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Monthly Archives: March 2015
Meet NATOs man in Moscow
Posted: March 4, 2015 at 4:49 am
KYIV, Ukraine Considering the situation, there was little Robert Pszczel could do to prevent the verbal assault.
For a while, he stood his ground in the state television studio and appealed to Russian viewers sense of reason.
Then a couple of guests as well as the host pounced.
Youre a Pole! one guest cried out lividly. Youre a Russophobe from the outset already.
Shouldering that sort of abuse has become more or less part of Pszczels job these days.
As director of the NATO Information Office in Moscow, hes the chief spokesman of the military alliance there. Amid the worst standoff between Russia and the West since the Cold War, stumping for NATO isnt the easiest of gigs.
Thanks to the crisis in Ukraine, which Russias powerful state media machine has exploited to shore up domestic support for the Kremlin, a wave of anti-Western hysteria has swept over Russia.
Criticizing the Russian government has had deadly consequences. Witness last weekends apparent political assassination of Kremlin critic Boris Nemtsov, an opposition leader painted as an enemy for allegedly siding with the West against Russia.
Its an environment that leaves little room for open discussion.
Russia is a great country, and a great country needs a great debate, Pszczel said in a telephone interview from Moscow. But where is it?
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Meet NATOs man in Moscow
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The Geek Life #246: Saturday Night Live, The Daily Show, Limostatin, NSA, and more! – Video
Posted: at 4:48 am
The Geek Life #246: Saturday Night Live, The Daily Show, Limostatin, NSA, and more!
http://www.webcastbeacon.com/geeklife-246 I Wasn #39;t Squished, Before! Paul has video problems as we talk about Saturday Night Live, The Daily Show, Limostatin, NSA, and more! We also...
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The Geek Life #246: Saturday Night Live, The Daily Show, Limostatin, NSA, and more! - Video
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Chomsky on Snowden & Why NSA Surveillance Doesn’t Stop Terror While the U.S. Drone War Creates It – Video
Posted: at 4:48 am
Chomsky on Snowden Why NSA Surveillance Doesn #39;t Stop Terror While the U.S. Drone War Creates It
http://democracynow.org - World-renowned political dissident, linguist and author Noam Chomsky discusses why National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden should be welcomed back to ...
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Chomsky on Snowden & Why NSA Surveillance Doesn't Stop Terror While the U.S. Drone War Creates It - Video
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Shooting Near NSA, Four Others May Be Linked: Officials
Posted: at 4:48 am
NEWSLETTERS Receive the latest local updates in your inbox
Updated at 11:47 PM EST on Tuesday, Mar 3, 2015
A suspect believed to be responsible for the separate shooting incidents on the ICC and near the NSA at Fort Meade, as well as other locations in the DC-Baltimore area over the last two weeks, is in custody, FBI Public Affairs Specialist Amy J. Thoreson said in a statement early Wednesday.
Late Tuesday evening, WBAL-TV in Baltimore reported shootings in Howard, Prince George's and Anne Arundel counties during the past week may be related.
A man was grazed by a bullet in Hanover last week, and Anne Arundel County Police had released surveillance video of a possible suspect vehicle.
Two shootings were reported Monday; one at a Wal-Mart in Laurel and another near an AMC Theater in Columbia.
Around 3 p.m. Tuesday, two men driving along the Maryland Intercounty Connector (ICC) near Interstate 95 were struck by bullets, likely fired from nearby woods. Both are expected to be OK.
About two hours later, U.S. Park Police investigated a report of shots fired near the National Security Agency's headquarters in Fort Meade.
Report of Shots Fired Near NSA Headquarters, Building Damaged U.S. Park Police are investigating a report of shots fired near the National Security Agency's headquarters Tuesday evening. News4's Darcy Spencer reports. (Published Tuesday, Mar 3, 2015)
A spokesperson for the police said the NSA is investigating damage to one of its buildings that appeared to be from gunshots. No one was injured.Throughout the evening, Park Police closed down sections of BW Parkway for their investigation.
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Shooting Near NSA, Four Others May Be Linked: Officials
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NSA whistleblower denounces Petraeus plea bargain
Posted: at 4:48 am
NSA whistleblower Thomas Drake denounced a plea bargain reached by former CIA Director David Petraeus and federal prosecutors, calling it a slap on the wrist for illegal actions served no public good.
On Tuesday, court documents revealed the extent of Petraeus security breaches, which included sharing classified information with his biographer and paramour Paula Broadwell and lying to federal agents about his actions.
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Petraeus lawyers negotiated a deal that would give the retired general two years probation and pay a $40,000 fine, but would keep him out of prison entirely. A federal judge could still change his ultimate sentence and put him behind bars for up to one year.
The governments message is clear, Drake said in a statement. [W]histleblowing in the public interest will be punished, while disclosing classified information devoid of public value will get you a pass.
Drake was indicted under the Espionage Act for allegedly revealing information about the NSAs Trailblazer monitoring project to a reporter, as well as to a staffer in Congress. He was also charged with obstructing justice and making false statements.
Ultimately, after years of legal proceedings, the federal government dropped the charges against Drake and agreed not to seek jail time if he plead guilty to a misdemeanor charge.
The statement was relayed to POLITICO by the Government Accountability Project, a Washington, DC-based non-profit.
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NSA whistleblower denounces Petraeus plea bargain
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The Surveillance State's Greatest Enemy? The U.S. Constitution
Posted: at 4:47 am
Even if proponents of the NSA win over public opinion, their agenda will still be contrary to the Fourth Amendment.
When The Washington Post reported that 63 percent of Americans are "willing to give up personal privacy to let the federal government investigate terror threats," the polling data seemed like bad news for privacy activists and civil libertarians. But Reihan Salam argues that the 32 percent of Americans who oppose giving up privacy in the name of national security are winning. "They dont need a majority of the electorate to embrace their position in order to achieve their goals," he writes. "They merely need a vocal, well-organized minority."
To support that analysis, he points to the experience of gun owners, who've defeated various firearms restrictions even when a majority of Americans favored them. The intensity of their pro-gun views helps them to succeed, he observed, as do their strong social bonds, facilitated by pastimes like hunting and going to gun shows, where they see other gun owners, spread political information, and channel their intense views. Gun control advocates have no equivalent social ties.
Salam believes that surveillance skeptics have a similar edge over surveillance defenders:
No, not all of Snowdens biggest fans in America are affluent, well-educated libertarian technophiles who spend much of their spare time socializing on lesser-known corners of the Web. But these groups certainly overlap. Just as hunting and target shooting are ways that older gun owners cement social bonds, gaming and obsessively following Reddit could serve much the same function among young surveillance skeptics. Libertarian Republicans like Kentucky Rep. Thomas Massie, Michigan Rep. Justin Amash, and Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul have recognized the growing power of this constituency, and they cater to it by regularly addressing libertarian groups and pushing for surveillance reform...
...it gets worse for the defenders of surveillance authority. The Snowden revelations didnt just make working for the NSA less attractive. As Julian Sanchez, a privacy expert at the libertarian Cato Institute has explained, the revelations badly embarrassed major U.S. technology companies, particularly those that have substantial operations outside of the country. Suddenly the notion that Google and Facebook were essentially arms of the U.S. government seemed like more than a paranoid fantasy, particularly to consumers in Europe and Asia already inclined toward anti-Americanism. Before the revelations, these companies could work closely with the U.S. government to facilitate its surveillance efforts without ever being held to account. Even if they objected to getting pushed around by Uncle Sam behind closed doors, they had little incentive to make a stink about it, as doing so could jeopardize their business by raising suspicions. After the revelations, the international reputation of U.S. tech giants took a hit, and they had little choice but to push back forcefully and to ally themselves with civil liberties groups.
While I don't know who will ultimately win the fight over surveillance policy, these are, indeed, among the factors that give privacy advocates a fighting chance. I'd only add that there is an even bigger advantage that civil libertarians can press, and it too is helpfully illuminated by way of analogy to the gun-control debate. The NRA's most significant advantage is the 2nd Amendment. With its adoption, the Framers decided that the right to bear arms should be protected even in a future instance when a majority of the public and the legislature might feel otherwise.
Surveillance policy is comparable: 63 percent of Americans may be willing to sacrifice privacy in the War on Terrorism, but they lack the power to overturn the Fourth Amendment. Many seem to have forgotten its actual text, so here it is in full:
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
That is the law of the land. And the NSA is violating its letter and spirit, no matter how many times its defenders use dubious legal reasoning to argue otherwise. The right of the people to be secure in their "persons, houses, papers, and effects" is meaningless if the NSA can seize and later search details about everyone's communications. The requirements for probable cause and particularity cannot be squared with surveillance that implicates practically everyone. The Fourth Amendment's historic attempt to end general warrants cannot be viewed as a success so long as the government is prying into the private affairs of tens of millions of people who are not even suspected of any wrongdoing.
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The Surveillance State's Greatest Enemy? The U.S. Constitution
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Funeral protest restrictions move ahead in Legislature
Posted: at 4:47 am
DES MOINES A bill to extend the buffer zone between funerals and protests from 500 to 1,000 feet won House Judiciary subcommittee approval despite a lawmakers warning the Legislature should not infringe on First Amendment free speech rights.
HSB 157 was proposed by Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, R-Wilton, in response to protests by members of Westboro Baptist Church at military funerals.
Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Bondurant, said the bill will help deal with protesters using hate speech and attempting to cover it under the First Amendment.
However, Rep. Jake Highfill, R-Johnston, said that although the Westboro protesters are sick and wrong and I certainly couldnt disagree with them more, the intent of the First Amendment is not to protect popular opinion.
The bill goes to the full Judiciary Committee, which is scheduled to meet again Wednesday afternoon.
The bill also provides for liquidated damages for infliction of emotional distress upon military family members of up to $10,000 per person
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Funeral protest restrictions move ahead in Legislature
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Funeral protest restrictions move forward in Legislature
Posted: at 4:47 am
DES MOINES | A bill to extend the buffer zone between funerals and protests from 500 to 1,000 feet won House Judiciary subcommittee approval despite a lawmakers warning the Legislature should not infringe on First Amendment free speech rights.
HSB 157 was proposed by Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, R-Wilton, in response to protests by members of Westboro Baptist Church at military funerals.
Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Bondurant, said the bill will help deal with protesters using hate speech and attempting to cover it under the First Amendment.
However, Rep. Jake Highfill, R-Johnston, said that although the Westboro protesters are sick and wrong and I certainly couldnt disagree with them more, the intent of the First Amendment is not to protect popular opinion.
The bill goes to the full Judiciary Committee, which is scheduled to meet again Wednesday afternoon.
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Funeral protest restrictions move forward in Legislature
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Funeral protest restrictions move forward in Iowa Legislature
Posted: at 4:47 am
Protesters would be subject to 1,000 foot buffer zone
March 3, 2015 | 11:16 am
DES MOINES A bill to extend the buffer zone between funerals and protests from 500 to 1,000 feet won House Judiciary subcommittee approval despite a lawmakers warning the Legislature should not infringe on First Amendment free speech rights.
HSB 157 was proposed by Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, R-Wilton, in response to protests by members of Westboro Baptist Church at military funerals.
Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Bondurant, said the bill will help deal with protesters using hate speech and attempting to cover it under the First Amendment.
However, Rep. Jake Highfill, R-Johnston, said that although the Westboro protesters are sick and wrong and I certainly couldnt disagree with them more, the intent of the First Amendment is not to protect popular opinion.
The bill goes to the full Judiciary Committee, which is scheduled to meet again Wednesday afternoon.
The bill also provides for liquidated damages for infliction of emotional distress upon military family members of up to $10,000 per person.
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Funeral protest restrictions move forward in Iowa Legislature
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Wilton Rep. Kaufmann's funeral protest bill moves forward
Posted: at 4:47 am
DES MOINES, Iowa A bill to extend the buffer zone between funerals and protests from 500 to 1,000 feet won House Judiciary subcommittee approval despite a lawmakers warning the Legislature should not infringe on First Amendment free speech rights.
HSB 157 (http://bit.ly/1Cq3fWY)was proposed by Rep. Bobby Kaufmann, R-Wilton, in response to protests by members of Westboro Baptist Church at military funerals.
Rep. Zach Nunn, R-Bondurant, said the bill will help deal with protesters using hate speech and attempting to cover it under the First Amendment.
However, Rep. Jake Highfill, R-Johnston, said that although the Westboro protesters are sick and wrong and I certainly couldnt disagree with them more, the intent of the First Amendment is not to protect popular opinion.
The bill goes to the full Judiciary Committee, which is scheduled to meet again Wednesday afternoon.
The bill also provides for liquidated damages for infliction of emotional distress upon military family members of up to $10,000 per person.
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Wilton Rep. Kaufmann's funeral protest bill moves forward
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