My friend and fellow researcher Geoff Cruikshank used to be legendary on these boards as u/harry_is_white_hot. We met on here years ago and have been working together since. His work surpasses that of any of us on here. Now somebody is going after him for very rudimentary but incisive work regarding the labeling of files. Over the target, as we say.
even if its obvious disinformation-agents opposing you, its very counterproductive to call them ” clown ” and other things in an article.
you put so much work into this and this is important work. and i get the frustration with bullshit.
but its very important that your language stays friendly and professional. you are adult men. i assume you want to convince people of the veracity of your work.
obvious ad hominem will destroy that.
its better to do ” good-natured, sarcastic and no insults “.
” our friend from eglin hasnt had his coffee yet, it seems. he screwed up…”
tweakingforjesus on
I’m curious. Why was a CIA document from the 1960s(?) typed on A4 size paper and not US standard letter or legal? Was that common back then?
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My friend and fellow researcher Geoff Cruikshank used to be legendary on these boards as u/harry_is_white_hot. We met on here years ago and have been working together since. His work surpasses that of any of us on here. Now somebody is going after him for very rudimentary but incisive work regarding the labeling of files. Over the target, as we say.
[https://substack.com/@geoffcruickshank](https://substack.com/@geoffcruickshank)
hey. if i may suggest:
even if its obvious disinformation-agents opposing you, its very counterproductive to call them ” clown ” and other things in an article.
you put so much work into this and this is important work. and i get the frustration with bullshit.
but its very important that your language stays friendly and professional. you are adult men. i assume you want to convince people of the veracity of your work.
obvious ad hominem will destroy that.
its better to do ” good-natured, sarcastic and no insults “.
” our friend from eglin hasnt had his coffee yet, it seems. he screwed up…”
I’m curious. Why was a CIA document from the 1960s(?) typed on A4 size paper and not US standard letter or legal? Was that common back then?