. Contain your endless vitriol. You allow others to control your actions. This can’t be the first time you’ve been told this.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 4:53 pm

Stephanie…
comment image

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 5:09 pm

No, you’re obsessed with you, Classic narcissism. I’m just pointing out the obvious. BTW, I thought you weren’t going to reply to me ever again….just can’t help yourself, can you?

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 5:38 pm

What does that even mean?

RiNS
RiNS
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 5:22 pm

Stephie

winning hearts and minds
burning down one village at a time….
comment image

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Llpoh
May 22, 2021 11:35 am

Do you guy’s know how many sites have posted this non earth shattering news already. Copyright schmoppyright. Get a job Loopy.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 11:57 am

Yes, that information is TOP SECRET and only YOU, you clever spy, have managed to ferret out this TOP SECRET information and are posting it from a major news source for the special eyes only cadre at TBP.

Llpoh is a secret Russian spy and wants to hide the TOP SECRET information only because it came from YOU, STEPHANIE SHEPHARD the WORLD’S GREATEST SLEUTH AND POSESSOR OF PROFANE AND ARCANE KNOWLEDGE.

HAIL STEPHANIE….worship at her fount of wisdom and if you don’t? You are a SHILL, an ANTIFA CUNTFACE, a destroyer of her FREEDOM OF SPEECH….and….a poopy butthead.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 12:21 pm

You are soon gone.

Anonymouse
Anonymouse
  Mygirl...maybe
May 22, 2021 2:17 pm

NOT SOON ENOUGH!!

Guest
Guest
May 22, 2021 8:19 am

I read somewhere it’s connected to infraguard thus probably part of the Stasi gang stalking program (think pre-crime). Would make sense.

Mike
Mike
May 22, 2021 9:18 am

Stopped reading at Via Newsweek.

Why?
Why?
May 22, 2021 9:30 am

I overheard the intel chaps talking about “sheep dipping” someone once, but had no idea what it meant. I suppose i was supposed to be deaf while pulling guard duty.

Tim
Tim
May 22, 2021 11:22 am

I don’t have a dawg in this fight, but isn’t a majority, or at least some, of TBP a direct C&P of other articles from other sources? I always thought of TBP as a news aggregator of sorts. Lots of great reads from all over the net. I remember some time ago, one of the columnists came on to TBP and asked Jim not to post any more of his articles, because he was continually lambasted. Maybe it was FerFal.

But beyond that, we get to come to one website, TBP, and read Kuntsler, Martin Armstrong, Lew Rockwell, and many other great articles from other sources and sites. Do we have to get permission from each of them? I thought that’s what made the internet work, sharing links. Isn’t that how SEO works?

Also, I think it’s disingenuous to say that someone or some group, wants to keep information hidden. Well, at least with regulars here on this website. Obviously, there’s a whole realm of knowledge that “they” would like to keep from “us”. But anyone who comes to TBP and sticks around for a while is going to be a champion of human freedom and human rights, including the right to Free Speech.

To think that LLPOH, been around nearly as long as anyone here, is a shill, or doesn’t want certain information to come out, isn’t reading the equation properly, IMO.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 12:05 pm

You flatter yourself entirely too much. You aren’t important and what you post isn’t earthshaking or even noteworthy. Then again, you ARE a narcissist so in your tiny mind….the entire world revolves around YOU.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 12:12 pm

You are the craziest fooking maroon to ever post on this site. PERIOD, hands down! I won’t even bid 2 bits for yas!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FU55yrmQZW8

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  Anonymous
May 22, 2021 12:42 pm

What about that Iranian woman from Milwaukee?

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Iska Waran
May 22, 2021 12:54 pm

Ol’ Steph has Irwani beat hands down…she truly is worse than any other lunatic that has posted in the past.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Tim
May 22, 2021 12:08 pm

There are reciprocity agreements between sites. Admin shares with Zerohedge, etc. Newsweek isn’t part of that. Attribution is generally sufficient EXCEPT when corporate mandates no sharing without permission and Newsweek has that on their site.

Yahsure
Yahsure
May 22, 2021 12:00 pm

Interesting article. Llpoh killed the comments section. No real discussion about the article. it was like reading kids calling each other names.

Mygirl...maybe
Mygirl...maybe
  Stephanie Shepard
May 22, 2021 12:25 pm

Kill the comments section? If Llpoh is correct, and, he is, then this site can get into trouble with Newsweek. I know you find it hard to believe, but, the world doesn’t revolve around you.

StackingStock
StackingStock
  Yahsure
May 22, 2021 2:08 pm

Winner, winner chicken fucking dinner!!!!!

Notice all the Cucks and Cunts all got onboard the Llpoh shit bus and fucked up the real discussion.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  StackingStock
May 22, 2021 2:55 pm

Stack it’s a non topic.

Robert Gore
Robert Gore
May 22, 2021 12:03 pm

I’m hesitant to wade into this shit show, but I have a point or two of clarification. I run my own blog, Straight Line Logic, which reposts excerptsof articles with attribution and links to the originals. The use of excerpts is governed by the Fair Use Doctrine, which essentially says that copyrighted works (which are virtually everything, online or off) can be excerpted for comment, criticism, and parody. Here’s a link to a more detailed explanation:

  • What Is Fair Use?

  • Copyright attaches upon creation, whether or not the creator registers the work with the US Copyright Office or a foreign copyright authority. It’s not cut and dried, but as I interpret the Fair Use Doctrine on the internet, you can post excerpts with attributions and links, but not an entire article. In most cases that is what I do. I used to post entire articles, but one of the writers at Lew Rockwell, who puts a clear copyright notice at the end of all of his articles, contacted me and told me to cease and desist, and to take down all of his articles that I had posted. He was in the right and I did so immediately. Now the only time I repost entire articles is from one site whose articles are behind a paywall. However, that’s undoubtedly a violation of copyright law–they don’t have a paywall for me to copy their stuff and distribute it for free–and upon further consideration and reading the comments here, I’ll stop.

    Disclaimer: I am a lawyer and I have no ax to grind against the person who posted this article, which I read and enjoyed, or any of those who commented. Fire away.

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 12:37 pm

    “He doesn’t check the copyright for any other article and full articles are posted regularly on TBP”.

    No, they aren’t unless there is reciprocity or permission granted. Your ‘free speech’ bullshit is getting lame, as are you.

    Robert Gore just commented, you obviously didn’t read what he wrote. Here, stupid, I’ll copy it and, I will also copy the statement from Newsweek itself. I know you wont read what I have posted, but others, not so stupid as you, will and they can make their own decisions while you run around shrieking and whining.

    Robert Gore:

    you can post excerpts with attributions and links, but not an entire article.

    Newsweek:

    What You May Not Do With Our Content: Unless expressly permitted, you must not, neither manually nor automatically (through any non-human mechanism or device), do any of the following with any content appearing on our site: • Copy, translate, reproduce, extract, adapt, distribute, publish, enter into a database, display, perform, modify, create derivative works from, transmit, archive, store or in any exploit (commercially or otherwise) any content; •

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 1:00 pm

    LOL? Mental illness’ poster child. Stephanie Shepard

    DOTR Scheduler
    DOTR Scheduler
      Mygirl...maybe
    May 22, 2021 5:32 pm

    Maybe you should have bolded for Stephanie: “UNLESS EXPRESSLY PERMITTED,” and “LINKS, BUT NOT AN ENTIRE ARTICLE.”
    She STILL wouldn’t get it, though.

    Stephanie Shepard
    Stephanie Shepard
      Mygirl...maybe
    May 22, 2021 2:08 pm

    Robert Gore is a shill. He is trying to suppress information and my rights to free speech.

    Robert Gore
    Robert Gore
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 3:44 pm

    Stephanie Shephard

    Robert Gore is a shill. He is trying to suppress information and my rights to free speech.

    There, I just violated your copyright, which may be considered an infringement of your free speech, although I don’t think that’s what you had in mind.

    In no way does posting my understanding of copyright suppress information, it in fact adds to it. And in no way does it suppress your free speech; it indirectly comments on what you’ve said. Commentary, even deprecating commentary, is not suppression.

    Stephanie Shepard
    Stephanie Shepard
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 3:49 pm

    ^^^ Not me either!!

    RiNS
    RiNS
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 3:58 pm

    what is wrong with you

    shoo shoo?

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      RiNS
    May 22, 2021 4:37 pm

    Sure does enhance comment sections when the ‘host’ calls people cunts and tells them to go fuck themselves. Ol’ Steph is a real class act, isn’t she?

    Shoo shoo

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 5:01 pm

    Sweetie, keep this up, please. Tell EVERYONE to fuck off, keep trashing the site and hanging your ass out. Don’t stop, keep it up…try harder, you can be a bigger asshole, don’t quit.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 5:21 pm

    What is wrong with you? Why are you so nasty and hateful. If you were nicer I bet the others would be nice to.

    Ghost
    Ghost
      Robert Gore
    May 22, 2021 4:07 pm

    My attempt at a Far Side caption.

    comment image

    So, Robert Gore, having waded into shit where he said he was hesitant to wade, discovers he must dig his way out or get dragged into the muck. (I was going for sarcasm with mild exasperation, but at this point it is all muck.)

    I knew some guys who did some OSI operations within the military… Office of Special Investigations. They were multi-lingual and could blend in places others couldn’t.

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Robert Gore
    May 22, 2021 12:31 pm

    Robert,
    Am I correct in understanding that what you are saying here is, posting an entire article is indeed copyright infringement?
    So when you wrote this:
    …you can post excerpts with attributions and links, but not an entire article.

    Then you are indeed corroborating Llpoh’s statement that what this poster did was copyright infringement?

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 12:57 pm

    Bye Stephanie…

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 1:03 pm

    comment image?w=499&ssl=1

    Stephanie's Mom
    Stephanie's Mom
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 2:26 pm

    That’s the last thing your father said to you when he left us.

    Robert Gore
    Robert Gore
      Mygirl...maybe
    May 22, 2021 1:51 pm

    Mygirl

    That’s correct.

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Robert Gore
    May 22, 2021 1:55 pm

    Thank you Robert. I just hope that the person posting will pay attention, although, sadly, I don’t believe that will happen.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    May 22, 2021 12:06 pm

    Would everyone please search their neighborhoods for a disheveled, frumpy, trash bag toting bag lady running extension cords to her wooden paneled, beater station wagon? She’s raising your power bills, riding your Interwebz, and driving all of us batshit crazy!

    Ban this bipolar liability, Admin!

    Harrington Richardson
    Harrington Richardson
    May 22, 2021 12:49 pm

    Not mentioning any poster(s) in particular but from time to time one gets the creepy feeling that we have “Zips in the wire” here on a regular basis. From time to time they manage to set one off in the command bunker-sort of like this shitshow.

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 1:07 pm

    Compared to you and your hate rants, Nam flashbacks are bliss. Odd how ‘shitshow’ and you are synonyms. Where ever you go, shitshows follow.

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 1:57 pm

    Yo, stupid, just got corroboration that Llpoh is correct. You, of course, won’t pay attention because, well, because you’re a self centered twat who only cares about herself. Now Robert is indeed a lawyer but hey, he’s probably lying too, right?

    Robert,
    Am I correct in understanding that what you are saying here is, posting an entire article is indeed copyright infringement?
    So when you wrote this:
    …you can post excerpts with attributions and links, but not an entire article.

    Then you are indeed corroborating Llpoh’s statement that what this poster did was copyright infringement?

    10ReplyMay 22, 2021 12:31 pm

    Robert Gore
    Mygirl

    That’s correct.

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 2:35 pm

    Stephanie’s contributions to TBP..
    comment image.

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 2:43 pm

    Shoo shoo….Stephanie. You bring flies and stink. comment image

    Mygirl...maybe
    Mygirl...maybe
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 2:57 pm

    Lame. Move along little shit head. Shoo shoo, Antifa cunt. You’re projecting. Go back to your handler, Hasbra troll, blah blah blah blah

    Harrington Richardson
    Harrington Richardson
      Stephanie Shepard
    May 22, 2021 6:43 pm

    Sat Cong!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    May 22, 2021 4:47 pm

    135 comments and 100 belong to Stephanie and Mygirl.
    Same thing yesterday. See something-Say something….

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
      Anonymous
    May 22, 2021 5:13 pm

    You counted? Why are you here? Your numbers are off but the drift is gotten.

    Auntie Kriest
    Auntie Kriest
    May 22, 2021 5:52 pm

    At least Winnie22Mag , who was made persona non grata for much less , had a fine warped sense of humor and also a thick hide.

    i forget
    i forget
    May 22, 2021 6:25 pm

    How does anybody “kill the comments section”? Is it like simon sez mask on until he sez mask off? Seems to me today’s taproot went into the ground just recently, when Steph said she could play the shiteshow game, too, & has grown furiously furiouser since then.

    Copyright issues aside I’d say that “the military’s secret undercover army” came into its fullest being, so far, & metasta-exploded, when darpanet was rolled out.

    The first one’s free, or nominal, kid…cuz info wants to be free…& weus wants info to have what it wants…weus wanna save info from them as would constrain it…until nominal info crosses the luminous (luciferase? Is that on the nose or just rubbing noses in it, cuz it glows? Well, why not Rudolpherase, then?) threshold to too liminal for all the subliminality out there to bear…at which time lifetime customer indenture awards are handed out in Stockholm.

    That a lot of internetians/internicheans sitting with their backs’ to ol Neech’s abyss are so utterly Stockholm subverted & Fumanchurian candidated only makes it all the more TNSTAAFL tragi-farcical.

    If I hear another such one say “I researched it on the internet” (decoded translation: I projected my guts out into the internet buffet & found the facts & proofs all right there on the table) I’m gonna’ hear another one say it. Oh, look, there’s a grainy, but official, pic of a ufo. The truth is out there, see it, beaming from outta my eyes?

    Decent piece on learned helplessness @lrc, today – where’s my smartphone?! Alexa, where’s my phone?!! Good to remember that Seligman, who got big love$ from “Sir” John Templeton to help propagate “positive psychology” – feelin good is good enuf for me & b. mcgee is a not small part of the troubles – went on from shocking poor helpless dogs to aiding & abetting “enhanced interrogation” (he plause-denies)…the socioP shuffle is pretty well known, by now, even if some rubs “the right way” neath the rubric of “science.”

    (Doc Milgram said to shock that mangy mutt misspairer, so I did, cuz in the beginning there mighta’ been the word, but here & now it’s the Doc’s word pairs – & those catechisms only – that’ll insulate a body. And cuz I’m “in the army” & Nuremberg’s way over there & only gets closer if weus loses by not shocking harder.)

    Also Sardi has one about fda greasing skids – with just a wee bit o’ help from bezos the bm (businessman?) – to make NAC prescription only. Guess why – no “research” necessary or required, except maybe by useful idiot fellow travelers “in the army” who like to do their grease daub part, too, like the little big wo/men. Monkey see-do’s the highest flat•tery, which is like “jumbo shrimp,” since there ain’t no height to speak of in 2D flatland.

    Tempted to cue up In the Navy, but I hate that song.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    May 22, 2021 9:23 pm

    With Newsweek as the source, it is just more govt propaganda.

    Leah
    Leah
      Anonymous
    May 23, 2021 1:48 am

    Why are they making such a big deal?

    Leah
    Leah
    May 23, 2021 12:20 am

    Why the fuck is this now breaking news to Newsweek? People have been saying this shit for years and have been waived off as conspiracy nuts. What changed?

    Thanks for posting this, Admin.

    StackingStock
    StackingStock
    May 23, 2021 12:43 am

    Did “Q” say that was okay?

    Trust the plan, give me a break.