Daily Archives: May 12, 2014

Cyberwar, NSA Spying, and US-China Relations: James Corbett on RT – Video

Posted: May 12, 2014 at 8:48 am


Cyberwar, NSA Spying, and US-China Relations: James Corbett on RT
After years of China #39;s rapid growth and development, the world #39;s second largest economy appears to be slowing down. The government is expecting the lowest ra. Edward Snowden #39;s revelations...

By: Matthew Moses

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Cyberwar, NSA Spying, and US-China Relations: James Corbett on RT - Video

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Verizon to regularly report on NSA data requests – Video

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Verizon to regularly report on NSA data requests
All Rights belong to RT. Further videos about topics addressed are available in Recent Activities, Favourites, Play Lists on my channels. Verizon Wireless will make semiannual reports on the...

By: Dean Morgan

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Verizon to regularly report on NSA data requests - Video

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YASSINOS NSA YA 9ALBY 2014 – Video

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YASSINOS NSA YA 9ALBY 2014
YASSINOS NSA YA QALBY 2014 face amine ben hadda.

By: YASSINOS NSA YA QALBY YASSINOS

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YASSINOS NSA YA 9ALBY 2014 - Video

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2014 Midterm Election Trend That We Starting To See – Obamacare, IRS, NSA & Benghazi – Fox Report – Video

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2014 Midterm Election Trend That We Starting To See - Obamacare, IRS, NSA Benghazi - Fox Report
2014 Midterm Election The Trend That We Starting To See - Obamacare, IRS, NSA Benghazi - Fox Report =========================================== **Please Click Below to SUBSCRIBE for...

By: Mass Tea Party

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2014 Midterm Election Trend That We Starting To See - Obamacare, IRS, NSA & Benghazi - Fox Report - Video

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Second House committee approves bill to end NSA bulk collection

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One day after the U.S. House of Representatives voted unanimously to end the National Security Agencys bulk collection of U.S. phone records, a second committee has approved the same bill.

The House Intelligence Committee, in closed session, voted to approve the USA Freedom Act Thursday instead of advancing the committees own NSA reform bill. Many privacy groups had criticized the Intelligence Committee bill, called the FISA Transparency and Modernization Act, saying it would have made minimal changes to the NSAs mass collection of U.S. telephone records.

Instead, the Intelligence Committee, by voice vote, approved the USA Freedom Act, which would require the NSA to get case-by-case court approval before collecting the telephone or business records of any U.S. resident.

The FISA Transparency and Modernization Act was among a group of NSA bills that did little to fix the problem of bulk collection, Electronic Frontier Foundation activist Nadia Kayyali wrote in a recent blog post. These bills dont just put lipstick on a pig, she wrote. They actually create new legal authority for NSA spying while providing political cover to its biggest supporters.

The USA Freedom Act, which now heads to the House floor for a vote, would also limit the controversial bulk collection program by allowing the FBI, asking on behalf of the NSA, to request U.S. phone records from carriers only if there are reasonable grounds to believe that the information sought pertains to a foreign power, an agent of a foreign power, or a person in contact with a foreign power.

The House Judiciary Committee approved the USA Freedom Act by a 32-0 vote on Wednesday.

The Intelligence Committee did not consider its own bill during its meeting Thursday, a spokeswoman said. The committees decision to instead approve the USA Freedom Act allows House leaders to avoid choosing between the bills when scheduling a vote on NSA reforms.

The sponsors of the Intelligence Committee bill, Representatives Mike Rogers, a Michigan Republican, and Dutch Ruppersberger, a Maryland Democrat, said they were pleased with the committees vote on the competing bill.

Enhancing privacy and civil liberties while protecting the operational capability of a critical counterterrorism tool, not pride of authorship, has always been our first and last priority, they said in a joint statement. We are pleased the House Judiciary Committee reached a compromise that garnered strong, bipartisan support.

The American Civil Liberties Union applauded the committees vote. This vote is a clear sign that the balance is shifting away from excessive NSA spying and back toward liberty, Laura Murphy, director of the ACLUs Washington Legislative Office, said in a statement. The momentum is on the side of privacy rights and limiting government power, and now the full House can pass a bill that rolls back bulk collection of Americans communications.

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Second House committee approves bill to end NSA bulk collection

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Lawmakers debate proposed EBT restrictions – Video

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Lawmakers debate proposed EBT restrictions
State Rep. Timothy Horrigan is blasting a proposed bill that would ban people from buying guns with their electronic benefits transfer cards, saying it violates their Second Amendment rights.

By: WMUR-TV

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Lawmakers debate proposed EBT restrictions - Video

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Sheriff Protects First Amendment & Becomes Internet Star – Video

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Sheriff Protects First Amendment Becomes Internet Star
Deputy Sheriff Stan Lenic, the cop who stood up for the First Amendment by refusing to impede the free speech rights of activists at Albany International Air...

By: Randall Leonard

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Sheriff Protects First Amendment & Becomes Internet Star - Video

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N.H Court Says COPSLIE License Plate Is Free Speech – Video

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N.H Court Says COPSLIE License Plate Is Free Speech
Read more below: The highest court in New Hampshire ruled that a vanity plate owned by David Montenegro that reads "COPSLIE" is protected free speech under the first amendment. The unanimous...

By: JmanPrepper WontBeSilenced

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N.H Court Says COPSLIE License Plate Is Free Speech - Video

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The Clash Between the First Amendment and National Security in Times of War Symposium – Video

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The Clash Between the First Amendment and National Security in Times of War Symposium
Commemorating the 100th Birthday of alumnus and former Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell participants spoke at a symposium titled "The Clash Between the First Amendment and National Security...

By: Reuben Halper

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The Clash Between the First Amendment and National Security in Times of War Symposium - Video

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Their opinion: Disagreeing on the First Amendment

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The Providence (R.I.) Journal, May 8, 2014

Reasonable people can disagree vehemently on the meaning of the First Amendment, as demonstrated by the 5-to-4 margin of Monday's Supreme Court ruling on prayer. The court ruled that the First Amendment permits even a Christian prayer at the start of a government board meeting, as long as there is no attempt to proselytize or pressure citizens to go along.

That seems a reasonable interpretation of what the First Amendment actually says. The amendment does not permit the federal government to prohibit the free exercise of religion by Americans, nor does it permit the government to establish a religion.

Does a voluntary prayer before a meeting -- something with a long tradition in America -- establish a state religion and force others to practice that religion? Only by the most extreme interpretation. In the real world, people are perfectly free to ignore the prayer, leave the room or petition their elected representatives to alter or drop the prayer. They may safely join any religious group they wish, or decline to believe altogether.

The First Amendment, in short, is a bulwark of liberty, protecting the right of people to express religious ideas even in public settings. But this guarantee of freedom does not preclude citizens from showing respect for diverse beliefs. Those who seek God's blessings at the start of government meetings may do so in a non-sectarian manner, striving not to exclude or offend any believers. Or they may eschew any prayer at all. Those approaches would be our strong preference to a sectarian prayer, which can hurt people's feelings and sow divisions.

In her dissent, Justice Elena Kagan cited George Washington's famous 1790 letter to Newport's Touro Synagogue, in which he embraced America's support for religious liberty. Quoting the Bible's Old Testament, Washington wrote: "every one shall sit in safety under his own vine and figtree, and there shall be none to make him afraid." He added: "For happily the Government of the United States gives to bigotry no sanction, to persecution no assistance, requires only that they who live under its protection should demean themselves as good citizens, in giving it on all occasions their effectual support."

It seems clear, though, that neither Washington nor the other Founders regarded public prayers as giving sanction to bigotry and assistance to persecution. Indeed, in his role as president, Washington issued a proclamation calling for a national day of prayer and fasting in service to "that great and glorious Being who is the beneficent author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be." He stated: "it is the duty of all nations to acknowledge the providence of Almighty God, to obey His will, to be grateful for His benefits, and humbly to implore His protection and favor." He did not believe that eradicating any public mention of God was the American way.

While America is markedly more diverse and secular than it was in Washington's day, we should strive to emulate his support for religious liberty, and to give no sanction to bigotry. Surely, as free people of good will, we can do that without eradicating the freedom to express religious ideas and without banishing prayer from public life.

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Their opinion: Disagreeing on the First Amendment

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