Archive for March 6th, 2008

Doesn’t this say it all about domestic surveillance?

The RNC chooses Qwest to be their telecom provider of choice.

Qwest, you may recall, is the only telecom provider that failed to cooperate with the NSA on illegal domestic surveillance.

I’m sure that made them a bad telephone company at the time in certain circles. Bad bad bad. But now? Not so much. Now that the RNC wants some privacy, they have nowhere else to turn. They fall, sighing, into the private embrace of Qwest. Oh, what a relief! Those psychopaths Bush and Cheney can’t eavesdrop on us planning to throw them under the bus! Phew! It’s too bad we let them fuck up the whole country, but what the hell. We’re moving on.

Reminds me of that saying…don’t shit where you eat. It’s too bad Qwest didn’t tell the RNC to go screw.

Sorry to be crude today. The bitter irony just wrings it out of me.

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More Warrantless Surveilling

Not content to funnel all of our voice and electronic communications through a secret warrantless surveillance program, in utter violation of the 4th Amendment, the government also makes notes on and opens citizens’ snail mail! It’s yet another warrantless surveillance program, which you pay for, and which is used against….YOU! Without you even needing to know about it! In fact, it’s really important that you don’t know about it, because then you might censor yourself and that would ruin all the fun for these government voyeurs.

The US postal service approves more than 10,000 requests from US law enforcement each year to record names, addresses and other information from the outside of packages, according to information released through a Freedom of Information Act request.

The warrantless surveillance mail program — as it is known — requires only the approval of the US Postal Inspection Service Director, and not a judge.

I’m sure that’s very helpful in the ‘War on Terror’. The inspector has approved almost 100% of such requests since 2004. No word on who he is or why he considers an occasional request beyond the pale.

“The idea of the government tracking that amount of mail is quite alarming,” Director of the American Civil Liberties Union’s national security project Jameel Jaffer told the paper. “When you realize that (the figure) does not include national security matters, the numbers are even more alarming.”

Officials would not disclose how much mail was monitored in national security or “terror”-related investigations. Under the PATRIOT ACT, those who received letters notifying them that they were being investigated often were gagged from even reporting their being targeted.

Responding to a USA Today request for the national security-related data, “inspection service counsel Anthony Alverno wrote that even revealing the frequency of the surveillance would undermine its effectiveness “to the detriment of the government’s national security interests.”

In true authoritarian style, any information about the ‘frequency of the illegal surveillance would undermine its effectiveness’. So it appears that they want people to live and behave under the impression that they have a functioning US Constitution behind them, but in fact, our government uses our own imaginary ‘freedoms’ to entrap us in their unconstitutional surveillance.

Sometimes people who have had amputations report that they can feel phantom pains from their missing limbs. I think this is like that. We continue to behave as if we have these rights to privacy and to freedom of speech. We think we can feel them and use them. But the rights have been amputated. Unfortunately, Americans are too jacked up on consumerism and junk tv to understand what’s going on. Meanwhile, the government has analyzed what we’ve said, written, purchased, read, joined, supported, etc. to categorize individuals as dangerous or not.

Dangerous to them. Not to our fellow citizens, but to the current regime. Not dangerous through violence, but merely through resistance.

At the appointed hour, they will round up all these ‘dangerous’ people and tell the rest to obey. And that should be pretty easy because the very people they round up will be the ones paying close attention. Once they remove anyone with the capacity to lead a resistance to government tyranny, the people left will be easier to control. And at that point the free flow of information will have ceased, so anyone who was planning on getting up to speed later will be shit out of luck. There won’t be anyone to ask.

The time to pay attention is now.

There’s reason to believe more mail may be being opened, as well.

In late 2006, a signing statement issued by President Bush suggested that his office had expanded executive branch power to open mail without a warrant.

The signing statement accompanied H.R. 6407, the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act of 2006, which reiterated a prohibition on opening first class mail without a warrant.

“In 1996, the postal regulations were altered to permit the opening of First Class mail without a warrant in narrowly defined cases where the Postal Inspector believes there is a credible threat that the package contains dangerous material like bombs,” the ACLU said in a press release at the time. “Instead of referencing the narrow exception in the postal regulations, the president’s signing statement suggests that he is assuming broader authority to open mail without a warrant.”

In January 2007, the ACLU and Center for National Security Studies filed a Freedom of Information Act request seeking information regarding any additional warrantless mail surveillance.

The goal is always the same: to destroy our civil liberties so that martial law can be implemented at will and at a time of their choosing, probably sometime this year, as a result of a false flag incident. Believe me, I hope I’m wrong. But anyone who refuses to see the writing on the wall is a fool, in my humble opinion.

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Disconnections Everywhere

Evidence emerges that the Arab street is getting fed up with the Occupation and with Arab leaders’ mealy-mouthed responses to it. Egyptians have begun to express their disgust that the Rafah border continues to be sealed up tightly. Patience runs thin in Cairo.

On Monday and Tuesday (Mar. 3, 4), demonstrations were held throughout the country by student groups and opposition political associations of all stripes, including the Muslim Brotherhood opposition movement and the pro-democracy group Kefaya. Numbering in the hundreds in many cases, protestors condemned the perceived inability of Arab capitals — particularly Cairo — to stem Israeli aggression in Gaza.

The popular mood was summed up in the Mar. 3 headlines of independent weekly al-Dustour: “Israel burns Gaza…and where are the Arabs? You spineless sons of….!”

In the capital, demonstrations were quickly cordoned off by police and security forces. At Cairo University — precariously located not far from the Israeli embassy — limited clashes broke out between protesters and police, reportedly resulting in several injuries.

In parliament, more than 100 opposition MPs staged a 24-hour sit-in on Sunday (Mar. 2) in solidarity with the beleaguered Palestinian residents of Gaza. An attempt by the parliamentarians to lead a protest march through downtown Cairo the following day, however, was thwarted by security services.

“As the people’s representatives, we expressed the anger of our constituents,” Hamdi Hassan, an MP for Muslim Brotherhood, which numbers roughly one-fifth of the assembly, told IPS. “The Arab regimes are keeping quiet while the Zionists are perpetrating a holocaust in Gaza.

“The latest events prove that the Arab governments are totally out of touch with the will of the people,” added Hassan, who participated in the parliamentary sit-in. “Arab regimes are merely following the dictates of U.S. policy in the region, while the Arab people want to see the liberation of Palestine.”


Hassan went on to enumerate the opposition’s demands, namely, “greater efforts by President Mubarak in his capacity as head of state to stop Israeli aggression against Gaza; the halt of Egyptian energy exports to Israel; the withdrawal of the Egyptian ambassador to Israel and the expulsion of the Israeli ambassador to Egypt; and an official reassessment of the 1979 Egypt-Israel Camp David peace agreement.”

The Labour Party’s Hussein was no less critical of Cairo’s feeble response to Israeli belligerence.


“Official reactions to the Israeli massacres in Gaza have hardly been appropriate, and betray an allegiance to Washington and Tel Aviv,” he said. “And by keeping the border closed to the besieged Gazans, Cairo has become a partner to Israel’s crimes.”

Critics also point to the government’s muted response to the slaying of a 13-year-old Egyptian girl in the town of Kerem Abu Sallim near the border with Israel on Feb. 28, reportedly the result of cross-border Israeli gunfire. According to reports in the local press, the girl succumbed to injuries after being shot in the head not far from an Israeli watchtower.

“The foreign ministry threatens the Gazans — using very tough language — not to approach the border,” said Hussein. “But when an Egyptian child is killed by an Israeli bullet, there isn’t a word of official condemnation.”

According to the Brotherhood’s Hassan, popular anger over continued Israeli aggression in Gaza is fast approaching boiling point.

“If the massacres continue, reactions by the opposition will move beyond demonstrations and sit-ins,” he said. “While one phase of Israeli violence in Gaza has just ended, I fear another will soon begin.”

Sure enough, Israeli tanks and armoured vehicles rolled into the Gaza Strip again on Tuesday (Mar. 4) night in what Israeli defence officials described as “pinpoint operations” against local resistance fighters.

While Arab leaders have made some tentative steps away from Washington’s control in the past few months, apparently they still have far to go before connecting with their populations’ desires. It’s the same thing here. What Americans want and what Americans get are two different things, even when we elect our ‘opposition’ party into power. A great many leaders seem to be heavily insulated from the masses, insulated by layers and layers of blood-soaked capital.

I don’t see this ending well.