Monday, September 30, 2019

Helikon-Tex Patriot Combat Hoodie fleece jacket in olive green color

Helikon-Tex Patriot Combat Hoodie fleece jacket in olive green color
SKU - BL-PAT-HF
Adjustable hood. Reinforced elbows
6 pockets. High insulation
Adjustable bottom, collar and cuffs
Main two-way YKK® zipper with wind flap and chin guard
Material - 100% Polyester
Designed in Poland
Crafted in China

Компания Helikon - была создана в 1983 году. Компания изготавливает одежду для армии, охранных и спецслужб: штаны и рубашки, куртки из мембранной ткани, головные уборы, трикотажные кофты, парки и другое. А так же компания Helikon является производителем и поставщиком военного снаряжения для НАТО.
Helikon-Tex Patriot Combat Hoodie fleece jacket in olive green color
Модель BL-PAT-HF
Состав ткани: 100% полиэстер двухсторонний флис, плотность: 390г/м2
- Шесть карманов: два нагрудных кармана, три кармана на рукавах, карман на спине с двумя отверстиями
- Регулируемый капюшон
- Подмышечные отверстия для вентиляции
- Усиление на локтях
- На липучке Velcro™ регулируемые манжеты
- Липучки на рукавах
- Центральная застежка на двухстороннюю молнию
Куплено в Пехоте

Saturday, September 28, 2019

Tactical Assault Military Sling 12L Backpack in green color

Tactical Assault Military Sling 12L Backpack of green color
The sling bag can be used as a book bag for school, for hiking, camping, trekking, traveling, for weapon, ammunition. This bug out bag has adjustable Y shaped load compression strap at the front to keep load tight for better balance.
Backpack has adjustable and comfortable shoulder strap, and also has two smaller straps to help reduce the sway of the bag while moving, as well as being able to quickly change the side of the sling carry strap attaching for an easy right hand or left hand carry.
1 main compartment, 2 lower front compartments, 1 upper front compartment, 1 padded back pocket, 1 card pocket and 5 internal multi-slot admin compartments.
Tactical Assault Military Sling 12L Backpack of green color
  1. Material: Nylon
  2. Size: 25cm(L)*14cm(T)*35cm(H)
  3. Color: Green


Available in stores


Тактический военный штурмовой однолямочный рюкзак на 12л в зеленом цвете

Tuesday, September 17, 2019

Edward Snowden. Permanent Record

Permanent Record. Edward Snowden
Edward Snowden’s revelations about the extent of US surveillance operations sent shockwaves around the world, the effects of which are still being felt today. In Permanent Record, the whistle-blower gives his side of the story, as well as detailing his personal background and the reasoning behind his actions. Edward Snowden, the man who risked everything to expose the US government’s system of mass surveillance, reveals for the first time the story of his life, including how he helped to build that system and what motivated him to try to bring it down. In 2013, twenty-nine-year-old Edward Snowden shocked the world when he broke with the American intelligence establishment and revealed that the United States government was secretly pursuing the means to collect every single phone call, text message, and email. The result would be an unprecedented system of mass surveillance with the ability to pry into the private lives of every person on earth. Six years later, Snowden reveals for the very first time how he helped to build this system and why he was moved to expose it. Spanning the bucolic Beltway suburbs of his childhood and the clandestine CIA and NSA postings of his adulthood, Permanent Record is the extraordinary account of a bright young man who grew up online – a man who became a spy, a whistleblower, and, in exile, the Internet’s conscience. Written with wit, grace, passion, and an unflinching candor, Permanent Record is a crucial memoir of our digital age and destined to be a classic.

... The fact is, no one with a biography like mine ever comes comfortably to autobiography. It’s hard to have spent so much of my life trying to avoid identification, only to turn around completely and share “personal disclosures” in a book. The Intelligence Community tries to inculcate in its workers a baseline anonymity, a sort of blank-page personality upon which to inscribe secrecy and the art of imposture. You train yourself to be inconspicuous, to look and sound like others. You live in the most ordinary house, you drive the most ordinary car, you wear the same ordinary clothes as everyone else. The difference is, you do it on purpose: normalcy, the ordinary, is your cover. This is the perverse reward of a self-denying career that brings no public glory: the private glory comes not during work, but after, when you can go back out among other people again and successfully convince them that you’re one of them. Though there are a score of more popular and surely more accurate psychological terms for this type of identity split, I tend to think of it as human encryption. As in any process of encryption, the original material—your core identity—still exists, but only in a locked and scrambled form. The equation that enables this ciphering is a simple proportion: the more you know about others, the less you know about yourself. After a time, you might forget your likes and even your dislikes. You can lose your politics, along with any and all respect for the political process that you might have had. Everything gets subsumed by the job, which begins with a denial of character and ends with a denial of conscience. “Mission First.” Some version of the above served me for years as an explanation of my dedication to privacy, and my inability or unwillingness to get personal. It’s only now, when I’ve been out of the IC almost as long as I was in it, that I realize: it isn’t nearly enough. After all, I was hardly a spy—I wasn’t even shaving—when I failed to turn in my English class assignment. Instead, I was a kid who’d been practicing spycraft for a while already—partly through my online experiments with game-playing identities, but more than anything through dealing with the silence and lies that followed my parents’ divorce. ... In the Intelligence Community, the “Frankenstein effect” is widely cited, though the more popular military term for it is “blowback”: situations in which policy decisions intended to advance American interests end up harming them irreparably. Prominent examples of the “Frankenstein effect” cited by after-the-fact civilian, governmental, military, and even IC assessments have included America’s funding and training of the mujahideen to fight the Soviets, which resulted in the radicalization of Osama bin Laden and the founding of al-Qaeda, as well as the de-Baathification of the Saddam Hussein–era Iraqi military, which resulted in the rise of the Islamic state. ... The CIA is the primary American intelligence agency dedicated to HUMINT (human intelligence), or covert intelligence gathering by means of interpersonal contact—person to person, face-to-face, unmediated by a screen. The COs (case officers) who specialized in this were terminal cynics, charming liars who smoked, drank, and harbored deep resentment toward the rise of SIGINT (signals intelligence), or covert intelligence gathering by means of intercepted communications, which with each passing year reduced their privilege and prestige.
Nothing is harder than living with a secret that can’t be spoken. Lying to strangers about a cover identity or concealing the fact that your office is under the world’s most top-secret pineapple field might sound like it qualifies, but at least you’re part of a team: though your work may be secret, it’s a shared secret, and therefore a shared burden. There is misery but also laughter. When you have a real secret, though, that you can’t share with anyone, even the laughter is a lie. I could talk about my concerns, but never about where they were leading me. To the day I die I’ll remember explaining to my colleagues how our work was being applied to violate the oaths we had sworn to uphold and their verbal shrug in response: “What can you do about it?” I hated that question, its sense of resignation, its sense of defeat, but it still felt valid enough that I had to ask myself, “Well, what?”
Edward Snowden. Permanent Record
Permanent Record. Edward Snowden. Эдвард Сноуден. Личное дело
Эдвард Сноуден. Личное дело. По-русски

Monday, September 16, 2019

45m Underwater Waterproof Protective Case for Gopro Hero 4 Black Action Camera

Black, matte color of the зrotective сase is good for disguising, to make the camera to be discreet.
45m Underwater Waterproof Protective Case for Gopro Hero 4 Black Action Camera
  1. High Strength PVC Material, 45m Underwater Waterproof, Dustproof, Shockproof
  2. Built with standard quick release mount, long screw, easy to attach other accessories
  3. High quality high transmission tempered glass lens, AF, AR dual coating, easy to clean and scratch proof
  4. Perfectly use the camera 45m underwater, ideal for scuba diving, snorkeling, swimming etc. sport activities
  5. Full body waterproof protect your camera from water, perfect fits for GoPro Action Camera


Available in store

Подводный водонепроницаемый на 45-метров защитный чехол для экшн-камеры Gopro Hero 4 Black

Friday, September 6, 2019

5.11 Tactical Men's Taclite Uniform Cap

5.11 Tactical Men's Taclite Uniform Cap of Tundra color
Fully adjustable hook-and-loop rear strap
65% Polyester, 35% Cotton
Color: Tundra (192)
Machine Wash
One Size
Style# 89070LT
Discontinued
Made in China

Monday, September 2, 2019

5.11 Tactical Legacy Tonal Tee T-Shirt

5.11 Tactical Legacy Tonal Tee T-Shirt
Throw on these 5.11® Tees and wrap yourself in a ringspun cotton/poly blend with moisture wicking performance. And with inks that resist the threats of fading from the sun and time, you’ll have comfort, fit, and looks that last.

52% cotton/ 48% polyester, ringspun jersey, 4.3 oz
Color: Military Green Heather (223)
Premium inks resist fading
Moisture-Wicking performance
Double-needle stitching on hems and sleeves
Shoulder to Shoulder neck tape
Style# 41191ABB
Made in Mexico. Printed in USA
Discontinued

Bought from Arsenal, Minsk