New slo-pitch organization arrives in Newfoundland

NSA not aiming to compete, but rather complement already-establish SPN organization

To meet the demand for slo-pitch softball in this province, a new national slo-pitch organization has arrived the National Slo-Pitch Athletics of Canada, or NSA. But the group emphasizes its aim is to support slo-pitch growth in the province, and as a result is not competingwith the long-established Slo-Pitch National (SPN) program.

We dont see ourselves as competition for SPN, said Rian Mugford, the person on the ground in Newfoundland for the NSAprogram. Iactually play in a lot of SPNtournaments. Our aim is to actually create more ball. Our purpose is to co-exist, to encourage the growth of slo-pitch.

Some 60 teams are registered members of the NSAprogram in Newfoundland, and 43 of them are in the Molson Caribou league which operates out of the two ball fields in the Pleasantville section of the city.

That leagues operate five nights per week.

Slo-pitch continues to be huge ... its growing and growing, Mugford said. Theres a big emphasis on co-ed play.

NSA Canada was formed in the spring of 1997, an offshoot of the National Softball Association in the United States.

It was at this first meeting where we learned of an organization in the United States called National Softball Association, Mugford said So we chose to offer our members dual registration with NSA Canada and the National Softball Association of the USA.

This dual registration allows our members the ability to compete at an international basis at the NSA-USA events.

In addition to purchasing insurance through the association, the NSAprogram provides customized apparel and cash prizes to winning teams. The mens B/C provincials are this weekend at the Caribou Complex, and the winning teams receive customized jackets, an $800 first-place prize and an invite to the 2015 NSAWorld Series Championship in Hamilton, Ont.

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New slo-pitch organization arrives in Newfoundland

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FBI arrests, indicts creator of smartphone surveillance app (and its not the NSA) – Video


FBI arrests, indicts creator of smartphone surveillance app (and its not the NSA)
The FBI arrested the maker of the stealthGenie app, charging the CEO with conspiracy and sale of a surreptitious surveillance device. The software is desig...

By: RT America

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FBI arrests, indicts creator of smartphone surveillance app (and its not the NSA) - Video

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James Bamford Releases DOJ Report On NSA Warrantless Wiretapping From 1976

maynard writes: Investigative Journalist James Bamford knows a thing or two more than most about the National Security Agency. Across his more than three-decade long career digging muck out of exactly those places U.S. government intelligence agencies preferred he wouldn't tread, he's published five books and over eighty press reports. At times, this made for some tense confrontations with intelligence officials from an organization once so secret even few members of Congress knew of its existence.

For the last several years public focus on the NSA has been on Bush and Obama era reports of illicit domestic spying. From allegations of warrantless wiretapping reported by James Risen in 2005 to secret documents released to journalists at The Guardian by Edward Snowden a year ago. And smack in the middle, Bamford's 2012 revelation of the existence of a huge, exabyte-capable data storage facility then under construction in Bluffdale, Utah.

Given all this attention on recent events, it might come as a surprise to some that almost forty years ago Senator Frank Church convened a congressional committee to investigate reports of unlawful activities by U.S. intelligence agencies, including illegal domestic wiretapping by the NSA. At the time, Church brought an oversight magnifying glass over what was then half-jokingly referred to as "No Such Agency." And then, like today, James Bamford was in the thick of it, with a Snowden-like cloak-and-dagger game of spy-vs-journalist. It all began by giving testimony before the Church Committee. Writing yesterday in The Intercept, Bamford tells his firsthand historical account of what led him to testify as a direct witness to NSA's wiretapping of domestic communications decades ago and then details the events that led to the publication of his first book The Puzzle Palace back in 1982. Read on for more.

...during the summer of 1975, as reports began leaking out from the Church Committee, I was surprised to learn that the NSA was claiming that it had shut down all of its questionable operations a year and a half earlier. Surprised because I knew the eavesdropping on Americans had continued at least into the prior fall, and may have still been going on. After thinking for a day or so about the potential consequences of blowing the whistle on the NSAI was still in the Naval Reserve, still attending drills one weekend a month, and still sworn to secrecy with an active NSA clearanceI nevertheless decided to call the Church Committee.

But he didn't stop at the witness stand. Afterward, he continued researching the matter for a book. And the further he dug, the more waves he made. Until someone slipped him a then recently declassified copy of a 1976 Justice Department memo [PDF] detailing a criminal investigation into illicit domestic spying by the NSA. But when agency officials discovered he had that document they took extraordinary measures attempting to get it back. They threatened to prosecute under the 1917 Espionage Act and retroactively reclassified the memo to squelch its contents.

Fearing someone might break into his home and steal the manuscript, Bamford arranged to transport and secure a copy outside of U.S. jurisdiction with a colleague at the Sunday Times of London. It was only upon the 1982 publication of Puzzle Palace that the agency dropped their pursuit of Bamford and his document as a lost cause. That's at least one stark difference between then and today when it comes to whistleblowers back then, they merely threatened espionage charges.

Yogi Berra famously once said, "It's like Deja Vu all over again." And though the Yankees' star wasn't speaking of illicit domestic wiretaps by the national security state, given a comparison of recent revelations to those detailed by Bamford decades earlier the quote certainly fits. In telling his story of how he published details about the last NSA Merry-Go-Round with warrantless wiretapping, Bamford shows us that our recent troubles of lawless surveillance aren't so unique. It's deja-vu all over again. But if deja vu is like a waking dream, this seems more a recurring nightmare for a body-politic lured to snoring slumber by a siren-song of political passivity.

That old Justice Department memo isn't likely to wake the public from their slumber. But within its pages is a stark warning we all should have heeded. As Bamford notes in that Intercept story, the report's conclusion that NSA lawlessness stems straight from the birth of the agency suggests a constitutional conflict systemic and intentional.

...the NSA's top-secret "charter" issued by the Executive Branch, exempts the agency from legal restraints placed on the rest of the government. "Orders, directives, policies, or recommendations of any authority of the Executive branch relating to the collection ... of intelligence," the charter reads, "shall not be applicable to Communications Intelligence activities, unless specifically so stated." This so-called "birth certificate," the Justice Department report concluded, meant the NSA did not have to follow any restrictions placed on electronic surveillance "unless it was expressly directed to do so." In short, the report asked, how can you prosecute an agency that is above the law?

Here's the "Prosecutive Summary" (PDF).

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James Bamford Releases DOJ Report On NSA Warrantless Wiretapping From 1976

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NSA Ajit Doval discusses security cooperation with US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel

PTI Oct 2, 2014, 12.47PM IST

(Hagel (in pic) and Doval)

WASHINGTON: National Security Advisor Ajit Doval has met US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel and discussed a range of issues, including the strategic Indo-US partnership and future areas of bilateral security cooperation.

"In their discussion they emphasised US-India common security interests, their commitment to the strategic partnership and future areas of security cooperation," Pentagon Press Secretary, Rear Admiral John Kirby, said after the meeting yesterday.

Hagel and Doval also discussed recent developments in Afghanistan and the need to continue to cooperate on security and development in the region.

"Secretary Hagel conveyed that the prime minister's visit had been a great success and has laid the foundation for deepening cooperation between the two countries," Kirby said.

Doval who had arrived in the US along with Prime Minister Narendra Modi last week, has extended his stay in the country by two days, to meet top leaders of the Obama administration.

In their talks on Tuesday, Modi and US President Barack Obama committed themselves to joint and concerted efforts to dismantle all safe havens for terror and disrupt all financial and tactical support to al-Qaeda, Lashkar-e-Toiba, Jaish-e-Mohammad, the Haqqani network and the D-company, a reference to the network of underworld don Dawood Ibrahim believed to be living in Pakistan under official patronage.

Doval will meet Secretary of State John Kerry today and is also expected to meet top brass of the American intelligence agencies and his counterpart in the Obama administration, Susan Rice.

He is expected to discuss subjects like the emerging threats in West Asia in the form of the dreaded Islamic State militant group and its implications for South Asia including India.

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NSA Ajit Doval discusses security cooperation with US Defence Secretary Chuck Hagel

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NSA eavesdropping still poisons US relations with Germany

BERLIN Juergen Hardts position in the German government, coordinator of trans-Atlantic cooperation, once was considered a major honor the official liaison to the United States, arguably Germanys closest ally.

But since the revelation that the National Security Agency eavesdropped for years on Chancellor Angela Merkels cellphone, U.S.-German relations have been a twisting, stomach-churning roller-coaster ride so wild that many Germans wonder whether its possible to get off. The pro-America crowd, meanwhile, can only warn that despite the nausea, its not safe to leave a ride in motion.

We have gone through challenging times in the bilateral relationship in the past, Hardt said in an interview. As in every relationship, there have been ups and downs. Right now, we are going through challenging times when it comes to public perception.

The relationship between Germany and the United States, two of the worlds four largest economies, is no small matter. The United States relies on Europe as a strategic and trading partner, and Germany is the tail that wags the European Union. As the world tilts toward Asia, economists and politicians think that perhaps the best way to extend the American Century and Europes global influence is through good relations, from shared security through open trade.

But the mere fact that Hardt is in this role today says something about the state of affairs. In the past, the job has been trusted primarily to political senior figures. But Hardt joined the Parliament only in 2009, and before his appointment as liaison to North America he wasnt widely considered to be among Germanys political elite. His previous career as spokesman for a family-owned door-to-door vacuum cleaner sales company didnt make national headlines, and hed never been noted for taking the lead on trans-Atlantic issues.

The previous holders of the post were well-known: Hardts immediate successor was Philipp Missfelder, a foreign policy star in Merkels Christian Democratic Union. It wasnt long ago that former Hamburg Mayor Hans-Ulrich Klose, a onetime vice president of the Parliament, had held the position.

Since then, the job has lost much of its sheen. Hardt doesnt shy away from talking about why.

Our nations share historic and long-standing close relations. We share bonds of friendships and personal connections between our people, he said. This solid basis is often overshadowed these days for one simple reason: NSA surveillance. The problem is that this is to a certain degree a matter of two different cultures and experiences. What is being accepted in the United States is not acceptable here.

Hardt notes that Germans are not naive about the ways of the modern spy world. There will be surveillance.

We do not and we cannot expect a complete change of American security policy, he said. But we do expect our citizens to be treated with the same respect U.S. law grants to its citizens. And we do expect that our national laws will be honored.

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NSA eavesdropping still poisons US relations with Germany

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Who Needs the NSA? Anyone Can Spy on Your Kids Thanks to ComputerCop – Video


Who Needs the NSA? Anyone Can Spy on Your Kids Thanks to ComputerCop
It doesn #39;t take an NSA spymaster to snoop on your digital doings. Thanks to a free software program, distributed by police departments all around the country, any creep with a basic knowledge...

By: Fusion

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Who Needs the NSA? Anyone Can Spy on Your Kids Thanks to ComputerCop - Video

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