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Wednesday, April 7, 2010

From the City of Cincinnati

Volunteer Surveillance Team (VST)

Downloadable VST Application in PDF Format

COPP-VST Training Schedule

The Volunteer Surveillance Team [VST] was established in the Northwest Business / Resident Quadrant of the Downtown Business area in the early 1990’s.

The VST provides highly trained and skilled citizen volunteers to assist the Cincinnati Police Department in crime surveillance operations. These operations are conducted on a district level and coordinated through the Patrol Administration Office.

The Cincinnati Police Department feels the use of citizen’s volunteers will increase the Departments endeavors in police service. The VST plays a major role in this attempt.

Members work from secluded and concealed locations. This program is ideal for residents who don’t want their identity known.

The activities of the VST vary depending on the needs of the Cincinnati Police Department and the abilities and experience of the VST members. Surveillance operations pertain to specific crimes in specific areas. There is no physical contact or enforcement by any member whatsoever.

For further information, contact the Cincinnati Police Volunteer Surveillance Team Coordinator at 513.352.3533.

Cincinnati Police Volunteer Surveillance Team
Patrol Bureau
310 Ezzard Charles Drive
Cincinnati, Ohio 45214-2805

Tuesday, April 6, 2010

i'm coming OUT!


Archived in this blog are the license plate numbers and vague descriptions (mainly my own observations and nicknames for their most obvious traits) of people who seem to be spies. I am saying it straight. Many seem to have an energetic similarity that seems to be of a fundamentalist church type feel. there are others, but it seemed to escalate when I started getting upset about weather modification that is being imposed without our knowledge. Now I have reason to be 99% positive that they are really there and not my imagination. My goal is to talk with each person that seems to be a part of this. I can't always think of what to say so I will quack or make some sound when I feel I am being squeezed. I have to have fun with this.

డాన్'త లుక్ నౌ.


Home > NGA Jobs > Special Employment Programs
Special Employment Programs

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Pat Roberts Intelligence Scholars Program

Congress established the Pat Roberts Intelligence Scholars Program (PRISP) in 2004 to recruit and train analysts and linguists who are committed to a career in the Intelligence Community (IC). NGA uses PRISP as a hiring bonus for individuals with certain hard-to-find skills, and to fund reimbursement of previous educational expenses or continuing education for current NGA analysts and linguists who have less than 24-months employment with the Intelligence Community. PRISP nominees must meet the following basic eligibility requirements:

1. Be employed as an analyst or linguist
2. Be a pay band 3 or below
3. Have less than two years employment in the IC (former contractor and military experience do not count against the two year window)
4. Receive supervisory endorsement
5. Sign a service agreement for 18 months of continuous employment with NGA in exchange for each award

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Ode to Pippen stardust in my eyes
the pink petals danced in the wind
when I opened the door to cry
My dog who I forgot
until you said good bye
I love you
you loved your freedom
like a
good Husky should
you are free now to travel the stars and
then come back to lick me on the ear.
the wind blows for you today
Pippy died April 26, 2010
what a good boy

Monday, April 5, 2010

Procol Harum - Conquistador


(as originally appeared in "The American Thinker")
NOTE: smooth talking code

Feb 18, 2010
by HERBERT E. MEYER

America is on the verge of something unprecedented in history: the peaceful, constitutional replacement of our country's entire political establishment. This is what lies behind the decisions of so many elected officials, at every level, to step aside rather than fight for reelection. And it explains how the Tea Party movement can exert so much political leverage without nominating its own candidates or even without formally choosing its own leaders.

Most of the time, we Americans don't pay much attention to politics. We focus all of our energy on our jobs, our families, and our faith. We work hard, play by the rules, and wish only to be left alone. We love our country, consider ourselves blessed to be living here, and ask little from the men and women we elect except to keep from screwing things up.

But in just the last decade, Americans were shocked by two catastrophes we hadn't imagined our political establishment would allow to happen. The first was 9-11, when nineteen terrorists successfully attacked our homeland, and by doing so revealed that for years, al-Qaeda and its allies had been waging holy war against us. The second was the 2008 financial crash, which revealed that our economy is a house of cards built on a pile of debt so high we cannot possibly repay it.

Republicans blame Democrats, and Democrats blame Republicans. To ordinary, non-political Americans -- who grasp intuitively, and correctly, that both parties share responsibility for these two catastrophes -- these politicians seem like children who've turned a party into a food fight. And what do parents do when a children's party gets out of control? They turn off the music, turn out the lights, and send everyone home, including those few who weren't behaving badly and just got caught up in the melee.

Americans don't like getting tangled in the details of politics. We prefer to stand back and see the big picture. (This, by the way, helps explain the extraordinary appeal of Ronald Reagan and Sarah Palin. That's what they do, too.) What the big picture is showing now is that our entire political establishment has failed. These were the men and women, both Republicans and Democrats, we relied upon to focus on the details, and by doing so, to keep us safe from terrorists and to keep the world's most powerful economy from imploding. And they blew it. So we'll replace them with a wholly new establishment -- some of whom will be Republicans, others Democrats, and a few Independents here and there -- and hope our next political establishment will get it right.

In the looming political battles, persona will matter more than policy. As we move toward the 2010 elections, of course we'll ask candidates to outline their plans for how to improve our health care system, what to do about illegal immigration, how to bring down the unemployment rate, how to fight the war, and all the rest. But what will determine who gets elected this year won't be a set of specific policies, but something simpler, and in a way much deeper: a recognition among grassroots voters across the political spectrum that character is more important than personality, that education isn't the same thing as judgment, and that expertise without common sense is dangerous.

Stand back from politics and you'll see the same re-establishment trend unfolding in other public arenas. Americans have decided that the mainstream media has failed, and so we are replacing The New York Times, the television network news departments, and all the rest with an entirely new media, including FOX News and websites like American Thinker and Lucianne.com. Americans have decided that our country's education establishment has failed -- our kids are barely learning to read and write, let alone taught our country's history -- so we're seeing the rise of private schools, charter schools, and home-schooling. Would anyone like to bet that within just a few years, we'll have a wholly new financial establishment on Wall Street to replace the greedy idiots who run it now?

The re-establishment of America won't be easy, and we'll make mistakes along the way. Some of the new people will prove just as worthless as they ones they replaced. And some very good people who now hold key positions in politics, the media, education, and finance will be swept away by the avalanche. That's too bad, but collateral damage is unavoidable.

No other country in history has ever attempted to replace its establishments so smoothly and so peacefully -- and so cheerfully -- as we are doing right now. And it isn't likely that any other country ever will attempt something like this. How exhilarating to realize that 234 years after our revolution, the United States is still the most dynamic, forward-looking, optimistic place on Earth. Boy, what an exciting time to be an American.

— Herbert E. Meyer served during the Reagan administration as special assistant to the director of Central Intelligence and vice chairman of the CIA's National Intelligence Council. His new video is The Siege of Western Civilization.

Storm King Press
Herb Meyer lives here, on San Juan Island Seven years ago before the congress voted to abdicate their responsibility to declare war, I had a forum to discuss the pros and cons of invading Iraq and he argued for the invasion. I think I spewed words at that forum. That's my problem I spew.Yesterday, I saw him in the food line at Al Nash's Memorial Reception and eavesdropped enough to hear him call Obama an Idiot, then I said in a loud voice "An idiot as opposed to Bush?".....After a couple of 'I told you so' jabs, I realized where I was and gasped at my lack of decorum. I should have said : "Let's take this outside." That's probably why I have such an affinity for Biden. He spews too.