An amazing case for reducing gun ownership in America

You claim Russia spies on all foreigners. That's a lie.

You posted wanting to know about guys urinal habits then denied it. That's a lie.

Have a good day Sunshine!!

My claim about Russia spying on all foreigners was based on a security briefing I received (written and oral) when I was scheduled to attend an international conference and tutorial presented in Russia by the Russian Army chemical weapons department. I believe the purpose on the part of the Russians was to show how open they were on the topic of chemical weapons. Fortunately for me, the whole thing was canceled and proposed backup events were deemed unacceptable.

As for the urinal habits topic - all we have seen so far is what exists in your mind.
 
My claim about Russia spying on all foreigners was based on a security briefing I received (written and oral) when I was scheduled to attend an international conference and tutorial presented in Russia by the Russian Army chemical weapons department. I believe the purpose on the part of the Russians was to show how open they were on the topic of chemical weapons. Fortunately for me, the whole thing was canceled and proposed backup events were deemed unacceptable.

As for the urinal habits topic - all we have seen so far is what exists in your mind.
Reminds me of Snowden’s bitch, James Clapper. Did you get that briefing?
 
rkdVQN_3
 
My claim about Russia spying on all foreigners was based on a security briefing I received (written and oral) when I was scheduled to attend an international conference and tutorial presented in Russia by the Russian Army chemical weapons department. I believe the purpose on the part of the Russians was to show how open they were on the topic of chemical weapons. Fortunately for me, the whole thing was canceled and proposed backup events were deemed unacceptable.

As for the urinal habits topic - all we have seen so far is what exists in your mind.


Yur soooooo full of " Adam Schiff "....
 
My claim about Russia spying on all foreigners was based on a security briefing I received (written and oral) when I was scheduled to attend an international conference and tutorial presented in Russia by the Russian Army chemical weapons department. I believe the purpose on the part of the Russians was to show how open they were on the topic of chemical weapons. Fortunately for me, the whole thing was canceled and proposed backup events were deemed unacceptable.

As for the urinal habits topic - all we have seen so far is what exists in your mind.
What year was this, 1955? You expect me to believe this "story" when you can't recall what you posted last year? And you backed your claim with a link about spies from another country... pathetic indeed.

Go to bed old man...
 

Some background --

During the 1991 Gulf War, it was reasonably presumed that Iraq would use chemical weapons in their defense since they had used nerve gas (Tabun and Sarin) against Iran and Iraqi Kurdish rebels, and had been observed purchasing precursor chemicals on the legal world market. The US Army had a system that could detect chemical agents in the field, but it was big (20-foot container size) and prone to false alarms. A passing vehicle with a diesel engine would often set it off, and that resulted in most of them being distrusted and eventually disused. As a result, the DOD started up a multi-millons project called J-CAD, (for Joint Chemical Agent Detector, the "Joint" part meaning that funds were funneled through all the services with the intent that the delivered device would have versions acceptable to all the services). The program was administered by the Air Force and was wandering off into the weeds formerly traversed by many big DOD projects, with rumors that it would be soon canceled.

In the meantime, the commercial/industrial technology had advanced along several fronts that bypassed the work being done by the J-CAD project. Some genius in the Special Ops part of DOD at Fort Benning figured that out, and sent out a feeler to various trusted pockets of industry offering to fund the development of a smaller, lighter, sooner device that SEALs and their Special Ops buddies could carry in their pockets (and those battle utilities have big pockets) that would incorporate current technology. We won the contract to build a thing called SmallCAD as a stopgap between current needs and the unknown date when J-CAD would be available.

The little box we developed was about the size of 4 Kindles stacked on top of each other, had a little monochrome LCD display and a loud buzzer that could be turned off in sensitive situations. The little thing had two separate analysis channels, one sorting out chemicals by passing them over surface-acoustic-wave oscillators coated with polymers that adsorb chemicals of interest and thus slow down their oscillations because of the increased mass in a predictable way. The other channel used a small Americium radiation source to ionize molecules in the air passing through and measure their drift time through an electric field, thus giving an estimate of their molecular mass. The outputs of the two sensor channels were combined in a simple algorithm that eliminated most false alarms. The whole thing would run for 2 hours or more on 12 small lithium camera batteries that could be purchased almost anywhere in the word (that was one of the requirements, and we submitted receipts from 3 different unrelated stores to prove it). We could reliably detect most of the cheap CW agents from mustard to nerve gas, with few false alarms. There was also a slot inside that could hold a separate specific detector to detect things like chlorine or carbon monoxide at the user's choice.

About the time we got it working we were informed of the Russian CW conference that eventually came to nothing.
 
Some background --

During the 1991 Gulf War, it was reasonably presumed that Iraq would use chemical weapons in their defense since they had used nerve gas (Tabun and Sarin) against Iran and Iraqi Kurdish rebels, and had been observed purchasing precursor chemicals on the legal world market. The US Army had a system that could detect chemical agents in the field, but it was big (20-foot container size) and prone to false alarms. A passing vehicle with a diesel engine would often set it off, and that resulted in most of them being distrusted and eventually disused. As a result, the DOD started up a multi-millons project called J-CAD, (for Joint Chemical Agent Detector, the "Joint" part meaning that funds were funneled through all the services with the intent that the delivered device would have versions acceptable to all the services). The program was administered by the Air Force and was wandering off into the weeds formerly traversed by many big DOD projects, with rumors that it would be soon canceled.

In the meantime, the commercial/industrial technology had advanced along several fronts that bypassed the work being done by the J-CAD project. Some genius in the Special Ops part of DOD at Fort Benning figured that out, and sent out a feeler to various trusted pockets of industry offering to fund the development of a smaller, lighter, sooner device that SEALs and their Special Ops buddies could carry in their pockets (and those battle utilities have big pockets) that would incorporate current technology. We won the contract to build a thing called SmallCAD as a stopgap between current needs and the unknown date when J-CAD would be available.

The little box we developed was about the size of 4 Kindles stacked on top of each other, had a little monochrome LCD display and a loud buzzer that could be turned off in sensitive situations. The little thing had two separate analysis channels, one sorting out chemicals by passing them over surface-acoustic-wave oscillators coated with polymers that adsorb chemicals of interest and thus slow down their oscillations because of the increased mass in a predictable way. The other channel used a small Americium radiation source to ionize molecules in the air passing through and measure their drift time through an electric field, thus giving an estimate of their molecular mass. The outputs of the two sensor channels were combined in a simple algorithm that eliminated most false alarms. The whole thing would run for 2 hours or more on 12 small lithium camera batteries that could be purchased almost anywhere in the word (that was one of the requirements, and we submitted receipts from 3 different unrelated stores to prove it). We could reliably detect most of the cheap CW agents from mustard to nerve gas, with few false alarms. There was also a slot inside that could hold a separate specific detector to detect things like chlorine or carbon monoxide at the user's choice.

About the time we got it working we were informed of the Russian CW conference that eventually came to nothing.
I wonder if a privatized military would go to as much trouble for it's soldiers.
 
How many commies did we get in Virginia Beach?
We kill 100 people a day with guns.
1/3 are children.
Are the children commies?
Are the guns making us safer?
 
Some background --

During the 1991 Gulf War, it was reasonably presumed that Iraq would use chemical weapons in their defense since they had used nerve gas (Tabun and Sarin) against Iran and Iraqi Kurdish rebels, and had been observed purchasing precursor chemicals on the legal world market. The US Army had a system that could detect chemical agents in the field, but it was big (20-foot container size) and prone to false alarms. A passing vehicle with a diesel engine would often set it off, and that resulted in most of them being distrusted and eventually disused. As a result, the DOD started up a multi-millons project called J-CAD, (for Joint Chemical Agent Detector, the "Joint" part meaning that funds were funneled through all the services with the intent that the delivered device would have versions acceptable to all the services). The program was administered by the Air Force and was wandering off into the weeds formerly traversed by many big DOD projects, with rumors that it would be soon canceled.

In the meantime, the commercial/industrial technology had advanced along several fronts that bypassed the work being done by the J-CAD project. Some genius in the Special Ops part of DOD at Fort Benning figured that out, and sent out a feeler to various trusted pockets of industry offering to fund the development of a smaller, lighter, sooner device that SEALs and their Special Ops buddies could carry in their pockets (and those battle utilities have big pockets) that would incorporate current technology. We won the contract to build a thing called SmallCAD as a stopgap between current needs and the unknown date when J-CAD would be available.

The little box we developed was about the size of 4 Kindles stacked on top of each other, had a little monochrome LCD display and a loud buzzer that could be turned off in sensitive situations. The little thing had two separate analysis channels, one sorting out chemicals by passing them over surface-acoustic-wave oscillators coated with polymers that adsorb chemicals of interest and thus slow down their oscillations because of the increased mass in a predictable way. The other channel used a small Americium radiation source to ionize molecules in the air passing through and measure their drift time through an electric field, thus giving an estimate of their molecular mass. The outputs of the two sensor channels were combined in a simple algorithm that eliminated most false alarms. The whole thing would run for 2 hours or more on 12 small lithium camera batteries that could be purchased almost anywhere in the word (that was one of the requirements, and we submitted receipts from 3 different unrelated stores to prove it). We could reliably detect most of the cheap CW agents from mustard to nerve gas, with few false alarms. There was also a slot inside that could hold a separate specific detector to detect things like chlorine or carbon monoxide at the user's choice.

About the time we got it working we were informed of the Russian CW conference that eventually came to nothing.
Is this the plot for the next 007 movie? It could be.. From Espola with Love.
 
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