jonblaze420
Well-Known Member
Can someone post pictures of what they imagine 4chan's 'specialized task force' looks like? Don't make me do all the work here fellas!
4Chan Specialized Task ForceCan someone post pictures of what they imagine 4chan's 'specialized task force' looks like? Don't make me do all the work here fellas!
LOL Here ya go. Their hostage Representative squadron captain.Lol dude the first result was this thread, did you even google it yourself?! Ha ha ha. And the other results made no sense unless you care to point them out..
Anyways here's one of 4chan's elite specialized force delta squad member:
View attachment 1865960
LOL Not anymore.Wellit's still the 4th in Mexico, we'll see..
Oh fer grief's sake. Such a counterthreat was a forgone conclusion. I was expecting a bit o' commitment from Anonymous. If you swim with sharks, son, have the appropriate attitude ... and dental work.http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/04/anonymous-mexican-drug-cartel-plan
... after an alleged counter-threat of mass retaliatory killings. <snip>
How the fuck is he anonymous then.http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2011/nov/04/anonymous-mexican-drug-cartel-plan
A plan by the international hacker movement Anonymous to expose collaborators of Mexico's notorious Zetas drugs cartel has come to an abrupt end. A US activist backed away from publishing the names after an alleged counter-threat of mass retaliatory killings.
"This moves the operation from being a risk to knowing that I would be murdering people," Anonymous participant Barrett Brown told the Guardian on Friday.
Brown's withdrawal from Operation Cartel puts an end to one of the most bizarre and confusing episodes in Mexico's drug wars.
It began with a video which appeared online in early October and promised to reveal the identities of people working with the Zetas unless the cartel released an Anonymous member kidnapped in the Mexican city of Veracruz.
The video prompted furious online debate: while Anonymous has previously targeted business and government websites and databases around the world, it was unclear how it could confront Mexico's amorphous – and deadly – drug trafficking organisations. Conflicting messages appeared on Twitter and other social networking sites, with some activists saying the operation had been cancelled while others pledged to continue.
This culminated in Mexico on Thursday when Spanish-speaking Anonymous participants, who had previously pledged to continue, announced that the Zetas had let the kidnapped member go.
They also said that she carried with her a message from the cartel threatening to kill 10 people for every person named and that they had decided to abandon their plans.
Brown, a prominent Texas-based activist and one of the few willing to be named, initially said Mexican hackers had promised to give him information on Zeta collaborators that they had taken from Mexican government sites and that it would be released in the next few days.
But while he said he was comfortable with running personal risks and "passing a death sentence" on those he identified, the wider retaliation threat had made him "rethink my position".
He added that Anonymous would continue to explore ways of using the internet to help spark some kind of mass response to "the near collapse" in Mexico, as he claims it did in Tunisia and Egypt.
How the fuck is a movement ever going to gain a foot hold without a figurehead? Lol.How the fuck is he anonymous then.
Sounds like you're talking about Occupy Wall Street.How the fuck is a movement ever going to gain a foot hold without a figurehead? Lol.
LOL Let's not try to make sense out of the madness, please.That threat is essentially meaningless with more than 5,000 deaths per year since 2005, they already kill enough people to warrant action.
If they kill more it'll likely bring too much heat from international authorities. Right now it's Mexicos problem.