another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Jun 15, 2014 10:53 pm

http://www.vachss.com/updates_page.html


(Updated 06-11-14)


We have added a new Category to The Zero's Resources section: Theocracy as Fascism. The Zero's intent with this newly–added (but often integral) category is not to disrespect any religion, spiritual beliefs, or lack thereof. Our only concern is behavior. Our equation is simply: Theocracy = Fascism. It matters not which particular religious mantle such individuals cloak themselves in — Christian, Muslim, Hindu, Buddhist, Atheist — anyone who forces compliance with their own "interpretation" of religious doctrine is a fascist, and you already know what The Zero thinks of fascism.
(Updated 06-04-14)
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Jun 20, 2014 11:56 am

Yo Sand Monkey we give you democracy you give us oil
Pajama Mama eh? see.
http://www.rsdb.org/search?q=arabs



ever wonder how taxpayer funded FBI agents got the satchel charges
from the Pentagon to collapse the Murragh Building?
ever wonder where these same FBI agents got nano thermetic explosives from the Pentagon to create a controlled demolition of the world trade center?

In other taxpayer funded news
http://www.keyt.com/news/local-vets-rea ... y/26580304

Local Vets React to President's Iraq Strategy
Military advisors to help Iraq battle terrorists.
Keith Carls, KEYT - KCOY - KKFX Reporter, KeithCarls@kcoy.com
POSTED: 07:42 PM PDT Jun 19, 2014



SANTA MARIA, Calif. -

Wes Maroney was working for the Santa Barbara County Marshal's Office when his National Guard unit was activated and called to duty for the start of Operation Desert Storm in January of 1991.


Maroney deployed again with his MIlitary Police unit to Iraq in 2003 for Operation Iraqi Freedom.

"I'm very concerned over what's going to happen to that country", Maroney told Central Coast News Thursday afternoon, "we put a lot of time and effort into it to make it somewhat like ours and to see it just falling apart and their soldiers running away is just devastating to me."

Maroney says his emotions go beyond heartbreak.

"I've known a number of people who died there (Iraq) trying to give that country its own freedom", Maroney says.

Maroney says President Obama's plan to send non-combat advisors to Iraq to help the Iraqi military battle the terrorist insurgency isn't enough to turn the tide.

"We don't need to train right now, its too late", Maroney says, "we need to just send in some Air Force and Navy and support them in the air that's what they need."

"What comes to mind is Vietnam and the military advisors that were initially sent in there", says former U.S. Army Officer, Pentagon Staff Assistant and retired FBI Agent Dan Payne, "we've had military advisors in Iraq and we saw how far that got us when three divisions just automatically folded, when 30,000 troops gave up their uniforms and weapons and booked."

Payne, who teaches political science at Allan Hancock College in Santa Maria, shared his thoughts on President Obama's plan for Iraq.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Jul 06, 2014 12:14 pm

[googlevideo][/googlevideo]just got this email from Marks


Flyby News <http://flybynews.com/
Editor - Jonathan Mark
04 July, 2014 - Bart Jordan Timesinger & Manhattan Project
<http://www.flybynews.com/cgi-local/newspro/viewnews.cgi?newsid1404486053,63266,

04 July, 2014 - Youtube - Flyby News

*Bart Jordan Timesinger and Manhattan Project* http://m.youtube.com/watch?v=GVJhJCbCQ68
*Jonathan Mark interviews Bart Jordan*
25 June, 2014 ~ video running time 02:41:11
*Editor's Notes*:

It will take a while to fully absorb the impact or significance of this
issue and video-interview, which will be broadcast by GCTV <http://GCTV.org,
other community tv stations, and on youtube
The reality of a person like Bart Jordan can only be explained by the
connection of our humanity beyond time and space. His story is simply
unimaginable if it were not true. In the field of science, Jordan's
expertise is in Metrology (the art of measure). He has lectured at five
different departments at the University of New Hampshire, sharing his
skills in mathematics, astronomy, archeology, music, literature, language,
and art. Uniting such disciplines with an intuitive flare for listening, he
has gained access to gifts and communications from our distant past; as
Bart puts it, "our future is in the past with no escape present."

The video, "Bart Jordan Timesinger & Manhattan Project" has a running time
of 02:41:11. It was recorded on 25 June, 2014 at Baldface Books in Dover,
NH. Jordan shares his experience in getting involved in the Manhattan
Project as a child from his unique skills and study of ancient language.
Jordan is mostly known as a gifted concert classical guitarist. His mentor,
the world renowned guitarist Andres Segovia, wrote a revealing statement
under his student's reconstructed drafting of the Ice Age Lespugue
Statuette from southern France: "To Bart Jordan, whose intelligence
penetrates the best concealed secrets of antique forms and equally composes
lyric pieces for the guitar." Some people know of Jordan's single-handed
recovery of early calendar art expressing the science of ancient cultures.
His work can be seen in the journals of the New England Antiquities
Research Association, in Lucy Lippard's book called "Overlay", and, of
course, in Flyby News
<http://www.flybynews.com/cgi-local/newspro/viewnews.cgi?newsid1084036882,16599,.


By way of introduction to Jordan's brief article appearing in Early America
Revisited, Dr. Ivan Van Sertima states the following: "Bart Jordan was a
child prodigy to whom Einstein granted special audience because of his
phenomenal mathematical abilities. He has shown extraordinary
correspondences between ancient Egyptian and ancient American pyramids. We
present below a contribution by this remarkable genius on unsuspected
correspondences between Old World/New World pyramids."

The discovery of a temple in Turkey, Gobekli Tepe that was built and buried
in sand in pre-Bible times is demanding a new perspective on humankind
civilization's history. Most recently, the discovery of the 'largest
pyramid on Earth' in Bosnia is simply fascinating. This pyramid dated back
up to 25,000 years! These subjects are discussed with Bart Jordan, and
images have been inserted into the video published on youtube on the 4th of
July. Most up-front during this first recorded interview (since 15 years of
our meeting) was Bart Jordan sharing about his involvement in the Manhattan
Project when only eight years old, and the threat made on his life. Very
little was edited out of this discussion. We plan to follow up with audio
recorded discussions with detailed images that will show how sacred sites
and measures derived from ancient language passed such information on Earth
throughout the ages.

"In mindful time past,
we honored our grandparents;
in mindless time present,
we threaten our grandchildren.

- Bart Jordan
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Jul 09, 2014 3:43 pm

Home»
News»
UK News»
Crime

20 establishment figures 'in elite paedophile ring'
Former child protection manager says there are up to 20 prominent public figures in alleged paedophile ring covering Parliament and judiciary
20 establishment figures 'in elite paedophile ring'
Peter McKelvie worked as a child protection manager in Hereford Photo: BBC
Matthew Holehouse

By Matthew Holehouse, Political Correspondent

9:44AM BST 08 Jul 2014

Judges, peers and MPs are among 20 prominent public figures who abused children for decades, a former child protection manager has said.

Peter McKelvie, who worked on the conviction of paedophile Peter Righton, said there was a “powerful elite” of paedophiles who carried out “the worst form” of abuse.

There is evidence linking the former politicians to an alleged paedophile network, he said.

Lord Warner, the former health minister, said the allegations were credible.

Mr McKelvie triggered a police investigation in 2012 when he revealed there were seven boxes of potential evidence of a powerful paedophile network, including letters between Righton and other paedophiles, being stored by West Mercia Police.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Jul 10, 2014 11:54 pm

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/j ... y-database



Five plaintiffs sue after being targeted in US 'suspicious activity' database
30 comments

James Prigoff one of the people suing over 'McCarthy era' tactics after the FBI monitored him for photographing public art
Rainbow Swash gas tank
The Rainbow Swash gas tank in Dorchester, Massachusetts. Photograph: Ktr101/Wikimedia

Spencer Ackerman in New York

Thursday 10 July 2014 16.05 EDT

The man from the FBI left his card on James Prigoff's door in Sacramento. When Prigoff, a photographer, returned Agent Ayaz's call, he learned that he had attracted the attention of a terrorism investigator, all for attempting to frame an ideal image of a piece of public art on the other side of the country.

Months earlier, Prigoff had travelled to Boston to photograph the Rainbow Swash, a series of bright, colorful stripes painted on a 140-foot gas storage tank in Dorchester. But two private security guards became agitated and told him – incorrectly – that he was on private property. After some hassle, Prigoff opted to snap the shot from a suboptimal location, into the sunlight.

Now, in August 2004, Ayaz wanted to know if Prigoff had ever been to Boston. The agent had already knocked on his neighbor's door, seeking information. Prigoff explained his Rainbow Swash incident, the only thing that came to mind from Boston that he reasoned could have prompted Ayaz's contact. Nothing further happened. As it happens, the Rainbow Swash is readily visible on Google Images.

But the most likely reason that Ayaz, a federal agent in California attached to a joint terrorism task force, could have known about Prigoff or his Boston trip in the first place is the result of post-9/11 laws intended to help law enforcement connect the metaphorical dots ahead of a terrorist attack. The security guards filed what is known as a suspicious activity report, an account of observed behavior striking the observer as questionable.

Suspicious activity reports – over 35,000 of which have been generated as of 2013, according to the government – go from their locations into terrorism databases like the FBI's eGuardian. There, they are visible not only to federal agents but to state and local police around the country through the Department of Homeland Security's controversial fusion centers. Reports on people like Prigoff reside there for up to 30 years.

Generating them requires observers to have neither probable cause nor reasonable suspicion of criminal activity – merely the law enforcement equivalent of the "see something, say something" vigilance mantra post-9/11.

"This is supposed to be a free country, where the government isn’t supposed to be tracking you if you’re not doing anything wrong. I lived through the McCarthy era, and I know how false accusations, surveillance, and keeping files on innocent people can destroy careers and lives. I am deeply troubled that the SAR program may be recreating that same climate of false accusation and fear today," Prigoff said in a statement.

Prigoff is one of five plaintiffs filing a lawsuit in California, represented in part by the ACLU, against attorney general Eric Holder and a Justice Department colleague. They seek a "permanent injunction" on the current lax standards of the suspicious activity reports and to end law-enforcement training on them. The standards "opens the door to and encourages religious profiling", reads the suit, filed on Thursday and shared with the Guardian.

According to a 2013 annual report from the Nationwide Suspicious Activity Report Initiative – comprising the FBI, Justice Department and Department of Homeland Security – some 296,000 law enforcement personnel nationwide had been trained in the guidelines for the reports, which were said to include civil liberties protections.

But their utility for preventing terrorism is in question. A March 2013 Government Accountability Office study found that the Justice Department office in charge of managing the suspicious-activity initiative does not track "their role in deterring terrorist activities or the number of arrests or convictions achieved".

The standards undergirding a suspicious activity report are defined as: "Observed behavior reasonably indicative of preoperational planning related to terrorism or other criminal activity." The lawsuit filed Thursday notes that such a standard is well below that of reasonable suspicion, let alone probable cause.

Examples of such suspicious behavior at US hotels listed in a DHS-FBI bulletin from 2010 included: "Abandoning a room and leaving behind clothing, toiletries, or other items"; "Refusal of housekeeping services for extended periods"; and "Multiple visitors or deliveries to one individual or room."

The use of suspicious activity reports across the government is substantial. The 2013 annual report found that all 78 DHS fusion centers can contribute or share the reports; 21 of the fusion centers automatically share the reports with the FBI, according to the GAO. Training on a search tool to comb through them increased to the point where law enforcement and intelligence personnel have conducted over 76,400 searches.

One of those reports concerned Placentia, California, bio-tech worker Tariq Razak – or, as his suspicious activity report referred to him, "Close Cropped Beard … Male/Arab." (The repot was incorrect: Razak is of Pakistani descent.)

Razak visited the Santa Ana train depot in May 2011, where he had an appointment with the Orange County employment resource center, located in the station building. His mother, who was wearing a headscarf, accompanied him. After initially getting lost within the building, they ultimately finished their business and were on their way.

But not before they caught the attention of a security officer, Karina De La Rosa, who rode the elevator with
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Jul 17, 2014 1:10 pm

Vagina selfie for 3D printers lands Japanese artist in trouble

Megumi Igarashi, aka Rokudenashiko, arrested for emailing digital template of her genitalia to supporters of her art


http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/j ... in-trouble
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Jul 18, 2014 7:48 pm

see link for full story


http://dailycaller.com/2014/07/18/senat ... imination/


Senator: FBI Retaliates Against Women Reporting Gender Discrimination
4:04 PM 07/18/2014


Republican Sen. Chuck Grassley claimed that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) is retaliating against female whistleblowers that reported gender discrimination at the agency.

Eight FBI employees that reported gender discrimination, including seven women, said that the FBI uses a secretive method of punishment against whistleblowers that deprives them of due process and a right to appeal punitive measures.

One of the female whistleblowers was disciplined for allegedly being “emotionally unstable” and “unable to work with others” for asserting that her hazardous materials suit did not fit women, The Daily Caller has learned. Another whistleblower claimed that she was denied a job for which she was most qualified out of six candidates because management said she was “emotionally fragile” after experiencing a divorce.

“At a hearing on May 21, 2014, I brought to your attention the cases of three female whistleblowers at the FBI,” Grassley wrote to Comey in a letter obtained by TheDC. Grassley was referring to a Judiciary Committee hearing that was completely whitewashed by the mainstream media. “Each one previously worked as a supervisor in FBI offices where their colleagues were predominantly male. These women alleged that they suffered gender discrimination and that they were retaliated against when they reported these abuses through the Equal Employment Opportunity process or other means.”

Grassley noted that Comey pledged to cooperate with an inspector general review of the allegations and to ensure that no further retaliation occurred. But the FBI has not lived up to its promise.

“However, the above-referenced whistleblowers have raised more pressing concerns of retaliation from their immediate supervisors,” Grassley wrote. “For example, one whistleblower reports that her current, male supervisor is a friend of the man who was the subject of her initial complaint of gender discrimination. On behalf of this friend, the whistleblower’s current supervisor is reportedly perpetrating subtler forms of retaliation against her.”

“In addition, since the May 21, 2014 hearing, five additional FBI whistleblowers have contacted my office,” Grassley wrote. “Four of them are women who claim that they were retaliated against after reporting gender discrimination. The fifth is a male coworker who allegedly suffered reprisal when he spoke out against the alleged discrimination.”

Grassley wrote that the FBI uses so-called “Loss of Effectiveness,” or LOE orders to retaliate against whistleblowers. FBI managers can use LOE orders to hand out punishments without going through the Office of Professional Responsibility.

“Unlike an OPR review, an LOE does not provide the employee in question a right of appeal,” Grassley wrote, noting that FBI managers use LOE orders as basis for demotion.

The FBI is not the only Obama administration agency suffering claims of workplace discrimination and whistleblower reprisal. A Department of Labor employees union recently alleged racial discrimination within the department. The U.S. Office of Special Counsel is currently investigating claims of whistleblower reprisal at the Department of Veterans Affairs from nineteen different states.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Jul 21, 2014 9:32 pm

http://koin.com/2014/07/18/fbi-portland ... mock-case/




FBI Portland takes students through mock case


d: July 18, 2014, 12:00 pmUpdated: July 18, 2014, 1:09 pm

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN 6) — More than 50 high school students from the metro participated in what is described as one of the most realistic and hands on looks into a career as an agent with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
Students with the Portland FBI Youth Leadership class brief a case agent on a mock kidnapping. (KOIN)Students with the Portland FBI Youth Leadership class brief a case agent on a mock kidnapping. (KOIN)

Friday marks the conclusion and graduation for students with the Youth Leadership Academy.

This is the fifth year the academy has been held at the Portland FBI Field Office. Of the 56 FBI field offices, not every division puts on a youth academy.

Officials said the students selected have expressed interest in a potential law enforcement career.

The three day course gave students direct access to FBI agents.

Yeny Soler, who will be sophomore next year, said she is interested in pursuing a career in forensics or psychology.

“I like talking with all the different agents,” Soler said. “They would explain to us the process of (becoming) an agent.”

The agents also dispelled some of the myths students have of what an FBI agent does.

“I had no idea what it was about,” Bailey Monlux said.

Monlux, who will be a senior this fall, said agents were quick to go over the history of the FBI.

“I just thought it was suits, sunglasses, gun, bust through some houses and what not,” he said laughing, realizing that he wasn’t alone in his thoughts.

On Friday, to wrap up their class, students participated in a mock kidnapping case.

The complex case scenario had the students working out of a command post inside the nerve center of the FBI’s building near Portland International Airport.[test_yt][/test_yt]
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Jul 22, 2014 12:31 pm

http://whowhatwhy.com/2014/07/20/classi ... -security/



Classic WHO: FBI Knew About Saudi 9/11 hijacker Ties, But Lied to Protect “National Security”
Print This Post Print This Post
By Russ Baker on Jul 20, 2014

Here’s one of our most popular—and explosive—pieces of original reporting, which we first ran in June 2013.

AndyBushThe FBI apparently has known for a decade about links between powerful Saudi interests and the alleged 9/11 hijackers, and has been forced to tacitly admit that it lied about it for all of these years.

In case the import is not clear, let us state emphatically: this is a huge development.

***

In court filings seeking to stave off a media Freedom of Information request, the FBI has stated that releasing documents relating to this issue will harm “national security.” As proof of the sensitivity of the matter, the FBI gave the judge a document dated April 4, 2002, in which the FBI states that its own inquiries “revealed many connections” between a well-connected Saudi family with a house in South Florida and “individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 9/11/2001.”

The Sarasota Affair

The Freedom of Information request that prompted these reluctant admissions was filed by the Broward Bulldog, a South Florida nonprofit investigative site which first covered the Saudi connection in 2011.

The Bulldog’s reporting explained how a family living in an exclusive gated community outside Sarasota, on Florida’s West Coast, had apparently vanished suddenly some 10 days before the 9/11 attacks. Investigators, including a swarm of FBI agents, found that the family’s departure was clearly so sudden that they left almost their entire household intact, down to cars, clothing, and food in the refrigerator. Most significant, though, investigators had established that several of the men publicly identified as among the 9/11 hijackers, including purported ringleader Mohammed Atta, had visited the house and/or been linked to it through a web of telephone communications.

The FBI told none of this to Congress, and it was not mentioned in the original 9/11 Commission report released in 2004.

WhoWhatWhy, in an original investigation, went deeper, and established that the owner of the house was a prominent Saudi businessman who works directly for the Saudi prince most involved with aviation—including being the first Saudi who trained to fly planes in South Florida. You can read our complete story here.

The significance of this cannot be stated strongly enough. Although many people think they “already know” about ties between the hijackers and Saudi royals, they confuse these important revelations with reports that prominent Saudis were permitted to leave the country shortly after 9/11, as popularized in Michael Moore’s film Fahrenheit 9/11.

This new revelation is far more significant. The older story shows possible favoritism toward, or at least concern for, well-connected Saudis on the part of the US government in permitting them to leave. The Sarasota story, however, shows that the US government came upon what may have been a command or control center for the men we are told hijacked the planes.

And with the connections documented by WhoWhatWhy, it is almost impossible not to conclude some kind of awareness, either before or after the act, on the part of Saudi Prince Sultan bin Salman bin Abdul Aziz Al-Saud and the powerful clique he represents within the royal clan. Again, for more on this, please read the entire story, which continues over three pages on our site.

The FBI Reversal

Kudos to the Bulldog for filing the FOIA request, which unearthed that gem of an FBI submission. It was included in filings by Miami Assistant U.S. Attorney Carole M. Fernandez, and was part of a sworn 33-page declaration from FBI Records Section Chief David M. Hardy. He stated that producing classified information related to the matter “would reveal current specific targets of the FBI’s national security investigations.” The purpose of the filings was to convince U.S. District Judge William J. Zloch not to allow the FOIA suit to succeed.

The April 4 document is significant for three reasons: (1) it demonstrates that the authorities are aware of the Saudi link, (2) it demonstrates that the FBI previously lied when it declared that its inquiries in the matter found no links to the terrorists or the plot, (3) it has the FBI asserting that no more disclosures should be made in order to protect “national security.”

The FBI’s practice of finding evidence tied to Saudi Arabia, then denying it had such evidence, then reluctantly admitting that it did (but only as a way of blocking still more disclosure) is telling. The apparent willingness of the FBI to brazenly lie and then reverse itself—seemingly with no consequences—is now beginning to look like standard operating procedure.

As WhoWhatWhy has demonstrated in articles about the Boston Marathon bombing, the FBI has been guilty of an astonishing array of disinformation, story reversals, unaccountable violence, and general misbehavior just in that one affair alone. See this, this, this, and this.

In the Boston bombing case, the FBI claimed not to know anything about the alleged perpetrators, Tamerlan and Dzhokhar Tsarnaev, then was forced to admit it had had direct contact with them and their family. It also initially claimed via leaks to mainstream media reporters that one of its officers shot and killed Ibragim Todashev, a figure connected with the Tsarnaevs, because he attacked them with a knife, Since then, the story has changed repeatedly and is now obscured by a thick fog of misdirection. We’ve pointed out many other changing aspects of the FBI’s story.

Hence, when we look back at the granddaddy of all purported terrorist plots, 9/11, and see the FBI’s astonishing actions to block disclosure, we have to ask: Just what is going on in this country? What is the FBI, and does it actually serve democracy and the public interest? And where is the president, purportedly the most powerful person in the country, and the public’s representative? If the president is unable or unwilling to get to the bottom of these bizarre and deeply worrisome developments, what does that say about the health of the system itself?

The Biggest Revelations, Ignored

Fortunately for the FBI, almost the entirety of the media—from the corporate owned “mainstream” to purportedly outsider ”alternative” news outlets and websites—have steered clear of the entire subject.

The recent FBI court filings were revealed by a Bulldog article published in conjunction with one mainstream outlet—the Miami Herald. Previous revelations that appeared in The Herald were generally ignored by the rest of the press, and we may reasonably expect the same disturbing indifference to the latest bombshell.

This development leaves us with three significant conclusions:

-The US government knows about, and is concerned about, apparent ties between its allies in the Saudi royal family and the men accused of having hijacked the planes on 9/11 and orchestrated the greatest attack in history on the American mainland.

-The FBI continues to lie and suppress information in other matters of public concern, supposedly all in the interest of our shared “national security.”

-The media continues to demonstrate how weak, compromised and intimidated it is. With the majority of Americans still dependent for their understanding of current events and their world on these same media, the ramifications can be considered alarming.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Jul 25, 2014 12:46 am

two s
Media Channel

How Yellow Journalism Screws the Left
When Journalists Get it Wrong – Reporting the Kurdish Tragedy
Guantánamo Ends Daily Hunger-Strike Reports

Marsha Blackburn (R-TN): Why One Congresswoman Wants To Block Fast, Cheap Internet In Her District
July 16, 2014

By David Sirota via IBT

A senior congressional Republican this week introduced legislation that would bar the federal government from using its powers to help community-owned Internet service providers compete with private telecommunications companies.

The move comes just as a Chattanooga-based, community-owned Internet provider that delivers some of the fastest connections in the nation, EPB, is girding for an expansion plan that would take on major telecommunications firms far beyond its home region.

In many states, major providers of high-speed Internet connections have successfully lobbied state lawmakers to deliver legislation that bars community-owned ISPs from expanding beyond their home territories. The Federal Communications Commission has the authority to intervene and preempt such state laws to enable smaller Internet providers to compete with larger national firms.

The legislation, introduced by Rep. Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee as an amendment to an annual spending bill, would strip the FCC of this power.

Blackburn’s top campaign donors include private telecommunications firms that do not want to have to compete with publicly owned ISPs. Her state is home to EPB, a taxpayer-owned power company in Chattanooga that also provides local residents some of the fastest Internet speeds in the world at market-competitive rates. EPB is now aiming to expand its services beyond Chattanooga.

However, to go forward with its expansion plan, EPB needs the FCC to enter the fray, applying its authority to preempt a Tennessee law backed by the private telecom industry that restricts the utility’s ability to move into new regions. According to data from the Center for Public Integrity, Tennessee is one of 20 states with such laws on its books.

The chairman of the FCC, Tom Wheeler, has recently voiced support for using his agency’s preemption authority to override state laws preventing community-owned ISPs from competing with private telecoms. That stance represents a break from his past: Wheeler previously worked as a lobbyist representing the cable industry, the principal channel for broadband Internet service.

Last month, Wheeler met with Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke and a day later published a statement on the FCC’s website declaring “that it is in the best interests of consumers and competition that the FCC exercises its power to preempt state laws that ban or restrict competition from community broadband.”

If passed by Congress, Blackburn’s amendment could effectively strip the FCC of its preemption power, at least for the year that the underlying annual appropriations measure is in force. That would halt EPB’s expansion proposal, and send a larger message to other community-owned utilities that they may not get federal relief from state statutes.

Such an outcome would be a big win for the private telecom industry, which might explain Blackburn’s central role in the fight. According to campaign finance data compiled by the Center for Responsive Politics, two of Blackburn’s largest career donors are employees and PACs affiliated with AT&T and Comcast. Those are two of EPB’s private-sector competitors in Chattanooga. Blackburn has also taken $56,000 from the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, the lobby for the big telecoms.

Comcast has described community-owned Internet service providers as a waste of taxpayer money while seeking to limit their expansion. A spokesperson told International Business Times, “Comcast operates in 39 states and has 130,000 employees across the country. It is important for our customers, our employees and our shareholders that we participate in the political process. The majority of our PAC contributions are to the senators and members who represent our employees and customers.”

AT&T did not respond to a request for comment by press time.

As the Chattanooga Times Free Press noted a few years back, “EPB offers faster Internet speeds for the money, and shows equal pep in both uploading and downloading content, with Comcast and AT&T trailing on quickness.” The New York Times notes that “for less than $70 a month, consumers enjoy an ultra-high-speed fiber-optic connection that transfers data at one gigabit per second” — a rate “that is 50 times the average speed for homes in the rest of the country.”

That success has been so rapid that the private telecom industry has abandoned the business lobby’s traditional arguments. Whereas corporations typically argue that the private sector has inherent and obvious advantages over the public sector, the Chattanooga Times Free Press reports that telecom firms have gone to court insisting “that EPB, as a public entity, would have an edge when competing against private companies, which would be at a disadvantage when facing an entity owned by taxpayers.” Similarly, whereas corporations typically push for government to stay out of the marketplace, private telecom firms have pushed for state legislatures to use government power to intervene in the marketplace by prohibiting community-owned utilities from competing for Internet customers.

Blackburn defends her bill to preserve those state laws by presenting it as a measure to protect local sovereignty.

“We don’t need unelected federal agency bureaucrats in Washington telling our states what they can and can’t do with respect to protecting their limited taxpayer dollars in private enterprises,” Blackburn said Tuesday during a congressional debate about her amendment. “We should be careful and deliberate in how we allow public entry into our vibrant communications marketplace. … This is an issue that should be left to our states.”

The consumer watchdog group Free Press has made the opposite argument. Citing data from the public-private partnership Connected Tennessee, the organization reports that “constituents back in Hickman County in the center of Blackburn’s Tennessee district struggle to get fast and affordable Internet services (as) only 38 percent of Hickman residents have access to broadband services, far below the Tennessee statewide average of 58 percent.” The group argues that if the FCC preempts the 20 state laws limiting municipal broadband, it would help address some of those access shortfalls through entities like EPB.

EPB’s much-vaunted move into Internet services began in 2008 after utility officials realized cost-saving smart-grid infrastructure for energy transmission could also serve as a conduit for super-fast broadband speeds. Like corporations, the utility issued bonds to raise resources to invest in building out its broadband capacity. Similarly, just as many private corporations ended up receiving federal stimulus dollars, so too did EPB, which put those monies into the broadband network.

Earlier this year, EPB executives told the Washington Post that their telecom services have become “a great profit center” — an assertion that appears to be confirmed by a 2012 Standard & Poor’s credit upgrade notice pointing out that the utility “is now covering all costs from telephone, video and Internet revenue, as well as providing significant financial benefit to the electric system.”



2nd story



https://securehomes.esat.kuleuven.be/%7 ... index.html



Sites with canvas fingerprinting scripts as of May 1-5, 2014

The list of websites that run canvas fingerprinting scripts on their homepages as of May 1-5, 2014. The web changes constantly; in particular, some websites may have removed fingerprinting scripts as a result of our study. Please consult the project website for the background information about canvas fingerprinting and other advanced tracking mechanisms.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Jul 30, 2014 2:12 pm

.I met Pulitzer Prize winner Ross Gelbspan in 1989 when he covered our 1st Annual Conference Investigating Crimes Committed by FBI agents
for the Boston Globe where he was a reporter. We held 13 conferences in total.


Ross went on to write Break Ins Death Threats and the FBI
(South End Press) where he details how taxpayer funded FBI agents hide their files from the public in their. " do not file files "

google. Ross gelbspan FBI do not file files


also. see


http://www.google.com/#q=Ross+gelgelbsp ... +file+file


[PDF]
In my field offices case the FBI swore it had no "do not file" files ...
jfk.hood.edu/.../Weisberg%20Subject%20Index%20Files/.../Files%20Retrie...
Jul 7, 1988 - ... for the Hose Gelbspan story from the Boston globe on FBI "do not file" ... FBI keeps secret files. Jay Ross Gelbspan Globe Staff. • A recently ...






see link for full story




http://m.sltrib.com/sltrib/mobile3/5823 ... a.html.csp


Wednesday, July 30, 2014



The Salt Lake Tribune) Lawyer Jesse Trentadue seeks documents and videotapes from the FBI probe of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing — he believes the records will provide information about the death of his brother, Kenneth Trentadue, in a federal prison.
Woman testifies of cameras that faced bombed OK federal building
Courts » Utah attorney claims FBI did inadequate search for Oklahoma City bombing documents and videotapes

Jesse Trentadue, a Salt Lake City attorney, is shown in his office with a picture of his brother, Kenneth. Kenneth Trentadue was found hanging from a noose made of torn bed sheets in a federal prison cell on Aug. 21, 1995. The death was ruled a suicide, but Jesse Trentadue believes his brother was killed after being mistaken for an Oklahoma City bombing conspirator. Tim Kelly
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) Lawyer Jesse Trentadue seeks documents and videotapes from the FBI probe of the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing — he believes the records will provide information about the death of his brother, Kenneth Trentadue, in a federal prison.
(Trent Nelson | The Salt Lake Tribune) On Monday, a three-day trial is scheduled to begin in U.S. District Court in Salt Lake City on a lawsuit by lawyer Jesse Trentadue that seeks documents and videotapes from the FBI investigation into the Oklahoma City bombing — including one tape that he believes shows suspects exiting a Ryder truck parked in front of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building and the detonation of explosives in the vehicle. Trentadue believes the records will provide information about the death of his brother in a federal prison cell in Oklahoma City a few months after the April 19, 1995, attack. Trentadue was photographed in Salt Lake City, Saturday July 26, 2014.

An Oklahoma City woman who lost her two young grandsons in the 1995 bombing of the Murrah Federal Building testified Wednesday that her nearby apartment building had exterior surveillance camera facing the federal building.

Jannie Coverdale also testified that an Oklahoma City police officer and an FBI agent came to her apartment building about six months after the bombing. The police officer told her the two were going to the fifth floor to review the surveillance tapes, she said.

Coverdale is one of three witnesses testifying this week in Utah federal court via video conference from Oklahoma City in the lawsuit filed by Salt Lake City attorney Jesse Trentadue.

Trentadue filed suit in 2008 against the FBI and the CIA, which since has been dropped as a defendant, claiming the agencies failed to locate and turn over all the materials he requested, including a videotape that he believes shows bomber Timothy McVeigh and another man exiting a Ryder truck in front of the Murrah building and the detonation of explosives.

Trentadue is asking for an order allowing him to search for videotapes and documents at FBI locations, including field offices in Oklahoma City and Los Angeles, and requiring the bureau to produce the records he requested. He believes, from public documents he already has and news reports, Trentadue says.

The FBI says it has no tape of the explosion and insists it has done a reasonable search for the videotapes and other materials. The agency says if Waddoups does conclude its searches were inadequate, he should allow the agency, rather than Trentadue, to conduct one or more additional searches
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Aug 06, 2014 1:39 pm

http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/08/06/70166.htm

FBI Agent's Retaliation Claim Will Move Forward



A federal judge won't reconsider allowing a retaliation claim against the Department of Justice head Eric Holder, even though the agent's national origin discrimination claim got the axe.
Bassem Youssef sued the Attorney General in 2011, claiming his non-selection for a position with the Federal Bureau of Investigation's counterterrorism communications exploitation section constituted retaliation and discrimination.
The court granted the FBI's motion to dismiss the national origin discrimination claim, but allowed the retaliation claim to stand.
"Although based on the same factual events, plaintiff's national origin discrimination and retaliation claims are two separate claims for which plaintiff presented distinct sets of evidence," states U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly in her ruling dismissing the FBI's motion to reconsider the previous ruling.
The judge states: "While the Court found that plaintiff failed to meet his burden and present sufficient evidence to create a genuine dispute as to whether the selection committee was actually motivated by discriminatory animus, the Court found that plaintiff did meet that burden as to his independent retaliation claim. In contrast to plaintiff's national origin discrimination claim, plaintiff was able to present more evidence of a potentially retaliatory motive such that a reasonable trier of fact could find that defendant's legitimate, non-discriminatory reason was pretext for retaliation."
Youssef filed a 2003 lawsuit against the FBI alleging national origin discrimination and retaliation following the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, claiming that the bureau excluded him from positions associated with counterterrorism because of his Egyptian heritage. That case was still active when Youssef was denied the assistant section chief job with counterterrorism
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Aug 09, 2014 12:11 am

https://archive.org/stream/directoryofg ... 7_djvu.txt




Full text of "Directory of graduates of the FBI National Academy and officers of the FBI National Academy Associates"

UNIVERSITY Of

AT URBANA-CHAMPAIGN
STACKS
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Aug 12, 2014 9:53 pm

see link for full story

Tuesday, August 12, 2014



http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/08/12/70315.htm



Judge Lets Feds Keep a Lid on Secret Court Opinion Transcripts



- Transcripts from secret court opinions authorizing the collection of call records and telephone data from ordinary citizens will remain under wraps, a federal judge ruled Monday.
Privacy watchdog group Electronic Frontier Foundation had sued Justice Department under the Freedom of Information Act in 2011 for access to opinions in which the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court found some of the National Security Agency's surveillance unconstitutional.
In the meantime, NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden leaked the first batch of documents to media outlets and shed further light on the NSA's surveillance tactics.
This led the DOJ to declassify and release hundreds of pages of documents related the government's secret interpretation of Section 215 of the Patriot Act - which it uses to justify spying on millions of Americans' phone conversations.
Earlier this year, EFF and DOJ attorneys sparred over whether the documents that EFF had requested should be released in light of the Snowden leaks. The watchdog group argued that the information was already widely available on the Internet, while DOJ lawyers countered that "leaks to the press don't declassify documents."
After an in camera review of five FISC opinions and orders issued between 2005 and 2008, U.S. District Judge Yvonne Gonzalez Rogers said Monday that the government established a sufficient case for withholding the documents - and the names of the telecommunications providers participating in the call records collection program.
"The FISC orders are properly withheld to protect intelligence sources and methods used by the government to gather intelligence data," Rogers wrote. "The orders discuss specific techniques authorized by the FISC, the details of the underlying investigations, and details concerning how the government operationally and technically implements the FISC-authorized techniques, which the government continues to employ. Disclosure of the documents would reveal intelligence activities or methods described in the FISC orders could allow targets of national security investigations to divine what information was collected when, as well as gaps in surveillance, thus providing a roadmap for evading surveillance. As set forth in DOJ's evidence, the withheld information, in combination with already-public information, would allow targets of government investigations to evade surveillance, thereby jeopardizing national security. Moreover, based on the court's review the documents must be withheld in full and contain no reasonably segregable information."
And despite that the fact that former government officials have already named which phone companies are participating in the data-collection program, disclosure remains unwarranted, Rogers said.
"The inherent risks to national security and government investigations of identifying the specific telecommunications carriers is not mitigated by the government's declassification of general information about the call record collection program," the 13-page ruling states. "As the 9th Circuit has recognized, official confirmation of the existence of or general information about an intelligence program does not eliminate the dangers to national security of compelling disclosure of the program's details."
Rogers did find it necessary, however, to order the release of a legal memo drafted by Justice Department's Office of Legal Counsel, outlining the Commerce Department's obligations to disclose census information under the Patriot Act, balanced against prohibitions in the Census Act.
"The census memorandum was cited as legal authority and adopted as the working law of DOJ," Rogers wrote. "The court's in camera review confirms that DOJ cited the census memorandum in an application to the FISC, referencing it as DOJ's legal position on the census-related issues therein, and contrasting it with other legal issues argued in the application. DOJ offered the Census Memorandum as a statement of the law to bolster its legal arguments concerning matters unrelated to the subject of the census memorandum itself. Thus, DOJ cited the census memorandum in the context of carrying out its duties, and in connection with matters completely unrelated to the OLC's provision of advice to the Department of Commerce. Moreover, DOJ has indicated that it will continue to rely on the census memorandum in other contexts as necessary."
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Aug 18, 2014 10:02 am

August 18, 2014
The Clinton Dynasty
Hillary-The-Hawk Flies Again
by RALPH NADER

“Hillary works for Goldman Sachs and likes war, otherwise I like Hillary,” a former Bill Clinton aide told me sardonically. First, he was referring to her cushy relationships with top Wall Street barons and her $200,000 speeches with the criminal enterprise known as Goldman Sachs, which played a part in crashing the U.S. economy in 2008 and burdening taxpayers with costly bailouts. Second, he was calling attention to her war hawkish foreign policy.

Last week, Hillary-The-Hawk emerged, once again, with comments to The Atlanticattacking Obama for being weak and not having an organized foreign policy. She was calling Obama weak despite his heavy hand in droning, bombing and intervening during his Presidency. While Obama is often wrong, he is hardly a pacifist commander. It’s a small wonder that since 2008, Hillary-The-Hawk has been generally described as, in the words of the New York Times journalist Mark Landler, “more hawkish than Mr. Obama.”

In The Atlantic interview, she chided Obama for not more deeply involving the U.S. with the rebels in Syria, who themselves are riven into factions and deprived of strong leaders and, with few exceptions, trained fighters. As Mrs. Clinton well knows, from her time as Secretary of State, the White House was being cautious because of growing Congressional opposition to intervention in Syria as Congress sought to determine the best rebel groups to arm and how to prevent this weaponry from falling into the hands of the enemy insurgents.

She grandly told her interviewer that “Great nations need organizing principles, and ‘Don’t do stupid stuff’ is not an organizing principle.” Nonsense. Not plunging into unconstitutional wars could have been a fine “organizing principle.” Instead, she voted for the criminal invasion of Iraq, which boomeranged back into costly chaos and tragedy for the Iraqi people and the American taxpayers.

Moreover, the former Secretary of State ended her undistinguished tenure in 2013 with an unremitting record of militarizing a Department that was originally chartered over 200 years ago to be the expression of American diplomacy. As Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton made far more bellicose statements than Secretary of Defense Robert Gates did. Some career Foreign Service Officers found her aggressive language unhelpful, if not downright hazardous to their diplomatic missions.

Such belligerency translated into her pushing both opposed Secretary of Defense Robert Gates and reluctant President Obama to topple the Libyan dictator, Muammar Gaddafi. The Libyan dictator had given up his dangerous weapons and was re-establishing relations with Western countries and Western oil companies. Mrs. Clinton had no “organizing principle” for the deadly aftermath with warring militias carving up Libya and spilling over into Mali and the resultant, violent disruption in Central Africa. The Libyan assault was Hillary Clinton’s undeclared war – a continuing disaster that shows her touted foreign policy experience as just doing more “stupid stuff.” She displays much ignorance about the quicksand perils for the United States of post-dictatorial vacuums in tribal, sectarian societies.

After criticizing Obama, Mrs. Clinton then issued a statement saying she had called the president to say that she did not intend to attack him and anticipated “hugging it out” with him at a Martha’s Vineyard party. Embracing opportunistically after attacking is less than admirable.

Considering Hillary Clinton’s origins as an anti-Vietnam War youth, how did she end up such a war hawk? Perhaps it is a result of her overweening political ambition and her determination to prevent accusations of being soft on militarism and its imperial Empire because she is a woman.

After her celebrity election as New York’s Senator in 2000, she was given a requested seat on the Senate Armed Services Committee. There, unlike her war-like friend, Republican Senator John McCain, she rarely challenged a boondoggle Pentagon contract; never took on the defense industry’s waste, fraud and abuse; and never saw a redundant or unneeded weapons system (often criticized by retired Generals and Admirals) that she did not like.

The vaunted military-industrial complex, which President Eisenhower warned about, got the message. Hillary Clinton was one of them.

Energetically waging peace was not on Secretary of State Clinton’s agenda. She would rather talk about military might and deployment in one geographic area after another. At the U.S. Naval Academy in 2012, Generalissma Clinton gave a speech about pivoting to East Asia with “force posture” otherwise known as “force projection” (one of her favorite phrases) of U.S. naval ships, planes and positioned troops in countries neighboring China.

Of course, China’s response was to increase its military budget and project its own military might. The world’s super-power should not be addicted to continuous provocations that produce unintended consequences.

As she goes around the country, with an expanded publically-funded Secret Service corps to promote the private sales of her book, Hard Choices, Hillary Clinton needs to ponder what, if anything, she as a Presidential candidate has to offer a war-weary, corporate-dominated American people. As a former member of the board of directors of Walmart, Hillary Clinton waited several years before coming out this April in support for a restored minimum wage for thirty million American workers (a majority of whom are women).

This delay is not surprising considering Hillary Clinton spends her time in the splendors of the wealthy classes and the Wall Street crowd, when she isn’t pulling down huge speech fees pandering to giant trade association conventions. This creates distance between her and the hard-pressed experiences of the masses, doesn’t it?

See Progressives Opposed to a Clinton Dynasty for more information.

Ralph Nader’s latest book is: Unstoppable: the Emerging Left-Right Alliance to Dismantle the Corporate State.
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