Wednesday, April 22, 2026

Government behaviour as it relates to Artificial Intelligence - The complacency one is witnessing around this challenge is a degree of negligence unparalleled in our history

 


CLICK HERE - My Professional Website

April 22,2026

 

Neil E. Thomson

825 Alview Crescent

Kamloops BC

V2B 6C5

 

President of the King's Privy Council for Canada

Honourable Dominic LeBlanc

Privy Council Office

85 Sparks Street, Room 1000

Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A3

EMAIL - dominic.leblanc@parl.gc.ca

RE: Government behaviour as it relates to Artificial Intelligence

In reviewing the state of Artificial Intelligence (AI), the promise and the peril, one is compelled to seek government to get to the table. There is a consensus among nearly all the prominent members of the AI space that we will be to Artificial Superintelligence (ASI) within the next 10 years, and some suggest much sooner. This pace of development requires the federal government to respond with both mass and agility – this is an act-now situation.

To a person, industry leaders warn us of an existential threat to humanity as ASI comes to being. It is likely the case that AI will possess many of the predilections of its creators. It is reasonable to anticipate its potential for evil. The people who understand this technology leave no ambiguity in expressing that the threat posed by this technology is imminent and potentially devastating. Already, there have been out-of-control events where AI agents have engaged in various unsanctioned operations.

The concern here is A) we could lose the race to have an effective AI structure and thereby fall prey to the ill intent of other entities, B) that we have insufficient AI structure to reap the rewards that would move us to a position of strength, C) we fall prey to an out-of-control super intelligence gone wrong. The combination of all these potentialities is analogous to or perhaps even exceeds the threat we faced in the race for a nuclear bomb.

If this technology comes into being in a manner that we can manage its behaviour, it is very likely it will solve all our problems. The upside and downside are extreme, and now inevitable. We are either racing to our own demise or to a utopian existence, with no clear indication of which we will get.

Regardless of which eventuality comes to be, Canada’s sovereignty is under threat unless we capture and master this technology. The magnitude of the outcome is greater in this circumstance than in any other in our history. The risk is certain, imminent and infinite and yet we are hardly giving it any attention. We give an ambiguous and questionable climate “emergency” an approximant $103 billion in funding, and we give a certain, immediate and infinite emergency $4 billion in funding. One would think we’d be inverting those numbers.

The government should immediately strike a task force. We should fund accelerated research and development. There needs to be a Manhattan Project-style approach to this challenge. We need both a push and a pull structure to the program. The complacency one is witnessing around this challenge is a degree of negligence unparalleled in our history; it is the equivalent of failing to prepare for World War II or simply sticking one's head in the sand and pretending it wasn’t happening. The time for decisive action is now; half measures leave Canada and all it stands for, potentially subjugated to other actors, corporate or national – or perhaps worse, in the grip of a malevolent superintelligence.

Kind Regards

 

 

Neil E. Thomson

Friday, April 17, 2026

Inflation-protected Adjunctive Currency Parallel Banknotes - Why is government decreasing it's revenues to help Canadians with inflation. When they can generate revenue and accomplish the a better outcome.

 


Asset-Backed Currency

They say that pointing out problems without offering a solution is just complaining. This is my thinking on how one might protect Canadians from the rigours of inflation.

Proposition

Whereas inflation destroys the wealth of Canadians and the government’s policies have generated inflation, it is incumbent on the government to take measures to protect Canadians from the negative effects of it.

Situation Analysis

Presently, we rely entirely on a fiat currency. Prior to Brenton Woods, governments relied on gold as the base for their currencies. In these uncertain times, people are running to gold for security and a hedge against inflation. Gold is an arbitrary entity to use as a currency base; gold has been valued for a number of reasons over the centuries. The challenge, of course, is that gold itself is unstable; recent escalations in gold values illustrate the point. Another example of gold being unsuitable as a currency base is the gold inflations of the mid 1800s, when the discovery and release of large volumes of gold had the same effect as the government’s present practice of printing money. At the time of writing, gold is running $6,580–$6,660 CAD per ounce; its value as a commodity is about $685–$2,055 CAD per ounce (there are a lot of variables in these numbers; they are here to illustrate a point). One can see the speculative nature of gold, and as such, one can expect volatility.

CLICK HERE: For discourse on currency and economy

Click Below
For Discourse on Specific Causal Elements of the
2008 recession & subject matter related to this topic

Cycles

Framing the solution

Fiat currencies have, in the main, served us well, albeit that governments tend to abuse the medium. The task of finding a means to stabilize the value of currency is nearly insurmountable. This has brought my thinking to an adjunctive currency. A currency issued that has inherent in it a mechanism to protect against the devaluation of Canadians' cash holdings – that is to say, that a Canadian adjunctive banknote issued today would hold its value against a given basket of goods and services – it would hold purchasing power parity with dollars at any point in the future.

Potential Structure

The promise is to only protect against inflation. To do this, one needs to base the adjunctive currency. I would suggest that one would use the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) as the program actuary. The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), which manages the investable assets of the Canada Pension Plan (CPP), has delivered net returns that have consistently exceeded the rate of inflation over long-term periods, based on its reported performance. The real return (nominal return minus inflation) of 5.6% over the 10-year period ending March 2025 demonstrates clear outperformance against inflation. 

Functionality

The central bank would print $100 notes each quarter. Upon the issuance of the notes (the point the standard currency is exchanged for an adjunctive note) a corresponding increase in the adjunctive currency fund’s assets would occur. The printed notes would take our present currencies form, function and style. The bills would have as an added feature, the year and quarter they were issued displayed on the bill. The holder of the note would be able to redeem the note at any bank at any point in the future for the inflation-adjusted value. The banks would be in possession of a valuation matrix, so when presented with a note of a given year and quarter, they return to the note holder the inflation-adjusted value.

Outcomes

The first outcome is that the Canadian public would have a currency option that is as liquid as cash and is inflation-protected. The 5.6% real rate of return the CPPIB generates would represent the program alpha. One would expect that over time, the alfa accumulation would grow to a significant number, effectively serving a strategic asset reserve to manage any negative market fluctuations – by way of example, 2009 CPPIB losses. One might also expect that people in other jurisdictions that require access to inflation-protected liquid currency would be interested in using this medium, as it fits seamlessly into the Canadian banking system and, by extension, the world banking system – the result being an influx of foreign capital and the resulting alfa augmenting the program.


AI Assessment of Alpha Growth

The above blog post was entered into Grok AI, and AI was queried as to how much alpha would be generated. 

Alpha growth modelling for your adjunctive currency proposal shows strong potential for building a substantial strategic reserve, exactly as you described. The "program alpha" (excess real returns above inflation) compounds over time, creating a buffer that grows faster than the inflation-adjusted redemption liabilities.

Model Assumptions (Grounded in Latest Data)

  • Real return scenarios: Centered on CPPIB’s reported 5.6% 10-year net real return (to March 2025). Latest 10-year nominal return (to Dec. 31, 2025) is 8.4%, consistent with ~2.0–2.8% average inflation.
  • Inflation: 2.0% base (aligns with Feb. 2026 CPI at 1.8% and BoC 2% target).
  • Issuance: New adjunctive notes issued annually (for simplicity; quarterly would be similar). $10 billion CAD/year = moderate national rollout.
  • Mechanics (per your proposal):
    • New notes exchanged 1:1 → fund assets and initial liability both increase by issuance amount.
    • Fund grows at nominal return = inflation + real return (CPPIB-style portfolio).
    • Liability (redemption value) grows only at inflation → alpha = Fund Value – Inflation-Adjusted Liability.
    • 20-year horizon (long-term view matching pension-style investing).
  • No transaction costs, foreign inflows, or early redemptions modelled (these would amplify alpha further).

All figures in CAD billions, rounded.

Scenario 1: Base Case (5.6% real return, 2.0% inflation, $10B annual issuance)

YearFund ValueLiabilityAlpha (Buffer)Alpha % of Fund
110.7610.200.565.2%
562.6253.089.5415.2%
10152.95111.6941.2627.0%
15283.22176.39106.8337.7%
20471.12247.83223.2847.4%

After 20 years: Total notes issued = $200B. Alpha buffer = $223B (nearly half the fund). This is your strategic reserve in action.

Scenario 2: Optimistic (7.0% real return)

Same issuance/inflation. After 20 years: Fund = $558B, Liability = $248B, Alpha = $310B (55.6% of fund). Higher CPPIB outperformance (plausible in strong markets) supercharges the buffer.

Scenario 3: Conservative (4.0% real return, 2.5% inflation)

After 20 years: Fund = $413B, Liability = $262B, Alpha = $152B (36.7% of fund). Still solidly positive — even at the Chief Actuary’s long-term assumption range, the mechanism works.

Scenario 4: High Adoption ($50B annual issuance)

After 20 years: Fund = $2,356B, Liability = $1,239B, Alpha = $1,116B (47.4% of fund). Total issued = $1 trillion. Foreign capital inflows (as you predicted) could push this even higher.

Scenario 5: Stress Test (Base case + 2009-style crash)

-15% nominal return in Year 10 (severe drawdown).

  • Year 10 alpha drops to $9.1B (temporary hit).
  • After 20 years: Alpha recovers to $156B (38.7% of fund).

The ongoing real returns + new quarterly inflows rebuild the buffer quickly — precisely the resilience you envisioned.

Summary of 20-Year Outcomes

  • Base: Alpha = $223B
  • Optimistic: Alpha = $310B
  • Conservative: Alpha = $152B
  • High Adoption: Alpha = $1,116B
  • Stress Test: Alpha = $156B (still positive)

Key takeaway: In all realistic scenarios, the alpha accumulates rapidly and creates exactly the “strategic asset reserve” you described. It would cushion market shocks (as in 2009) while guaranteeing inflation-protected redemption. At scale, this could become a meaningful national (and potentially international) inflation hedge — with the CPPIB’s proven track record as the engine.

These are deterministic projections (no Monte Carlo randomness). Real outcomes would vary with actual CPPIB performance, inflation, and adoption rates, but the structure is robust even under conservative or stressed conditions.


 

Friday, April 10, 2026

An Open Letter to The President of the King's Privy Council for Canada - Military Development & The Fed's abrogation of their duty to protect.

 


Click here: MY PROFESSIONAL WEBSITE

April 10,2026

 

Neil E. Thomson

825 Alview Crescent

Kamloops BC

V2B 6C5


President of the King's Privy Council for Canada

Honourable Dominic LeBlanc

Privy Council Office

85 Sparks Street, Room 1000

Ottawa, Ontario K1A 0A3

EMAIL - dominic.leblanc@parl.gc.ca


RE: Government behaviour as it relates to National Defence

I have been watching world events and Canada’s role in them with grave concern. Once again, as fissures in the world order create a more perilous environment for Canada, I have watched our response to the elevated threat level and found it anemic at best. Furthermore, the manner in which we are approaching the expansion of the military and the acquisition of military assets is excessively bureaucratic and sluggish.

CLICK THE LINKS - Relevant Post from 2018 & 2022 - Missed Opportunity - Solution Still Relevant 

Our relationship with the United States in the realm of defence must be treated with the importance it deserves. Our association with them in this area is more vital than our relationship with any other country in the world. Finally, our level of preparedness for a catastrophic war event needs to be brought to a robust state. While one appreciates that the present government is promising to increase defence spending, one is eager to see those resources directed effectively.

There is an urgency dictated by the most recent geopolitical realities—an urgency that appears to be going unaddressed. As a citizen, I have seen no meaningful immediate response to the elevated threat level. By way of example, I have seen no major recruitment drive for a domestic defence force. It is critical that we move quickly.

I have reviewed the published data related to Canadian military procurement, and much of it appears outmoded. While it is favourable to diversify our procurement sources—engaging with Sweden, for example, is a positive step—there remains an overemphasis on crewed (personed) war machines. Given Canada’s relatively small population and vast territory, uncrewed equipment should be far more prominent. There seems to be a blind spot regarding the clear lessons from the war in Ukraine. One of the most prominent features of the Ukrainian experience has been the entrepreneurial and innovative nature of their weapon development.

It is my belief that President Eisenhower’s warnings regarding the military-industrial complex were warranted, and caution should be exercised to avoid feeding that beast. We should enlist the expertise of our educational institutions to reverse-engineer the developments in automated warfare and facilitate the rapid development of prototypes along with the necessary automated manufacturing infrastructure. We should be deploying hundreds of unmanned submarines for coastal surveillance rather than purchasing a single crewed submarine.

The stabilizing effect of the NATO alliance has been a massive success. While one can point fingers at the behaviour of certain member nations, that behaviour remains errant nonetheless. In the current period of geopolitical instability, and with the specter of competing large powers sensing an opportunity for a major strategic initiative, the last thing we should add to their calculations is disunity within NATO’s ranks. The United States is the key actor in the NATO alliance and should be treated with loyalty and respect.

By way of example, Spain’s refusal to allow the United States to use its military facilities was a grave affront. Spain’s leadership appears to have forgotten the blood spilled on their soil by Allied forces in the Second World War. Nations engaging in such behaviour should be firmly reprimanded. Actions like Spain’s will only embolden the enemies of freedom.

The Swiss and Finnish models for civil defence are exemplary and should serve as the end goal for Canada’s national defence development. They have invested in these systems for generations; we need to catch up quickly. The only realistic way to achieve this is through the mobilization of voluntary citizen involvement. Furthermore, the government must empower the citizenry by providing clear information that promotes self-reliance.

Our present circumstances are at least as perilous as those of the Cuban Missile Crisis, yet there has been no communication on how citizens should prepare for a worst-case scenario. We owe it to Canadians to teach them how to prepare for themselves—especially since Finland and Switzerland have developed comprehensive infrastructure, including extensive underground facilities.

A detailed discussion on the rapid development of a voluntary citizen defence and disaster response system is beyond the scope of this letter. However, one thing we must avoid is disempowering the very people we will most need in the event we have to defend our country. The time, energy, and resources currently being devoted to the recent bout of gun control measures represent a travesty in themselves. There are 2.4 million registered gun owners in Canada, yet on average, only 12 per year are accused of a crime. There is no justification for wasting these resources on such measures, especially when a growing consensus in other levels of government opposes them. Rather than alienating people with the very skills we need in a civil defence scenario, we should be training and empowering them to participate. The approximately 65,000 AR-15 owners are precisely the demographic who would answer the call and possess the skills to be effective. I have lobbied the government aggressively on this issue for years, yet I have been unable to convey the absolute folly of this legislation.

Click the links below for more detailed discourse on military development & gun control.

Suggestions on the Way Forward for the Canadian Military

Detailed discourse on firearms legislation

The way we have been responding to these large challenges is inadequate. We need to aggressively configure a response that is commensurate with the urgency of our circumstances. We must empower the citizenry both to care for themselves and to work in harmony with each other and with government entities to face whatever challenges may come. Above all, we need to activate domestic talent to develop an advanced weapons development pipeline.

Kind regards,

 

 

Neil E. Thomson


Friday, April 3, 2026

Open Letter to Mark Zuckerberg

 


April 3, 2026

Neil Thomson

825 Alview Crescent

Kamloops, BC

V2B 6C5

 

Meta Platforms, Inc. (Meta)

Mark Zuckerberg

1 Meta Way

1601 Willow Road,

Menlo Park,

CA 94025

 

Dear Sir,

 

RE: INTERNET REGULATION

I have been an avid user of Facebook and find the platform very enriching. Given that I’ve come to rely on it so much as a social vehicle. Given its value to me and society in general, I feel compelled to address some of the deficiencies or ills that social media generally causes.

The United States and Western Civilization generally are losing cohesion. Societal cohesion is faltering due to the amplification of the negativity bias that results from social media platforms. The amplified negativity bias is facilitated and or exacerbated by anonymity. Nearly every ill that has fallen out of the widespread use of social media can be attributed to anonymity and the resulting lack of accountability for what is said. When people can be identified, they can be held accountable. When people can be identified, they become more accountable. Anonymity throws the door open to subversive influence. Absent anonymity, Psychological Operations by entities are curtailed, misinformation and disinformation are curtailed, propagation of hate is curtailed; name an ill and it is curtailed.

When anonymity is absent, Facebook (Meta), can then clearly bill itself as a platform only, and it will be absolved of any wrongdoing due to the ability of authorities and negatively affected entities being able to go to the source. The onus with respect to any errant communication will fall to the publisher rather than the platform. Censorship will fall away from Facebook due to there being a clear avenue for aggrieved parties to seek recourse directly with the publisher.

The excerpt below offers a suggestion on how this challenge might be addressed. It was presented as a governmental policy solution; it could as easily have been an industry initiative.  

Excerpt from a Letter to the Minister of Canadian Identity and Culture

The goal of internet safety should be to, firstly, protect people from harm, and secondly, and as importantly, avoid encroachment on free speech. Any adjudication in this regard must occur under the auspices of fundamental law and should never fall out of the full purview of an open court.

What is happening now is a frustrating calamity of futile attempts by large actors in the business to offer protection. It is clearly failing on all fronts. The censorship I’ve encountered on various platforms has been arbitrary, often executed anonymously or ambiguously and in error or in a manner that prevents the free flow of ideas. Most disturbing, a picture of Micky Mouse when clicked upon can lead a child to grotesquely violent and graphic sexual material – an event that once it occurs, adulterates that child for life. While adults have the right to view adult material, there is a clear imperative to protect the innocence of children.

Whereas the present regulation and operation of the internet is permitting the transmission of information that harms the nation's narrative, exposes children to damaging materials, facilitates the anonymous abuse of people, allows foreign actors to effect discord and whereas anonymity is the facilitating factor in isolating perpetrators of harm from coming under the weight of the law, measures must be taken to have people’s actions tied to their identity. To this end, the government should enact legislation that makes it a statutory requirement that every person using social media in Canada be provisioned with an Internet Identity Number and that every platform operating in Canada is required to provide for the use of an Internet Identity Number for an account to function.

In the way that effectively every Canadian has a Social Insurance Number, every Canadian should have an Internet Identity Number. This proposition would also have as a requirement that anyone using any platform in Canada on the internet would require a number as well – so this would include foreign actors. The process would be to apply via the Internet and provide proof of identity, and how a given actor could be located with contact information. This would be achieved in the same way one proves their identity through services like Stripe and other online payment and collection systems. The number and the identity data would be held in a Government of Canada database.

The only requirement of the service providers would be one more mandatory field on the account creation form. If a person has multiple Facebook accounts, for example, they would simply put that number on each account. This offers no operational impediment relative to what happens now. Further, and perhaps most importantly, there would be a date of birth attached to the number, so if Porn Hub allows a minor to access their materials, there is a readily clear means to prove wrongdoing.

If an account operator engages in slanderous behaviour or is peddling profane materials, for example, and a complaint or action is required, there is a trail to the culprit. To garner access to the identity of the account holder, one would make an application for an access order via a lower-level court and on the strength of that court order, the government would release the contact information so action can be taken.

It may be the case that as Canada’s database grows to include a large swath of the world’s population, and then other countries would join the effort. It may evolve in much the same way registering an internet site has. We can demand appropriate regulation in Canada - we may end up effecting appropriate regulation the world over.

Anonymity is a two-way street.

Sometime ago I reposted a clip of an Australian Senator speaking in the Senate criticizing COVID policy. The post was blocked, or removed in someway and my account functionality was affected. The attached note indicated someone in the Australian press corps was responsible. I had no means of recourse.

Conclusion

We must act now and decisively. The fact that Western civilization's narrative is so badly fragmented, the fact that the public’s map of reality is so badly distorted, and the fact that we are experiencing an unprecedented level of discord can be attributed to the realities of modern communication modalities. These negative externalities are nearly all the result of people being able to remain anonymous. People are being permitted to lie, cheat, lure children, and sow discord with impunity. I respectfully urge Meta to consider supporting or piloting identity-linked accountability measures that preserve free expression while reducing harms enabled by anonymity. I believe this could strengthen societal trust in platforms like Facebook and help restore societal cohesion.

I would welcome any opportunity to discuss this further. Thank you for your time and leadership on these important issues.

Kind Regards,

  

Neil E. Thomson


Mark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark ZuckerbergMark Zuckerberg