Spying
Glenn Greenwald Explains the Democrat FISA Sell-Out
Submitted by crippledchimp on Sun, 07/06/2008 - 3:10pm. Bush | Civil Liberties | Democrats | FascismUSA | NSA Spying | Politics | SpyingThe political establishment and telecom immunity -- why it matters
Saturday July 5, 2008 09:29 EDT
Glenn Greenwald
Nancy Soderberg was deputy national security advisor and an ambassador to the United Nations in the Clinton administration. Today, she has an Op-Ed in the Los Angeles Times defending the FISA bill and telecom amnesty. The entire Op-Ed is just a regurgitation of the same trite, vague talking points which the political elite are using to justify this bill, accompanied by the standard invocations of "National Security" which our Foreign Policy elite condescendingly toss around to justify whatever policy they're claiming is necessary to protect us. But it's the language that she uses -- and the brazenness of the lying (and that's what it is) to justify this bill -- that's notable here.
It's notable because the political establishment is not only about to pass a patently corrupt bill, but worse, are spouting -- on a very bipartisan basis -- completely deceitful claims to obscure what they're really doing. This is what Soderberg says is what happened:
The Senate is dragging its feet because the compromise bill's opponents -- mostly Democrats -- want also to punish the telecommunications companies that answered President Bush's order for help with his illegal, warrantless wiretapping program. That is the wrong target.
CIA Was Urged to Keep Torture Interrogation Videotapes
Submitted by crippledchimp on Sun, 12/09/2007 - 8:32am. Bush | Bush Administration | FascismUSA | Human Rights | John Ashcroft | Politics | Spying | TortureHere's comes the hit on the designated fall-guy - former CIA Director of Operations Jose A. Rodriguez Jr, now in business with the brother of Silvestre Reyes (D-Tex.), chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence....
C.I.A. Was Urged to Keep Interrogation Videotapes
December 8, 2007 By MARK MAZZETTIWASHINGTON, Dec. 7 — White House and Justice Department officials, along with senior members of Congress, advised the Central Intelligence Agency in 2003 against a plan to destroy hundreds of hours of videotapes showing the interrogations of two operatives of Al Qaeda, government officials said Friday.
The chief of the agency’s clandestine service nevertheless ordered their destruction in November 2005, taking the step without notifying even the C.I.A.’s own top lawyer, John A. Rizzo, who was angry at the decision, the officials said.
The disclosures provide new details about what Gen. Michael V. Hayden, the C.I.A. director, has said was a decision “made within C.I.A. itself” to destroy the videotapes. In interviews, members of Congress and former intelligence officials also questioned some aspects of the account General Hayden provided Thursday about when Congress was notified that the tapes had been destroyed.
Bush's Fatherland Security Recruits Firefighters to Spy on Americans
Submitted by crippledchimp on Tue, 11/27/2007 - 11:38pm. Bush | Bush Administration | Civil Liberties | FascismUSA | Politics | Spying | Videos
Firefighters take on terror role - Critics cite privacy concerns as workers don’t need warrants to access areas Fri., Nov. 23, 2007
WASHINGTON - Firefighters in major cities are being trained to take on a new role as lookouts for terrorism, raising concerns of eroding their standing as American icons and infringing on people’s privacy.Unlike police, firefighters and emergency medical personnel don’t need warrants to access hundreds of thousands of homes and buildings each year, putting them in a position to spot behavior that could indicate terrorist activity or planning.
But there are fears that they could lose the faith of a skeptical public by becoming the eyes of the government, looking for suspicious items such as building blueprints or bomb-making manuals or materials...
Justice Dept. Reopens NSA Surveillance Probe
Submitted by crippledchimp on Thu, 11/15/2007 - 9:51pm. Alberto Gonzales | Bush | Bush Administration | Civil Liberties | FascismUSA | Mukasey | NSA Spying | SpyingJustice Dept. Reopens Surveillance Probe By Dan Eggen Wednesday, November 14, 2007
The Justice Department said yesterday that it has reopened an internal investigation of the role played by its lawyers in the administration's warrantless surveillance program, marking a notable policy shift just days into the tenure of new Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey.
The investigation by the Office of Professional Responsibility was abandoned in July 2006 after President Bush refused to give security clearances to the OPR lawyers conducting the investigation, according to documents and congressional testimony...
Senate Judiciary Poised to Pass Total Information Awareness
Submitted by crippledchimp on Tue, 11/13/2007 - 11:38am. Bush | Civil Liberties | Democrats | FascismUSA | FBI Spying | NSA Spying | Pentagon Spying | Politics | SpyingElliot D. Cohen: Senate Judiciary Poised to Pass Total Information Awareness Bill Mon, 2007-11-12 A BUZZFLASH GUEST CONTRIBUTION by Elliot D. Cohen
Amid public outcry, in 2003, Congress defunded the Bush Administration's Total Information Awareness (TIA) project, a massive Orwellian technology-driven surveillance and data mining initiative. Now, it is attempting to pass through the FISA Amendments Act of 2007 (S. 2248), a bill that would affectively give legal standing and retroactive legal immunity to a major component of this project...
Bushite Intelligence Official Says Privacy Must Be Redefined
Submitted by crippledchimp on Mon, 11/12/2007 - 12:01pm. Bush | Bush Administration | Civil Liberties | FascismUSA | FBI Spying | NSA Spying | Pentagon Spying | Politics | SpyingAin't this a BUNCH of TOTAL BS?
U.S. official: Privacy must be redefined - Residents need to adjust to loss of anonymity, government leader says updated 7:41 p.m. ET, Sun., Nov. 11, 2007
WASHINGTON - As Congress debates new rules for government eavesdropping, a top intelligence official says it is time that people in the United States changed their definition of privacy.Privacy no longer can mean anonymity, says Donald Kerr, the principal deputy director of national intelligence. Instead, it should mean that government and businesses properly safeguard people’s private communications and financial information.
Kerr’s comments come as Congress is taking a second look at the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act...
Gonzales Testimony Part of Broader Effort to Conceal NSA Spying
Submitted by crippledchimp on Fri, 07/27/2007 - 5:56am. Alberto Gonzales | Bush Administration | FascismUSA | NSA Spying | Spying | US AttorneysAnalysis: Gonzales Testimony Part of Broader Effort to Conceal Surveillance Program By Spencer Ackerman and Paul Kiel - July 26, 2007, 6:54 PM
Alberto Gonzales' testimony that there was "no serious disagreement" within the Bush Administration about the NSA warrantless surveillance program has left senators sputtering and fulminating about the attorney general's apparent prevarications. But a closer examination of Gonzales' testimony and other public statements from the Administration suggest that there may be a method to the madness....
Pentagon IG Cover-up of Military Spying on US Citizens
Submitted by crippledchimp on Tue, 07/03/2007 - 11:19pm. Bush Administration | Civil Liberties | FascismUSA | Militarism | Pentagon Spying | Spyingemptywheel lays out the latest evidence of military spying on US citizens, and the cover-up by the Pentagon IG...
More Funny Business with Record-Keeping? by emptywheel July 02, 2007
Holy Shit. Remember TALON and CIFA? Here's a description I wrote in April:
It was designed to gather intelligence on threats to defense installments in the United States - to try to collect information (in the TALON database) on threatening people scoping out domestic bases. But it ended up focusing on peace activists and the lefty blogosphere's own Jesus' General....
It Can Happen Here By Marie Cocco
Submitted by crippledchimp on Fri, 06/15/2007 - 3:12pm. Bush | Bush Administration | Civil Liberties | Extraordinary Rendition | FascismUSA | FBI Spying | Human Rights | Iraq War | Militarism | NSA Spying | Pentagon Spying | Politics | Spying | TortureIt Can Happen Here By Marie Cocco
Posted on Jun 12, 2007
WASHINGTON—There was a time when the dark, political drama was my preferred weekend movie. That was before kids and suburbs and serial viewings of “Shrek.”
The films were almost always about some exotic country gripped in a vise of poverty and dictatorship, where human life is cheap and strongmen unaccountable for crimes that shock the conscience. The genre was popularized in the 1982 film “Missing,” by the master director Costa-Gavras. It was a fictionalized account of the kidnapping and murder of a young American journalist in Chile, and the political awakening that his conservative father and the journalist ‘s wife undergo when they come to understand that the American government refuses to aide their search and somehow appears complicit in the horrors they see unfolding around them.
No matter where these dramas were set—in Latin America or in Africa or the Soviet Union or Northern Ireland—you would leave the theater stunned and silent, for a time. But safe, it seemed, in the knowledge that it could not happen here. Now it has...
Office of Top Spy Inadvertently Reveals Classified National Intel Budget
Submitted by crippledchimp on Mon, 06/04/2007 - 11:54pm. Bush Administration | Politics | SpyingExclusive: Office of Nation's Top Spy Inadvertently Reveals Key to Classified National Intel Budget June 03, 2007 - Check out the latest post, "Has the CIA Outsourced the Black Sites?"
In a holdover from the Cold War when the number really did matter to national security, the size of the US national intelligence budget remains one of the government's most closely guarded secrets. The Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the highest intelligence agency in the country that oversees all federal intelligence agencies, appears to have inadvertently released the keys to that number in an unclassified PowerPoint presentation now posted on the website (since pulled by DIA) of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). By reverse engineering the numbers in an underlying data element embedded in the presentation, it seems that the total budget of the 16 US intelligence agencies in fiscal year 2005 was $60 billion, almost 25% higher than previously believed....
Impeach Gonzales
Submitted by crippledchimp on Tue, 05/22/2007 - 1:42pm. Alberto Gonzales | Bush Administration | Impeachment | Politics | Spying | US Attorneys | Videos
Petition: http://impeachgonzales.org/ It's time to impeach Attorney General Alberto Gonzales.
Ashcroft Not Whacked Enough For the Bush Pack
Submitted by crippledchimp on Mon, 05/21/2007 - 6:22am. Alberto Gonzales | Bush Administration | Civil Liberties | John Ashcroft | Spying | TortureIt's rather bizarre to think Ashcroft wasn't whacked enough for the Bush Pack...
Ashcroft's Complex Tenure At Justice - On Some Issues, He Battled White House By Peter Baker and Susan Schmidt Sunday, May 20, 2007; A01
As attorney general, John D. Ashcroft was the public face of an administration pushing the boundaries of the Constitution to hunt down terrorists, but behind the scenes, according to former aides and White House officials, he at times resisted what he saw as radical overreaching...
Who Are the Idiots Who Voted to Confirm Gonzales?
Submitted by crippledchimp on Fri, 05/18/2007 - 8:08pm. Alberto Gonzales | NSA Spying | Scandals | Spying | US Attorneys | VideosEvery Republican plus the usual "suspects" (DINO's) voted to confirm the Torturer General in what is believed the closest confirmation vote of a pResidential appointee in modern history...
| Question: On the Nomination (Confirmation Alberto R. Gonzales to be Attorney General ) | |||
| Vote Number: | 3 | Vote Date: | February 3, 2005, 04:29 PM |
| Required For Majority: | 1/2 | Vote Result: | Nomination Confirmed |
| Nomination Number: | PN12 | ||
| Nomination Description: | Alberto R. Gonzales, of Texas, to be Attorney General | ||
| Vote Counts: | YEAs | 60 |
| NAYs | 36 | |
| Not Voting | 4 |
results below the fold...
White House Edits to Privacy Board's Report Spur Resignation
Submitted by crippledchimp on Wed, 05/16/2007 - 8:53pm. Bush Administration | Civil Liberties | FascismUSA | Politics | Scandals | SpyingWhite House Edits to Privacy Board's Report Spur Resignation By John Solomon and Ellen Nakashima Tuesday, May 15, 2007; A05
The Bush administration made more than 200 revisions to the first report of a civilian board that oversees government protection of personal privacy, including the deletion of a passage on anti-terrorism programs that intelligence officials deemed "potentially problematic" intrusions on civil liberties, according to a draft of the report obtained by The Washington Post.One of the panel's five members, Democrat Lanny J. Davis, resigned in protest Monday over deletions ordered by White House lawyers and aides (the ONLY democrat)...
















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