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Current Topic: Current Events |
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Civil Liberties and National Security |
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Topic: Current Events |
5:41 pm EDT, May 17, 2006 |
Stratfor: Geopolitical Intelligence Report - May 16, 2006 Civil Liberties and National Security By George Friedman USA Today published a story last week stating that U.S. telephone companies (Qwest excepted) had been handing over to the National Security Agency (NSA) logs of phone calls made by American citizens. This has, as one might expect, generated a fair bit of controversy -- with opinions ranging from "It's not only legal but a great idea" to "This proves that Bush arranged 9/11 so he could create a police state." A fine time is being had by all. Therefore, it would seem appropriate to pause and consider the matter. Let's begin with an obvious question: How in God's name did USA Today find out about a program that had to have been among the most closely held secrets in the intelligence community -- not only because it would be embarrassing if discovered, but also because the entire program could work only if no one knew it was under way? No criticism of USA Today, but we would assume that the newspaper wasn't running covert operations against the NSA. Therefore, someone gave them the story, and whoever gave them the story had to be cleared to know about it. That means that someone with a high security clearance leaked an NSA secret. Americans have become so numbed to leaks at this point that no one really has discussed the implications of what we are seeing: The intelligence community is hemorrhaging classified information. It's possible that this leak came from one of the few congressmen or senators or staffers on oversight committees who had been briefed on this material -- but either way, we are seeing an extraordinary breakdown among those with access to classified material. The reason for this latest disclosure is obviously the nomination of Gen. Michael Hayden to be the head of the CIA. Before his appointment as deputy director of national intelligence, Hayden had been the head of the NSA, where he oversaw the collection and data-mining project involving private phone calls. Hayden's nomination to the CIA has come under heavy criticism from Democrats and Republicans, who argue that he is an inappropriate choice for director. The release of the data-mining story to USA Today obviously was intended as a means of shooting down his nomination -- which it might. But what is important here is not the fate of Hayden, but the fact that the Bush administration clearly has lost all control of the intelligence community -- extended to include congressional oversight processes. That is not a trivial point. At the heart of the argument is not the current breakdown in Washington, but the more significant question of why the NSA was running such a collection program and whether the program represented a serious threat to l... [ Read More (2.0k in body) ] Civil Liberties and National Security |
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Back From Iraq - Washington Post |
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Topic: Current Events |
10:10 am EDT, May 14, 2006 |
Bad stuff happened in Iraq, stuff Adam Reuter doesn't want to talk about. Not with his friends, not with the line cooks in the burger joint where he worked when he first came home or the tenants in the apartment complex he manages now. He doesn't even want to talk about it with his wife, who worried because he was jumping out of bed in the middle of the night. But when he agrees to talk about the war -- really talk about it -- he goes right to how the insurgent crumpled after he pulled the trigger. How later, during the firefight, he ended up just a few feet from the corpse. Bullets buzzed by, and he was supposed to keep an eye on the alley, but he couldn't help but glance over. "He just lay there," Reuter remembers. His eyes and mouth open. His whiskers a few days old. The bullet had gone in his neck cleanly, just to the right of his Adam's apple, but had come out ugly from the back of his head. He was maybe 25, a little older than Reuter. And his blood was pooling, thick and almost black in the darkness.
Back From Iraq - Washington Post |
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Contra-Contraception - New York Times |
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Topic: Current Events |
7:44 am EDT, May 8, 2006 |
Senator Coburn told me that he's not anti-birth-control: "I'm not a no-condom person. I prescribe tons of birth control products. But that's only one-half of the issue. The other half is preventing S.T.D.'s." This is not the message of the federal abstinence initiative, however. The emphasis there is squarely on promoting a moral framework that puts sexuality in a particular place. As the 2007 federal guidelines for program financing state, "It is required that the abstinence education curriculum teaches that a mutually faithful monogamous relationship in the context of marriage is the expected standard of human sexual activity."
Read and be warned. -janelane, SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE Contra-Contraception - New York Times |
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Daily Kos: Re-Improved Colbert transcript (now with complete text of Colbert-Thomas video!) |
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Topic: Current Events |
5:13 pm EDT, May 1, 2006 |
I've taken the existing transcripts I've seen of Stephen Colbert's brilliant monologue at the White House Correspondents Dinner, and the actual footage (complete video available at Democratic Underground), and edited the transcripts (correcting spelling and punctuation, adding mistakenly omitted words, etc.) to produce the following improved transcript. I have now also transcribed all of Colbert's Press Secretary "audition video." Continue below the fold with me.
Daily Kos: Re-Improved Colbert transcript (now with complete text of Colbert-Thomas video!) |
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Topic: Current Events |
11:55 am EDT, Apr 14, 2006 |
According to one who was present, Churchill suddenly blurted out: "Are we animals? Are we taking this too far?" ... by acknowledging that we do not "have clean hands ourselves," we would be in a far stronger position to condemn "the people who plunged the world into war and carried out gross crimes under its cover." As matters stand now, we are at the very least open to the charge of hypocrisy. ยท
my German ex girlfriend's father when he was a child and a refugee pulled bodies out of the ruins of destroyed Dresden he still won't talk about it even to his family i believe WW2 was a battle of light against dark but we did not emerge pure on certain occasions our moral integrity was a casualty of war Among the Dead Cities |
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Condi and Rummy, by Tom Friedman |
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Topic: Current Events |
2:10 pm EDT, Apr 8, 2006 |
The Bush team tried to make history on the cheap in Iraq. But you can't will the ends without willing the means.
Condi and Rummy, by Tom Friedman |
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Delta Force founder - 'our credibility is utterly zero' |
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Topic: Current Events |
4:41 pm EST, Mar 28, 2006 |
ultimately I believe in the good and the decency of the American people, and they're starting to see what's happening and the lies that have been told. We're seeing this current house of cards start to flutter away. The American people come around. They always do.
hear hear Delta Force founder - 'our credibility is utterly zero' |
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Why I Published Those Cartoons |
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Topic: Current Events |
4:19 pm EST, Feb 23, 2006 |
Has Jyllands-Posten insulted and disrespected Islam? It certainly didn't intend to. But what does respect mean? When I visit a mosque, I show my respect by taking off my shoes. I follow the customs, just as I do in a church, synagogue or other holy place. But if a believer demands that I, as a nonbeliever, observe his taboos in the public domain, he is not asking for my respect, but for my submission. And that is incompatible with a secular democracy.
This is a good explanation of the context around the cartoon war. Why I Published Those Cartoons |
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Very politically (religously) incorrect cartoon |
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Topic: Current Events |
5:03 pm EST, Feb 20, 2006 |
Oh dear. Just when you thought it was about time the extremists were going to cool down... They are just going to go apesnort over this. Let's hope the Internet isn't quite as widespread over there as it could be.
with my politically correct hat on i would say not all muslims can be stereotyped like this that said fucking excellent but they're so gonna get their lives threatened these guys have balls to do that now nice one Very politically (religously) incorrect cartoon |
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