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Wangja

Joined: 17 May 2004 Location: Seoul, Yongsan
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Posted: Mon Nov 21, 2005 5:32 pm Post subject: And speaking of the Patriot Act .... |
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here it is in action .....
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Feds ramp up spying on journalists, other Americans
By DOUG THOMPSON
Publisher, Capitol Hill Blue
Nov 21, 2005, 05:12
Using powers granted under the USA Patriot Act, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has stepped up surveillance of journalists in an effort to plug leaks from a scandal-weary Bush administration. |
Ah yes "only for counter-terrorism" we were told. Certainly not for counter-criticism. |
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igotthisguitar

Joined: 08 Apr 2003 Location: South Korea (Permanent Vacation)
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Posted: Tue Nov 22, 2005 8:42 pm Post subject: |
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http://www.margaritate.com/downloads/Alex_Jones-911_The_Road_To_Tyranny.asf
Alex Jones�� ��911 The Road to Tyranny�� is a fire-in-the-belly movie that looks at the Police State emerging in the United States of America. His book ��9-11 Descent Into Tyranny�� adds yet more examples of the coming New World Order. One of the gems in both the film and the book is the speech delivered by GHW Bush to the U.S. Congress on September 11, 1991.
��Out of these troubled times, our fifth objective, a new world order, can emerge. Now we can see a new world coming into being, a world in which there is the very real prospect of a new world order.��
The movie does not dissect the *911* events themselves (although the book is useful), but it reminds us of the shocking televison images of the WTC under aerial attack. But we are left in no doubt that the Bush Administration was complicit in the attacks -- to which the movie adds the delicious irony of GW Bush, addressing the UN on November 10, 2001, saying:
��Let us never tolerate outrageous conspiracy theories concerning the attacks of September 11, malicious lies that attempt to shift the blame from the terrorists themselves: away from the guilty.��
Now that Michael Moore��s documentary ��Fahrenheit 9/11�� has won the Cannes Palme d��Or, some say it��s in the same genre as Alex Jones�� movie ��911 The Road to Tyranny��. Should Moore��s movie, already a salute to Ray Bradbury��s ��Fahrenheit 451��, be subtitled ��911 ... The Road to War��?
You can download some of Alex Jones�� movie for free at http://www.infowars.com , and compare it with a preview of Moore��s film at http://www.fahrenheit911.com/trailer/ .
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The Bobster

Joined: 15 Jan 2003
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Posted: Wed Nov 23, 2005 7:52 am Post subject: |
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I think this is the link that Wangja intended to post "
Feds ramp up spying on journalists, other Americans
I bothered to google it because I was curious, and I offer the link because there's more in the piece that is of interest than what was quoted above. Here's a little more :
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Last week, the Federal Communications Commission set an 18-month deadline for broadband Internet Service Providers to make their systems ��wiretap-ready.��
��This is like saying, `Everybody has to keep their doors unlocked because the FBI might need to get in,���� says Mark Rasch, a former Justice Department attorney who handled computer crime cases and now senior vice president and chief security counsel of Solutionary Inc., a computer security consulting company in Omaha. ��The harm of everybody keeping their doors unlocked all the time is much greater than the benefit.�� |
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Wangja

Joined: 17 May 2004 Location: Seoul, Yongsan
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Posted: Wed Nov 23, 2005 6:37 pm Post subject: |
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The Bobster wrote: |
I think this is the link that Wangja intended to post "
Feds ramp up spying on journalists, other Americans
I bothered to google it because I was curious, and I offer the link because there's more in the piece that is of interest than what was quoted above. Here's a little more :
Quote: |
Last week, the Federal Communications Commission set an 18-month deadline for broadband Internet Service Providers to make their systems ��wiretap-ready.��
��This is like saying, `Everybody has to keep their doors unlocked because the FBI might need to get in,���� says Mark Rasch, a former Justice Department attorney who handled computer crime cases and now senior vice president and chief security counsel of Solutionary Inc., a computer security consulting company in Omaha. ��The harm of everybody keeping their doors unlocked all the time is much greater than the benefit.�� |
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Thanks, I had intended to post the link, but by the time I realised I had not, the thread had dropped off the list. |
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igotthisguitar

Joined: 08 Apr 2003 Location: South Korea (Permanent Vacation)
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Posted: Tue Nov 29, 2005 4:48 am Post subject: |
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Court Trip For Bus Rider Who Refused To 'Show Papers'
Denver Post / David Harsanyi | November 28 2005
Related: Next Stop: Big Brother
http://www.papersplease.org/davis/index.html
Will it come to this? The ID card above is satire, but how soon before it becomes reality? When honest, law-abiding citizens can't commute to work on a city bus without a demand for their "papers," something is very, very wrong.
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Deborah Davis doesn't consider herself a hero. Certainly not a modern-day champion of the Constitution. Yet, in her own way, she might be a little of both.
Two months ago, this 50-year-old mother of four was reading a book while riding to work on RTD's Route 100. When the bus rolled up to the gates of the Denver Federal Center in Lakewood, a guard climbed on and demanded Davis, as well as everyone else on board, produce identification.
Perhaps it was that inherent American distaste for producing papers on demand, but Davis, who had gone through this drill before, decided to pass.
"I told him that I did have identification, but I wasn't going to show it to him," Davis explains. "I knew that I wasn't required by law to show ID and that's why I decided I wasn't going to. The whole thing seemed to be more about compliance than security."
According to Davis, the guard proceeded to call on federal cops, who then dragged Davis off a public bus, handcuffed her, shoved her into the back seat of a police car and drove off to a police station within the Federal Center.
While I was unable to reach anyone at the Department of Homeland Security on Friday to comment on Davis' case, the offense/incident report corroborates her basic story.
Though, it should be noted that, according to the arresting officer, Davis became "argumentative" before she "was physically removed from the bus and placed under arrest."
Good for her.
Davis - whose middle son is risking his life in Iraq while the federal government is demanding papers from and arresting his middle-aged mom - is scheduled to be arraigned on Dec. 9 and could face up to 60 days in jail.
Gail Johnson, a volunteer ACLU lawyer who practices at a prominent Colorado criminal defense firm, will defend Davis without charge. She expects the government to arraign Davis on two federal criminal misdemeanors, if not more.
The first states that citizens must "when requested, display Government or other identifying credentials to Federal police officers or other authorized individuals." The second says that citizens must comply with "the lawful direction of Federal police officers and other authorized individuals."
As Johnson sees it, there are numerous problems with the charges and she plans to fight them "vigorously."
"She was a passenger on a public bus," explains Johnson, who believes this case is about the fundamental right to travel. "She got on the bus outside of the federal area and she wanted to get off the bus outside the federal area. It's not her fault buses run along this route."
Legal issues notwithstanding, you have to wonder what ever happened to common sense? What exactly were the guards, who merely glanced at the IDs, doing? Is there a "no-bus rider" terrorist list in Lakewood? And if there is, how would the guards be able to differentiate between real and fake IDs?
And no, we needn't be absolutists about freedom. There are potentially a whole host of justifiable reasons for enhanced security.
In this instance, however, the Federal Center houses the Department of Veterans Affairs, the U.S. Geological Survey and a section of the National Archives.
Not exactly Dick Cheney's super-secret underground bunker.
If safety at the center was a question of national security, why have a public bus route running through the facility in the first place?
"I'm just a regular, normal, everyday person," Davis says. "There is nothing really far out about me. I have been laid off. I pay my taxes. I have my problems. I am no different than anyone else. It just didn't seem right."
Ah, but here she's wrong.
She's not like anyone else. So let's hope more Americans act like Deb Davis, not another partisan hack acting the victim, but an average American who questions government intrusion into our private and public lives for freedom's sake.
http://www.denverpost.com/news/ci_3253063 |
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igotthisguitar

Joined: 08 Apr 2003 Location: South Korea (Permanent Vacation)
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Posted: Tue Dec 26, 2006 10:18 pm Post subject: |
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Gee ... who woulda thunk it? Blah-biddie blah, blah-biddie blah blah ...
GROUND ZERO LEGITIMACY.
Senators "Nix" Pre-9/11 Hijacker ID "Theory"
By ANNE FLAHERTY, Associated Press Writer
WASHINGTON - A lengthy Senate investigation has debunked charges by a Republican congressman that military analysts identified Mohamed Atta and other Sept. 11 hijackers before the attacks, according to a committee aide familiar with the report
CONT'D ...
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20061227/ap_on_go_co/able_danger |
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Joo Rip Gwa Rhhee

Joined: 25 May 2003
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Posted: Tue Dec 26, 2006 11:01 pm Post subject: |
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Capitol Hill Blue is a not-for-profit, non-commercial experiment in on-line journalism published as an information resource for our readers. All material is � 2006 Capitol Hill Blue. For more information, please check out our FAQ. We take your privacy seriously at Capitol Hill Blue.
Home / The Rant / ReaderRant
CHB Investigates. . .
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Feds ramp up spying on journalists, other Americans
By DOUG THOMPSON
Publisher, Capitol Hill Blue
Nov 21, 2005, 05:12
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Using powers granted under the USA Patriot Act, the Federal Bureau of Investigation has stepped up surveillance of journalists in an effort to plug leaks from a scandal-weary Bush administration |
To stop leaks the US is stepping up survellance of journalists. The article doesn't say how or where .
and making sure broadband Internet Service Providers to make their systems �wiretap-ready.� is what is needed.
Actually the Patrot act doesn�t go far enough..
I hope the US has a national ID card in the future. Many countries do It is not a problem. |
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