Baby-on-Cobalt: Difference between revisions
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An extension of the concept of blue-on-blue, aka [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friendly%20fire friendly fire], which Eric first discussed publicly on JRE #1945. | An extension of the concept of blue-on-blue, aka [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friendly%20fire friendly fire], which Eric first discussed publicly in February 2023 on [https://open.spotify.com/episode/7MDxyrrhD7gC7XMRwB0ulv?si=RTfTyUcFTomrUfYsTHEGbg&t=10548&context=spotify%3Aepisode%3A7MDxyrrhD7gC7XMRwB0ulv JRE #1945]. "Baby blue" refers to civilians who may unintentionally stumble upon covert operations within their own government, and find themselves the accidental targets of "cobalt blue", i.e., government organizations and officials. The United States government currently has [https://ncirc.bja.ojp.gov/event-deconfliction several deconfliction programs (Case Explorer, SAFETNet, and RISSafe)] to keep local, state and federal law enforcement organizations informed as needed on each other's operations to prevent blue-on-blue conflicts. These programs, however, are not available to civilians. | ||
[[Category:Ericisms]] | [[Category:Ericisms]] | ||
[[Category:DISC]] | [[Category:DISC]] |
Revision as of 05:55, 3 March 2023
An extension of the concept of blue-on-blue, aka friendly fire, which Eric first discussed publicly in February 2023 on JRE #1945. "Baby blue" refers to civilians who may unintentionally stumble upon covert operations within their own government, and find themselves the accidental targets of "cobalt blue", i.e., government organizations and officials. The United States government currently has several deconfliction programs (Case Explorer, SAFETNet, and RISSafe) to keep local, state and federal law enforcement organizations informed as needed on each other's operations to prevent blue-on-blue conflicts. These programs, however, are not available to civilians.