Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it so difficult to give a synopsis of links you post.
Is it so difficult for you to go to the link and read a few sentences?
I don’t like blindly clicking on sites unless I have an idea what and why.
Anonymous wrote:Thanks, OP. Just listened. The whole time I was thinking, this exactly what we were afraid was happening!
I don't understand why this makes Congress just "call for an investigation." Why isn't Congress apoplectic??
Anonymous wrote:Seems that NPR is trying desperately to stay relevant. Do I believe their reporting? Heck no. They have given me no reason to trust their reporting.
Wasn’t NPR the media group that refused to report on HB’s laptop? Why should we believe them now?
Anonymous wrote:I feel like maga has succeeded when they have convinced people that NPR isn’t to be trusted. So sad.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it so difficult to give a synopsis of links you post.
Is it so difficult for you to go to the link and read a few sentences?
I don’t like blindly clicking on sites unless I have an idea what and why.
You're afraid of clicking on NPR.org?
new Poster
Jeez just stop. Common courtesy to give a short synopsis when you were posting something instead of just making people go do all the work. Not everyone has all the time in the world.
There's a whole lot more to it than that. There's a poster here who's desperately flailing trying to discredit NPR, without any genuinely sound rationale for doing so, other than "waah, NPR didn't hype the Hunter laptop non-story and didn't tell the salacious lies about the laptop that I wanted them to tell, like my wonderful Newsmax and NY Post did!"
"Within 15 minutes of DOGE engineers creating accounts, years, names and passwords within internal systems within DOGE, within 15 minutes of the creation of those accounts, somebody or something from Russia tried to log in with all of our credentials, meaning they had the right usernames and right passwords. And the question is, how do they get that and why?
The second question that I have is that why is it that from what Dan has seen, as well as others, because we have spoken to other individuals who are able to corroborate this, which is that some of the data is also using Starlink as a backdoor. And that's another way to get data out of internal databases within agencies. And Starlink has now direct access where information is likely, we believe is funneled directly into Russia."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it so difficult to give a synopsis of links you post.
Is it so difficult for you to go to the link and read a few sentences?
Anonymous wrote:NPR is a pathetic joke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it so difficult to give a synopsis of links you post.
Is it so difficult for you to go to the link and read a few sentences?
I don’t like blindly clicking on sites unless I have an idea what and why.
You're afraid of clicking on NPR.org?
new Poster
Jeez just stop. Common courtesy to give a short synopsis when you were posting something instead of just making people go do all the work. Not everyone has all the time in the world.
Anonymous wrote:NPR is a pathetic joke.
"Within 15 minutes of DOGE engineers creating accounts, years, names and passwords within internal systems within DOGE, within 15 minutes of the creation of those accounts, somebody or something from Russia tried to log in with all of our credentials, meaning they had the right usernames and right passwords. And the question is, how do they get that and why?
The second question that I have is that why is it that from what Dan has seen, as well as others, because we have spoken to other individuals who are able to corroborate this, which is that some of the data is also using Starlink as a backdoor. And that's another way to get data out of internal databases within agencies. And Starlink has now direct access where information is likely, we believe is funneled directly into Russia."