funeralcrasher: (Default)
Pentagon sets its sights on social networking websites
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg19025556.200?DCMP=NLC-nletter&nsref=mg19025556.200

"I AM continually shocked and appalled at the details people voluntarily post online about themselves." So says Jon Callas, chief security officer at PGP, a Silicon Valley-based maker of encryption software. He is far from alone in noticing that fast-growing social networking websites such as MySpace and Friendster are a snoop's dream.



I love how the article begins by blaming people who use these sites, rather than slamming the NSA for mining data in the first place. Sure, nobody should post their entire lives on the internet if they value privacy. But that doesn't make wiretapping and surveillance acceptable.. Sorry.

New Scientist has discovered that Pentagon's National Security Agency, which specialises in eavesdropping and code-breaking, is funding research into the mass harvesting of the information that people post about themselves on social networks. And it could harness advances in internet technology - specifically the forthcoming "semantic web" championed by the web standards organisation W3C - to combine data from social networking websites with details such as banking, retail and property records, allowing the NSA to build extensive, all-embracing personal profiles of individuals.

Americans are still reeling from last month's revelations that the NSA has been logging phone calls since the terrorist attacks of 11 September 2001. The Congressional Research Service, which advises the US legislature, says phone companies that surrendered call records may have acted illegally. [MAY HAVE?] However, the White House insists that the terrorist threat makes existing wire-tapping legislation out of date and is urging Congress not to investigate the NSA's action.



I enjoy posting on livejournal. I like reading about what's going on in others' lives, and I enjoy conversing with people I might otherwise never have met due to geographics. But I also don't relish the idea that the NSA is intent on combing through MY entries looking for patterns and making an even larger dossier on me (and you) than they already have. I don't want to be spied on. I don't want peeping toms looking in my windows. The idea that anyone would stalk me is creepified beyond belief, especially when it's my own god damned government.

If I can find a way to download all of my entries to my local pc, I may begin manually editing & deleting every entry I've made, at least in this journal. But who knows, the NSA may already have all of this data logged elsewhere thanks to Narus & AT&T.

9/11, decreasing constitutional rights, corporate and congressional corruption, presidential signing statements that prevent accountability, domestic spying.. and sooner or later, bird flu..

I can't help thinking of that image of a bloodied human face being stomped on repeatedly by a large black boot.

Over and over and over.
funeralcrasher: (Default)
Reposted from [livejournal.com profile] amenquohi


Crony Dictatorship Accomplished
LINK


  1. $21 Billion for Iraqi reconstruction goes missing.

  2. Congress gets wind of this, writes bill authorizing investigation.

  3. Bush signs bill, adding 'signing statement' preventing investigation.

  4. Crony dictatorship accomplished.





The Case of the Missing $21 Billion
Who's Following the Iraq Money?
By DAVE LINDORFF

During the days of the Nixon Watergate scandal investigation, reporter Bob Woodword was famously advised by his mysterious source, Deep Throat, to "follow the money" as a way of cracking the story.

Well, there is a lot of money to follow in the current scandal that can be best described as the Bush/Cheney administration, and so far, nobody's doing it.

My bet for the place that needs the most following is the more than $9 billion that has gone missing without a trace in Iraq--as well as $12 billion in cash that the Pentagon flew into Iraq straight from Federal Reserve vaults via military transports, and for which there has been little or no accounting.

When word of the missing money first surfaced in 2004, Congress passed legislation creating an office of Special Inspector General, assuming that this new agency would root out the problem and figure why all that taxpayer money had disappeared, and why only minimal reconstruction was going on in destroyed Iraq, instead of a massive rebuilding program as intended.

The new inspector general, an affable attorney named Stuart Bowen, went to work and came up with a report in early 2006 that sounded scathing enough. Bowen found cases of double billing by contractors, of payments for work that was never done, and other scandals. But he never came up with more than $1 billion or so worth of problems.

Now we know why.

It turns out that Bowen was never really looking very hard.

When the Boston Globe, this past April, broke the story that President Bush has been quietly setting aside over 750 acts passed by Congress, claiming he has the authority as "unitary executive" and as commander in chief to ignore such laws, it turned out that one of the laws the president chose to ignore was the one establishing the special inspector general post for Iraq. What the president did was write a so-called "signing statement" on the side (unpublicized of course), saying that the new inspector general would have no authority to investigate any contracts or corruption issues involving the Pentagon.

Well, since most of the missing money has been going to the military in Iraq, that pretty much meant nothing of consequence would be discovered by the inspector general.

You might think that the inspector general himself would have complained about such a restriction on his authority to do the job that Congress had intended, but Bush took care of that. In his role as Chief Executive, he appointed Bowen to the post, a man who has a long history of working as a loyal manservant to the president. Bowen was a deputy general counsel for Governor Bush (meaning he was an assistant to the ever solicitous solicitor Alberto Gonzales). He did yeoman service to Bush as a member of the term that handled the famous vote count atrocity in Florida in the November 2000 election, and then worked under Gonzales again in the White House during Bush's first term, before returning briefly to private practice.

Bowen simply never mentioned to anyone that, courtesy of a secretive and unconstitutional order from the president, he was not doing the job that Congress had intended.

The deception was far-reaching. When Thomas Gimble, the acting inspector general of the Pentagon, was asked in 2005 during a congressional hearing by Christopher Shays (R-CT), chair of the House government reform subcommittee, why the Pentagon had no audit team in Iraq to look for fraud, Gimble facilely replied that such a team was "not needed" because Congress had set up the special inspector general unit to do that. He didn't mention that the president had barred the special inspector general from investigating Pentagon scandals.

This would all be pretty funny except for two things.

First of all, Americans and Iraqis are dying in droves because of the chaos that the U.S. invasion and occupation have created in Iraq-a problem that that $9 billion in missing Congressionally-allocated funds, and the bales of US dollars, were supposed to have solved.

Second, and I admit this is pretty speculative on my part, money being like water, it tends to flow to the lowest level, which, from a moral and ethical standpoint, would be the Bush/Cheney administration and the Republican Party machine that put them, and the do-nothing Congress that covers up for them, into office.

My guess is that a fair piece of those many billions of dollars is sloshing around back in the U.S. paying for things like Republican Party electoral dirty tricks, vote theft, bribing of Democratic members of Congress, and god knows what else.

If this seems far-fetched to anyone, remember that this administration has included a number of people who were linked to the Reagan-era Iran-Contra scandal, when the creative-and criminal-idea was conceived of secretly selling Pentagon stocks of shoulder-fired Stinger anti-aircraft missiles to Iran, and using the proceeds to secretly fund the U.S.-trained and organized Contra fighters who were fighting to topple the Sandinista government in Nicaragua (Congress had inconveniently banned any U.S. aid to the Contras).

It seems to me inconceivable that this corrupt and obsessively power-mad administration would have passed up an opportunity to get its hands on some of the easy money flowing into Iraq over the course of the last three years.

Given all this, it seems almost unfathomable that Democratic Party leaders would be insisting, as have Rep. Nancy Pelosi (R-CA) and Sen. Harry Reid (D-NV), Democratic leaders of the House and Senate, that there would be no impeachment hearings in Congress if Democrats were to succeed in winning back Congress this November.

What better way to follow that money than an impeachment hearing into why the president unconstitutionally subverted the intent of Congress in establishing an office of special inspector general for corruption in Iraq?
funeralcrasher: (Default)
Dear Ms. Stembridge:

      Thank you for contacting me regarding S. 1955, the Health
Insurance Marketplace Modernization and Affordability Act of 2005.  It
is good to hear from you.

      An estimated 45.8 million people were without health insurance
in 2004.  The number of uninsured has risen in almost every year since
1989 and is expected to continue to rise in the near future.  Our country
is certainly in need of more options to help ease the burden on small
business owners to provide insurance for their employees.  S. 1955
would provide for the establishment and governance of Small Business
Health Plans (SBHPs).

      I understand how important healthcare is to all Americans.  Our
country is in need of affordable health insurance programs for those
individuals who currently lack the means to obtain benefits.  It is also
important that these healthcare programs allow individuals access to
healthcare plans which best meet their needs, but we must ensure that
consumers are safe and protected.

      S. 1955 will also allow for insurance plans to bypass some
standards set by individual state health insurance plan consumer laws.
This bill is scheduled to be voted on in the near future.  Rest assured that
when this legislation comes to a vote, I will take into consideration all of
the effects that SBHPs will have on the State of Georgia.

      Again, thank you for taking the time to contact me.  As always, I
appreciate hearing from you. Additionally, if you would like to receive
timely e-mail alerts regarding the latest congressional actions and my
weekly e-newsletter, please sign up via my web site at:
www.chambliss.senate.gov.


So, we can expect a yes vote on S1955 from the distinguished senator from Georgia.  This pigfucker intends to rape 85 million Americans with this dastardly bill.  Saxby Chambliss is a traitor to the American people and deserves prosecution and sentencing.  What he'll get is a pat on the back for doing a heckuva job, from our Imperialist leader.

War is Peace
Ignorance is Bliss
Freedom is Slavery

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