[139659] in SIPB IPv6
What's Coming Won't Be Loud - It'll Be Silent.
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Survival Watch)
Thu Feb 12 06:48:13 2026
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Date: Thu, 12 Feb 2026 12:47:58 +0100
From: "Survival Watch" <SurvivalWatch@powersecurenow.ru.com>
Reply-To: "The Insider File" <Watchtower@powersecurenow.ru.com>
To: <sipbv6-mtg@charon2.mit.edu>
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What's Coming Won't Be Loud - It'll Be Silent.
http://powersecurenow.ru.com/EyOd-jsb3-LLGgG9KE-QvqI--wxxXtZ4BL9yYl8e8vWuXzRCmg
http://powersecurenow.ru.com/8nOqTueEBvmZRIT4rNX2dXk56chQ4uOvihOsGFMydFIsD6yvlQ
ution of pit eyes can be greatly improved by incorporating a material with a higher refractive index to form a lens, which may greatly reduce the blur radius encountered—hence increasing the resolution obtainable. The most basic form, seen in some gastropods and annelids, consists of a lens of one refractive index. A far sharper image can be obtained using materials with a high refractive index, decreasing to the edges; this decreases the focal length and thus allows a sharp image to form on the retina. This also allows a larger aperture for a given sharpness of image, allowing more light to enter the lens; and a flatter lens, reducing spherical aberration. Such a non-homogeneous lens is necessary for the focal length to drop from about 4 times the lens radius, to 2.5 radii.
So-called under-focused lens eyes, found in gastropods and polychaete worms, have eyes that are intermediate between lens-less cup eyes and real camera eyes. Also box jellyfish have eyes with a spherical lens, cornea and retina, but the vision is blurry.
Heterogeneous eyes have evolved at least nine times: four or more times in gastropods, once in the copepods, once in the annelids, once in the cephalopods, and once in the chitons, which have aragonite lenses. No extant aquatic organisms possess homogeneous lenses; presumably the evolutionary pressure for a heterogeneous lens is great enough for this stage to be quickly "outgrown".
This eye creates an image that is sharp enough that motion of the eye can cause significant blurring. To minimise the effect of eye motion while the animal moves, most such eyes have stabilising eye muscles.
The ocelli of insects bear a simple lens, but their focal point usually lies behind the retina; consequently, those can not form a sharp image. Ocelli (pit-type eyes of arthropods) blur the image across the whole retina, and are consequently excellent at responding to rapid changes in light intensity across the whole visual field; this fast response is further accelerated by the larg
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<center><a href="http://powersecurenow.ru.com/EyOd-jsb3-LLGgG9KE-QvqI--wxxXtZ4BL9yYl8e8vWuXzRCmg" http:="" microsoft.com="" style="font-size:29px;line-height:50px;color:#FF0000;padding:10px;" target="blank"><b>What's Coming Won't Be Loud - It'll Be Silent.</b></a></center>
<div style="color:#800000"><b>Warning:</b></div>
<b>This Is Disturbing!</b><br />
<br />
Something terrifying is coming to America — and nobody is warning you.<br />
<br />
Not the media.<br />
<br />
Not the government.<br />
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Not even the people you trust most.<br />
<br />
But by a strange twist of fate, a historian uncovered something they were never supposed to see…<br />
<br />
And now, the truth is spreading fast — despite every attempt to bury it.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://powersecurenow.ru.com/EyOd-jsb3-LLGgG9KE-QvqI--wxxXtZ4BL9yYl8e8vWuXzRCmg" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><b>Click here now to see the hidden warning before it vanishes</b></a><br />
<br />
<a href="http://powersecurenow.ru.com/EyOd-jsb3-LLGgG9KE-QvqI--wxxXtZ4BL9yYl8e8vWuXzRCmg" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://powersecurenow.ru.com/e0765e42fb5e1d608a.jpg" /></a><br />
<br />
Do you really think you’re safe?<br />
<br />
When banks can freeze your accounts at will…<br />
<br />
When the grid can go down in a second…<br />
<br />
When enemies of the U.S. no longer need bombs — just silence…<br />
<br />
The truth is: we’re one move away from collapse.<br />
<br />
And the next event will strike without warning — paralyzing the nation in minutes.<br />
<br />
This isn’t fearmongering. It’s already happening behind the scenes.<br />
<br />
<a href="http://powersecurenow.ru.com/EyOd-jsb3-LLGgG9KE-QvqI--wxxXtZ4BL9yYl8e8vWuXzRCmg" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><b>See What They Didn't Want The Public To Find Out...</b></a><br />
<br />
The systems you rely on are already crumbling.<br />
<br />
The question is: will you be ready when the silence begins?<br />
<br />
You still have time to act.But not much.<br />
<br />
This could be your last real chance.<br />
<br />
Stay vigilant.<br />
<br />
God bless,<br />
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<div style="color:#ffffff;font-size:8px;">ution of pit eyes can be greatly improved by incorporating a material with a higher refractive index to form a lens, which may greatly reduce the blur radius encountered—hence increasing the resolution obtainable. The most basic form, seen in some gastropods and annelids, consists of a lens of one refractive index. A far sharper image can be obtained using materials with a high refractive index, decreasing to the edges; this decreases the focal length and thus allows a sharp image to form on the retina. This also allows a larger aperture for a given sharpness of image, allowing more light to enter the lens; and a flatter lens, reducing spherical aberration. Such a non-homogeneous lens is necessary for the focal length to drop from about 4 times the lens radius, to 2.5 radii.<br />
<br />
So-called under-focused lens eyes, found in gastropods and polychaete worms, have eyes that are intermediate between lens-less cup eyes and real camera eyes. Also box jellyfish have eyes with a spherical lens, cornea and retina, but the vision is blurry.<br />
<br />
Heterogeneous eyes have evolved at least nine times: four or more times in gastropods, once in the copepods, once in the annelids, once in the cephalopods, and once in the chitons, which have aragonite lenses. No extant aquatic organisms possess homogeneous lenses; presumably the evolutionary pressure for a heterogeneous lens is great enough for this stage to be quickly "outgrown".<br />
<br />
This eye creates an image that is sharp enough that motion of the eye can cause significant blurring. To minimise the effect of eye motion while the animal moves, most such eyes have stabilising eye muscles.<br />
<br />
The ocelli of insects bear a simple lens, but their focal point usually lies behind the retina; consequently, those can not form a sharp image. Ocelli (pit-type eyes of arthropods) blur the image across the whole retina, and are consequently excellent at responding to rapid changes in light intensity across the whole visual field; this fast response is further accelerated by the larg</div>
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