I’ve never paid much interest to Edward Snowden, because he exposed nothing I didn’t known already. For years I thought he is nothing but a wannabe whistleblower (that just doesn’t know any real secrets).
Only recently I did an investigation, to conclude that Snowden is a fraud, still working for the CIA.
What speaks for Snowden (and Wikileaks) is that they don’t spread blatant lies; so they don’t misinform us (like some of the most famous conspiracy theorists).
It’s also very suspicious that Snowden became really famous. All “real” whistleblowers die relatively unknown.
LIMITED HANGOUT OPERATION
Edward Snowden first shocked the world in June 2013 by telling that the NSA wiretaps not only US citizens but the entire world. This was already known since December, 2005 from an article by the New York Times - the wiretap then called Operation Stellar Wind.
On June 6, 2013 Glenn Greenwald and Snowden delivered a presentation on PRISM, NSA’s program to read e-mails. This was more than a decade after we had heard of Echelon, and after the post-9/11 Patriot Act. Only the most naïve still believe that their e-mails are secure.
Webster Tarpley calls this a limited hangout operation: http://web.archive.org/web/201803131052 ... operation/
TOO MANY COINCIDENCES
Jon Rappoport has described some of the coincidences in Edward Snowden, to conclude that he’s a fraud.
Snowden has the perfect image: young, thin, and bespectacled. Because of Hollywood movies we know how a tech-whistleblower looks...
In 2003, aged 19 without a high school diploma, Snowden enlists in the Army. Snowden swiftly breaks both legs in a training exercise and is discharged from the Army. If they hired him for a computer wizard, why did they let him go?
Swiftly (circa 2003?), Snowden gets a job as security guard for an NSA facility at the University of Maryland. Shortly thereafter (also 2003?), Snowden shifts jobs and goes to work for the CIA.
At only 23 years old, the CIA sends Snowden to Geneva with diplomatic immunity. Snowden is in charge of maintaining computer-network security (without a high school diploma). Snowden witnesses that the CIA “turns” a Swiss banker. In 2009, Snowden leaves the CIA (because he was disgusted at how the CIA turned the Swiss banker?), or that’s what we’re supposed to believe...
Snowden next works for 2 private defence contractors, Dell and Booze Allen Hamilton. In this latter job, Snowden works at the NSA. As an outsider, he has access to top secret NSA data. So we must believe that an outsider like Snowden has access to all of this secret information. But of course Snowden is a computer wizard that can hack anything, while the NSA only employs dumbos without high school diplomas…
Snowden takes medical leave one day and flies from Hawaii to Hong Kong, where he arrives on May 20, 2013. The NSA, CIA and FBI know nothing about his escape…
Snowden contacts some reporters and on June 1 three reporters of The Guardian — Glenn Greenwald, Ewen MacAskill, and Laura Poitras — begin interviewing Snowden for a week.
On June 5, The Guardian publishes its first article on the NSA leaks. On June 9, The Guardian first reveals Snowden’s identity. Still no intelligence agency can find him…
On June 12, The South China Post publishes an interview with Snowden.
On June 23, Snowden flies to Moscow with Wikileaks’ Sarah Harrison without any problems.
According to this story Snowden was a system operator; these are mostly techies that don’t have a clue on the files they have access to. How did he know which files to take and how could he tell the journalists anything interesting?
From 2003 to 2009 Snowden worked for the CIA as a system operator. In this time he did have access to confidential files. When he didn’t work for the NSA he copied thousands of confidential files, and escaped.
Computers are very good at keeping record on anything that happens. Which means that he couldn’t copy this much data unnoticed, and then get away.
For more than a month (May 20-June 23), the NSA, and other agencies of the US government, couldn’t catch Snowden: http://web.archive.org/web/201905110713 ... d-snowden/
CONCLUSION
I don’t even understand how a whistleblower, that wants to stay hidden, can take a plane. Airports are just about the most closely watched places in the world. To add injury to insult 3 reporters from The Guardian fly from New York to Hong Kong to interview Snowden, in between interviews already publish their first article, and then he’s also interviewed by The South China Post.
Then after being interviewed and having his identity revealed Snowden flies from Hong Kong to Russia.
Bizarrely Edward Snowden went to Hong Kong that is in the centre of the opium/heroin trade. That’s about the last place in the world to go, for a white man that wants to stay hidden...
A story like this would prove that the NSA doesn’t spy on us at all. It’s almost like a Hollywood blockbuster, that doesn’t hold up when you check the story...
There is also a strange visual thing about Snowden. Snowden has been shown over and over again with a missing nose pad on his glasses (his left side), which still hasn’t been fixed. Are we supposed to believe that he cannot afford to get his glasses fixed?
The first picture is from 2013, the second from 2016.

