Got The Item?

Date: October 24, 2008
Categories: American Patriots, Be Afraid, fun, homeland insecurity, humor, politics
Wednesday, 23 of May of 2012
In a time of the spring, old paths are obscured and new growth begins.

Date: October 24, 2008
Categories: American Patriots, Be Afraid, fun, homeland insecurity, humor, politics

Oh no they didn’t!
Date: September 30, 2008
Categories: American Patriots, Be Afraid, Broken Taboo, ethics, Foreigners, fun, homeland insecurity, liberty, money, Outrages, politics
This month is Home Safety Month, brought to you by the Home Safety Council. I could go on and on about exactly home you should be safe at home, but that’s not the main point.
The main point of Home Safety month is that, if you’re going to do something unsafe, you should be sure to do it outside the home.
Don’t forget to tell the kids.
Northeastern University has revealed that a team of its researchers used people’s cell phones to track their movements without their knowledge and without their permission. 100,000 people were spied upon by the Northeastern University team. That’s illegal for academic researchers to do in the United States, so Northeastern University chose to spy on people outside of the USA, in some foreign country that they refuse to name.
The Associated Press is reporting the story, but only part of the story. “That type of nonconsensual tracking would be illegal in the United States, according to Rob Kenny, a spokesman for the Federal Communications Commission,” the AP writes.
What the AP quotes Rob Kenny as saying is not exactly true. Academics, and other private citizens like you and I cannot legally use cell phone networks to spy on people’s private movements and communications, but the government can.
Thanks to the Patriot Act and the Protect America Act, the American federal government has the power to do the same thing here in the United States that the researchers from Northeastern University did outside of the USA.
The White House can take the information your cell phone beams back to its network, and use that to see where you go and what you do, not just who you talk to with your cell phone. They don’t need a search warrant to do it. They don’t need your permission. They don’t even need to tell you they’re spying on you. No judge approves the spying. No one can stop it.
This kind of spying is a tool of political power.
With this power, the President can track political activists.
The President can eavesdrop on congressional aides.
George W. Bush has the power to spy on Barack Obama’s campaign.
The tricky part is that you can never be sure that you’re being spied on when you’re carrying your cell phone… and you can never be sure that you aren’t being spied on either.
Never being sure if someone from the government is watching where you go, or listening to what you say, you can never be sure that you’re alone.
That kind of environment stifles free speech, free association, and even free thinking.
Two dangerous events have taken place in Manhattan recently. First, there was the bombing. A guy rode up on a bicycle and set a bomb to go off outside of a military recruiting center when no one would be there. It was a little bomb, a big firecracker, really. It broke the glass on a window and a door. The bomber lost his bicycle.
Homeland Security went on high alert trying to find the bicyclist. It was the top story for three days.
Then, there was the crane. Today, a big crane in New York City fell over. It hit a bunch of apartment buildings. At least 4 people are dead.
No one’s saying that we have to give up the freedoms of the Bill of Rights because of the accident with the crane. Lots of people have spent several years working hard to get rid of the freedoms of the Bill of Rights to protect Americans from bombers, who haven’t been able to do much but break windows.
Why the difference in reaction? Why are people so ready to freak out when it comes to a bomb that doesn’t do much damage, but just shrug when it’s a crane that kills people?
Date: February 14, 2008
Categories: American Patriots, Be Afraid, Broken Taboo, Democratic Losers, ethics, fun, general, homeland insecurity, humor, legislation, liberty, Outrages, politics, Republican Heroes
Date: February 12, 2008
Categories: activism, Be Afraid, Broken Taboo, Democratic Losers, ethics, fun, general, homeland insecurity, humor, legislation, liberty, Outrages, Republican Heroes
En lieu of the recent posts on the main blog about the FISA ordeal, I thought I should share this little story I came across when I logged on to Yahoor today.
Senate delays eavesdropping vote
By PAMELA HESS, Associated Press Writer2 hours, 39 minutes agoThe Senate on Thursday signaled support for granting legal immunity to telecommunications companies that helped the government conduct warrantless eavesdropping, a sign that the contentious provision may be headed for approval next week.
On a strong 60-36 vote, senators rejected an amendment that would have killed the immunity provision and strengthened the powers of a secret court to oversee the surveillance of phone calls and e-mails that involve people inside the United States.
Further action on the legislation was delayed until Monday, pushing Congress closer to a Feb. 1 deadline for enacting a new law. If a new law is not signed by the president by then, some eavesdropping practices that are now legal would be prohibited.
The Bush administration is insisting that any new law also protect from potentially crippling civil lawsuits those telecommunications companies that helped the government eavesdrop on Americans after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks.
Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, R-Nev., blamed Republicans for the delay, saying they were trying to block a series of amendments majority Democrats sought to offer.
“It appears the president and Republicans want failure. They don’t want a bill,” Reid said.
The draft bill, written by the Senate Intelligence Committee, would update the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act. The law, first enacted in 1978, dictates when federal agents must obtain court permission before tapping phone and computer lines inside the United States to gather intelligence on foreign threats. Agents may tap lines outside the country without court oversight.
It was the second time in six weeks the Senate had taken up the FISA modernization bill, only to see action stymied. Reid abruptly closed down debate in December when it became clear the Senate couldn’t finish work before the holiday break.
Most vexing to the intelligence agencies, without an extension of the law the government would return to needing individual court orders to listen in on any communication that passes through U.S. telecommunications switches and computer servers — even those that are between people who are outside the country. This is not required by FISA, according to legal experts, but became the practice over time to provide firms with legal protections.
House Intelligence Committee Chairman Rep. Silvestre Reyes, D-Texas, and Judiciary Committee Chairman Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., on Thursday proposed extending the existing law for 30 days to buy the Senate additional time to produce a bill. The House completed its version of the bill last fall.
In a move to resolve the immunity issue, the key impasse on the legislation, the White House ended months of resistance Thursday and agreed to give House members access to secret documents about its warrantless wiretapping program.
The Bush administration is trying to persuade the House to agree to retroactively shield from liability those companies that helped the government eavesdrop on Americans without the approval of the FISA court. About 40 such civil lawsuits are pending against telecommunications firms, and the administration says if the cases go forward they could reveal information that would compromise national security. It also contends that the companies could be bankrupted if the lawsuits are successful.
The companies were helping the administration carry out the so-called Terrorist Surveillance Program, a still-classified effort that intercepted communications on U.S. soil without oversight from the FISA court from Sept. 11, 2001, to Jan. 17, 2007.
Reyes and Rep. Pete Hoekstra of Michigan, the top Republican on the House intelligence panel, requested access to the White House documents in May. House Democrats say they will not support telecom immunity without seeing them first. Some senators were given access to the documents last fall.
The documents include the president’s authorization of warrantless wiretapping, Justice Department legal opinions going back to 2001, and the requests sent to the telecommunications companies asking for their assistance.
I’m trying really hard to be surprised these days…really hard…
Date: January 24, 2008
Categories: activism, American Patriots, Be Afraid, election 2008, ethics, general, homeland insecurity, legislation, liberty, Outrages, politics
I’m still lazy, so here’s another comic;

December 1, 2007 – Saturday
1705 days into the war
U.S. MILITARY DEATHS IN IRAQ: 3881
U.S. MILITARY WOUNDED IN IRAQ: 28582
IRAQI CIVILIAN DEATHS
(MINIMUM): 77353
(MAXIMUM): 84502
(LANCET ESTIMATE) 600,000
COST OF THE WAR SO FAR (ROUNDED TO THE NEAREST MILLION): $473,314,000,000
Please note that the above figures, from the IBC website, are NOT estimates of total Iraqi civilians killed as a result of the US invasion and its aftermath. Rather, they are a count of Western-reported verifiable violent deaths, and likely to be a small percentage of the true figure. Les Roberts, author of the Lancet Report, believes the actual number may now be as high as 1,000,000.
RED DAVE
Date: December 1, 2007
Categories: activism, Be Afraid, general, history, homeland insecurity, Our Glorious War Machine, Outrages, war and peace
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