4 Comments
founding

Hi Brandon.

Serious “bug” question, and I’m not even remotely joking.

Stink bugs. Ubiquitous in the US since “introduced” here in 1998.

Mine are very aggressive now. Dive bombing me at every opportunity but fortunately not landing in my food or beverages.

How could one determine if a creature in your environment is sending packets of information to the adversial AI (and I happen to think it’s all adversarial)? I’ve got two dogs and three cats besides the C-130 sized stink bugs.

I know that, according to Sun Tzu, China is employing a “surround and close in on” strategy for the long game in the US. The Deagle report is proof.

What more perfect way than to introduce an invader species like the shield-shaped stink bug with enough body mass to carry sensors?

Is there any remote chance that we are getting “bugged” by these bugs?

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author

100% all wildlife and bugs are sensors in an Artificial Intelligence (AI) Bio Cyber Physical System (BCPS). Since "shedding" occurs from people who consume food and water and air, then the "shedding" and wireless clouds surrounding their "built-environment" determine which AI BCPS is linked to the local "bugs". If the fool, uses Tik Tok from China, then the fool's "built-environment" is bugged by ChinaCCP AI BCPS, enabled by "shedding" of synthetic biology and associated "neurotechnology" hardware pipelines (from Made in China neurotech chipsets) and programmed via content (apps like Tik Tok or games or wechat).

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founding

Dear God, the answer I didn't want to hear! Ughhhhh. Thanks for taking the time to answer. :)

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deletedFeb 12
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author

Sure, I just added a calendar schedule app here: https://calendly.com/electrostasis/

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