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Security guard looking at his sleeve with a taxi driver gestiulating from his vehicle in the backround.

 

Kumamoto, Japan; 2019

Security minding one of the entrances to the department store.

 

Безопасность присмотра одного из входов в универмаг.

 

GUM Department Store ГУМ, Moscow Москва, Russia Россия (Saturday 18 Aug 2012 @ 12:05pm)

 

Texture by Skeletal Mess

NIKKOR-SC Auto 1:1.2 f=55mm

I make the fatal mistake of shooting vintage film at box speed and wasn't pleased with the first roll of this old 2007 film. So, I shot this 400 ISO at 200 and yes, quite pleased with the results.

 

Nikon FM

Nikkor 50mm f1.4 ai-s

Fujicolor Superia X-TRA 400 9/2007 24 exposure (shot at 200- second try)

Credit Michael Paulsen who took this photograph of me and others attending a class at the Harris County Sheriff's Academy on Thursday. I really enjoyed the presentations and meeting some fine security professionals.

In the later part of the 60's, the USAF began to refer to their police force as the "Security Police".

 

I researched the web to see if I could create a SP officer using some Hasbro Shore Patrol items. Honestly, most of the SP helmets I found online were either Blue or Black. However, I did find one image of a white SP helmet. The caption with the helmet indicated that the airman had stopped wearing the white helment once he realized what a great target it made at night. Being that this is Vietnam era, that makes a LOT of sense!

 

So, a basic GI Joe soldier with a Shore Patrol helmet, Carbine and pistol now represents a SP officer from the late 60's. It's a very rare combination, mostly due to the white helmet.

 

Both figures are 40th anniversary Hasbro GI Joes. The SP helmet is a Cotswold reproduction of a Hasbro SP helmet.

The 2014 Global Security Forum will be held on Wednesday, November 12th from 8:00 a.m.-3:30 p.m. at CSIS headquarters located at 1616 Rhode Island Avenue, NW, Washington, DC 20036.

2014 AGENDA

OPENING SESSION: 8:00 A.M. TO 9:00 A.M.

Keynote Address: "Strategic and Budgetary Dynamics Facing the U.S. Military"

The Honorable Robert O. Work

U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense

 

MORNING BREAKOUT SESSIONS I: 9:30-10:45 A.M.

I. Sequestration and the Politics of Defense Affordability

Jim Dyer

Principal, Podesta Group,

and former Staff Director, House Committee on Appropriations

Charles J. Houy

Former Staff Director, Senate Committee on Appropriations

Robert F. Hale

Former Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) and Chief Financial Officer

Sid Ashworth

Corporate Vice President, Government Relations, Northrop Grumman Corporation, and former Staff Director, Defense Subcommittee, Senate Committee on Appropriations

Moderator:

Clark A. Murdock

Senior Adviser and Director, Defense and National Security Group and Project on Nuclear Issues, CSIS

II. Troubled Seas: Maritime Tension in Asia

Richard L. Armitage

President, Armitage International,

and former Deputy Secretary of State

Kurt Campbell

Founding Partner, Chairman, and CEO, The Asia Group,

and former Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs

Bonnie S. Glaser

Senior Adviser for Asia, Freeman Chair in China Studies, CSIS

Website Presentation:

Mira Rapp Hooper

Fellow, Asia Program, and Director, Asia Maritime Transparency Initiative, CSIS

Moderator:

Michael J. Green

Senior Vice President for Asia and Japan Chair, CSIS,

and Associate Professor, Georgetown University

III. Civil-Military Relations: The Legacy of Iraq and Afghanistan

Mark Perry

Author, The Most Dangerous Man in America and Partners in Command

COL Richard Lacquement (ret.)

Dean, School of Strategic Landpower, Army War College

 

Eliot A. Cohen

Robert E. Osgood Professor of Strategic Studies, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and former Counselor, Department of State

Moderator:

Kathleen H. Hicks

Senior Vice President, Henry A. Kissinger Chair, and Director, International Security Program, CSIS

 

IV. Health and Security in Fragile States

Gayle Smith

Special Assistant to the President and Senior Director for Global Development, Democracy, and Humanitarian Assistance Issues, National Security Council

Bruce Eshaya-Chauvin

Medical Adviser, Health Care in Danger, International Committee of the Red Cross

Jason Cone

Director of Communications, Doctors Without Borders/Médecins Sans Frontières

Nancy E. Lindborg

Assistant Administrator, Bureau for Democracy, Conflict, and Humanitarian Assistance, USAID

Moderator:

Talia Dubovi

Associate Director and Senior Fellow, Global Health Policy Center, CSIS

 

MORNING BREAKOUT SESSIONS II: 11:00 A.M.-12:15 P.M.

I. The Defense Industrial Base and Federated Defense

William J. Lynn III

CEO, Finmeccanica North America and DRS Technologies,

and former Deputy Secretary of Defense

Robert J. Stevens

Former Chairman and CEO, Lockheed Martin Corporation

Clayton M. Jones

Former Chairman and CEO, Rockwell Collins

Pierre Chao

Managing Partner and Cofounder, Renaissance Strategic Advisors, and Senior Associate, Defense-Industrial Initiatives Group, CSIS

Moderator:

Andrew P. Hunter

Director, Defense-Industrial Initatives Group, and Senior Fellow, International Security Program, CSIS

II. Iraq in the Balance

VADM Robert S. Harward (ret.)

Chief Executive, Lockheed Martin UAE, and former Deputy Commander, U.S. Central Command

General James E. Cartwright (ret.)

Harold Brown Chair in Defense Policy Studies, CSIS, and former Vice Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff

Moderator:

Jon B. Alterman

Senior Vice President, Zbigniew Brzezinski Chair in Global Security and Geostrategy, and Director, Middle East Program, CSIS

 

III. Military Innovation and Changing Ways of War

Arati Prabhakar

Director, Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency

Lt. Gen Robert E. Schmidle Jr.

Principal Deputy Director, Cost Assessment and Program Evaluation, Office of the Secretary of Defense

Moderator:

Maren Leed

Senior Adviser, Harold Brown Chair in Defense Policy Studies, CSIS

IV. Expanded U.S. Engagement to Combat Ebola in West Africa

Tom Frieden

Director, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Anne A. Witkowsky

Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense, Stability and Humanitarian Affairs

Ambassador Donald Lu

Deputy Coordinator for Ebola Response, U.S. Department of State

Jeremy Konyndyk

Director, Office of U.S. Foreign Disaster Assistance, USAID

Moderator:

J. Stephen Morrison

Senior Vice President and Director, Global Health Policy Center, CSIS

 

LUNCH: 12:15-12:45 P.M.

 

MID-DAY PLENARY SESSION: 12:45-1:45 P.M.

I. Looking Ahead to 2017: Creating a Renewed Vision for U.S. Leadership in the World

Jeremy Bash

Founder and Managing Director, Beacon Global Strategies, Senior Adviser, International Security Program, CSIS, and former Chief of Staff to Secretary of Defense Leon Panetta

Kori Schake

Research Fellow, Hoover Institution, and former Senior Policy Adviser to the McCain-Palin Campaign

Moderator:

David E. Sanger

National Security Correspondent, New York Times

CLOSING PLENARY SESSION: 2:00-3:30 P.M

 

I. A Simulated Crisis with Russia: European Energy and Other Unconventional Challenges

Richard L. Armitage

President, Armitage International, and former Deputy Secretary of State

Michèle Flournoy

Cofounder and CEO, Center for a New American Security, and former Under Secretary of Defense for Policy

General James E. Cartwright (ret.)

Harold Brown Chair in Defense Policy Studies, CSIS, and former Vice Chairman, Joint Chiefs of Staff

John E. McLaughlin

Distinguished Practitioner-in-Residence, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, and former Deputy Director of Central Intelligence

James B. Steinberg

Dean, Maxwell School, Syracuse University, and former Deputy Secretary of State

Charles B. Curtis

Senior Adviser, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS, and former Deputy Secretary of Energy

Joshua B. Bolten

Managing Director, Rock Creek Global Advisors, and former White House Chief of Staff

Moderators:

Kathleen H. Hicks

Senior Vice President, Henry A. Kissinger Chair, and Director, International Security Program, CSIS

Heather A. Conley

Senior Vice Presdient for Europe, Eurasia, adn the Arctic, and Director, Europe Program, CSIS

*Please note that this session is off-the-record

Contributing CSIS Experts:

Frank A. Verrastro

Senior Vice President and James R. Schlesinger Chair for Energy and Geopolitics, CSIS

Sarah O. Ladislaw

Director and Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

Edward C. Chow

Senior Fellow, Energy and National Security Program, CSIS

James A. Lewis

Director and Senior Fellow, Strategic Technologies Program, CSIS

Andrew C. Kuchins

Director and Senior Fellow, Russia and Eurasia Program, CSIS

Jeffrey Mankoff

Deputy Director and Fellow, Russia and Eurasia Program, CSIS

Juan Zarate

Senior Advsier, Transnational Threats Project and Homeland Security and Counterterrorism Program, CSIS

 

Programs

GLOBAL SECURITY FORUM

Topics

DEFENSE AND SECURITY, INTERNATIONAL SECURITY

Regions

AFGHANISTAN, ASIA, IRAQ, MIDDLE EAST, RUSSIA

Too many vans and buses

Special agents with Homeland Security Investigations led a multi-agency investigation targeting a South San Francisco-based street gang linked to multiple shootings and murders. HSI special agents executed numerous search and arrest warrants as part of Thursdays enforcement action, leading to multiple arrests.

Gunner provides security as we fly through Southwest Afghanistan. Shot on X-E1 and XF35mm, edited in LR and Nik Silver Efex Pro 2.

Olympus OM-D E-M5 Mark II with Olympus 75mm F1.8 and VSCO Film Filters

phone security

 

Credit www.thoughtcatalog.com with an active link required.

  

Image is free for usage on websites (even websites with ads) if you credit www.thoughtcatalog.com with an active link.

20110524_5847

 

Deltaplein Kijkduin.

Mij kan niets gebeuren, 24 uur per dag bewaking.

 

HGA

Most of the time she is in reception duty.

we have had thunder and torrential rain all day. By 12:30pm i kid you not i was having withdrawal symptoms. I just had to go out and photograph something.

The blurred figure on the right is a David Jones security officer pouncing on me for taking photos. He tried to tell me that "It was against David Jones store policy to take photos without permission from management". I reminded him that as I was outside the store, the policy did not apply to me. I told him that as inside the store entrance was clearly visible from a public space, I wasn't doing anything wrong. He then tried to suggest it was harassment and he would call the police. I ignored him and continued on my merry way

Social Security Logo, Letter for those writing articles on social security.

 

Free to use this photo please reference the photo credit to ComplexSearch www.complexsearch.com.

Example: [Photo Credit: ComplexSearch]

Security guard at Van Gogh Museum, Amsterdam

I worked briefly as a Security Officer back in 2004.

As I've been on the nightshift recently & heard the Security Firm were recruiting again, I've started "guarding" 2 days a week for some extra cash.

‘Bouncers’ at the door..

I have been randomly selected a few times when going through airport security, overtime I get my hands and shoes swabbed. The last time I flew I got randomly selected again but no swabbing allowed anymore; either a pat down or go through this contraption. I chose going into the machine.

 

Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without explicit permission.

© All rights reserved

So what happens if I don't?

His name is Moises, and he was one of two security guards for our apartment complex in Playa del Carmen. He would often drive us in the golf cart to where we needed to go. Unfortunately, we don't know enough Spanish and he didn't know enough English for us to have much conversation beyond "Hola Moises, como estas?"

米軍深谷通信隊跡地に残る管理事務所小屋

Not Who or What You Think...

in the philippines, if your house is outside a secured village it is important you secure your water and light meters, otherwise, they can be stolen. signs of times!

This ancient machine perforates letters and numbers in the edge of sheets of paper, such as cheques or legal documents, to identify them in a way that cannot be erased or altered. Up to eight single-character pin units can be fitted (see next photo); the sliding plate with the hole locks them in place and stops them sliding out again in use. There's no maker's name but I guess early 20th century.

 

When it arrived with me it had been stored in a damp shed for years and needed some work to get it going again. There were three boxes of pin units, mostly numbers and mostly rusted to uselessness, but a lot of penetrating oil and careful levering got one set in usable condition again. I'm fascinated by gadgets like this and I'm sure it will be very useful. For something, someday …

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