Showing posts with label defense. Show all posts
Showing posts with label defense. Show all posts

Friday, April 4, 2014

Stephen Colbert Takes Down Bill O"Reilly"s Insane Defense Of Income Inequality


I want to thank Stephen Colbert for taking the time to compile Bill O’Reilly’s nonsensical observations about American society. BillO thinks he’s found a bone to chew on with income equality, but his analogies are unhinged. If he thinks I’m trying to legislate that the federal government adds almost twenty four inches to my height so I’m equal in stature to Shaq, then he’s crazier than I thought.


Colbert rips his arguments to shreds in the only way he knows how: with humor.


O’Reilly: Equality is what is hurting President Obama. the left has seized that word “equality” to push it’s progressive agenda. We now have income equality, marriage equality, gender equality..And on and on and on…


Colbert: Yes, income, marriage, gender on and on and on. And yes those last three don’t mean anything, but they don’t mean anything equally.
And Bill laid out why fighting for equality is pointless.


O’Reilly: Each human being is born with abilities, but they are not equal abilities. I will never have physical equality with my fellow Irishmen Shaquille O’Neal. He’s bigger and stronger than I am by nature. I will never be as smart as Einstein As talented as Mozart as kind as Mother Teresa.



Colbert: Oh, Come on, Bill, that list is too modest. You’ll never be as fast as Usain Bolt or you’ll never be as emotionally mature as a toddler or understand how tides work as a middle schooler. You’ll never be as strong as a silver-back gorilla or win as many Oscars as Titanic.


O’Reilly’s logic is airtight.


read more



Latest from Crooks and Liars



Stephen Colbert Takes Down Bill O"Reilly"s Insane Defense Of Income Inequality

Friday, March 28, 2014

Al-Qaeda Syrian Rebels To Receive Air Defense Aid From Obama Administration

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Al-Qaeda Syrian Rebels To Receive Air Defense Aid From Obama Administration

Wednesday, March 19, 2014

US Irate With Israeli Defense Minister Comments


WASHINGTON (AP) — The Obama administration on Wednesday vented its anger at the Israeli defense minister’s public criticism of the U.S. and his personal insults of Secretary of State John Kerry.




In a new sign of tension between top officials of the two allies as Washington tries to forge an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal and negotiate with Iran over its nuclear program, Kerry called Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to protest recent remarks by Defense Minister Moshe Yaalon.


Yaalon this week accused the Obama administration of being weak on Iran and questioned its commitment toIsrael’s security. Previously, Yaalon has criticized Kerry for being unrealistic and naive in trying to forge an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal.


State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said Yaalon’s remarks were “not constructive” and “inconsistent” with the close relationship between the U.S. and Israel.


Psaki repeated Obama and Kerry’s oft-stated position that the U.S. commitment to Israel’s security is “unshakable,” outlined several main elements of the longstanding U.S.-Israeli defense relationship. And she noted that Netanyahu himself has spoken of an “unprecedented level” of security cooperation between the countries.


“The comments of the defense minister are completely inconsistent with that,” Psaki told reporters. “So, it is certainly confusing to us why Defense Minister Yaalon would continue his pattern of making comments that don’t accurately represent the scope of our close partnership on a range of security issues and on the enduring partnership between the United States and Israel.”


She would not say if Kerry had demanded an apology of Yaalon, declined to characterize Netanyahu’s response to Kerry’s protests and referred questions about that to the Israeli government.


In Israel, an official in Yaalon’s office said Netanyahu and Yaalon had “discussed the recent reports” and added that the minister “will clarify what was said in his talks with the Americans.” The official spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss the diplomatic matter with the media by name.


In remarks quoted in Israeli reports on Tuesday, Yaalon said Israel cannot depend on the United States to lead any action against Iran’s nuclear program and can only rely on itself.


“We thought that the one who needs to lead the campaign against Iran is the U.S.,” Yaalon was quoted by the daily Haaretz as saying during a lecture at Tel Aviv University on Monday.


He also disparaged American influence and power, noting the ongoing crisis over Ukraine and Russia’s annexation of Crimea.


Yaalon has made controversial comments about Washington in the past. In January, he was quoted as saying that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry was “obsessive” and “messianic” over his Mideast peace efforts.


__


Associated Press writer Tia Goldenberg contributed to this report from Jerusalem.


Copyright 2014 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.




All TPM News



US Irate With Israeli Defense Minister Comments

Saturday, March 8, 2014

China Expands Defense Budget Over 12% To $132 Billion

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China Expands Defense Budget Over 12% To $132 Billion

Tuesday, March 4, 2014

Peace quest spurs defense push



Robust response comes after critics hit out at increase in country’s military spending


Peace can only be preserved with strength, the spokeswoman for China’s top legislature said on Tuesday, in one of the strongest responses to concerns over growing military power.


Meanwhile, analysts said that increased defense spending is part of China’s modernization drive amid growing challenges from some Asian countries that keeping raising their military budgets.


Fu Ying, spokeswoman for the second session of the 12th National People’s Congress, said that as a major, China is responsible for regional peace and security.


But “based on our history and experience, we believe that peace can only be maintained by strength”, she said.


Fu said China, whose military policy is entirely defensive in nature, has never treated any country as an enemy or a threat.


“We have heard such concerns. Indeed, certain countries have been selling the idea of China as a major threat,” Fu said. “But we Chinese might ask, can a prosperous country such as China really achieve peace without a strong national defense?”


She said China supports disputes being resolved through negotiations. However, it will “respond effectively” to provocation by those ready to sabotage regional security and order, “for the sake of China’s own territorial sovereignty, as well as for the protection of regional order and peace”.


China’s defense budget, after years of double-digit growth, stood at $ 117.7 billion in 2013, as the United States remained the world’s biggest defense spender with a budget of $ 600.4 billion.


China’s defense budget for this year is expected to be announced on Wednesday when the top legislature begins its meeting.


Qian Lihua, a major general who used to head the Foreign Affairs Office under the Ministry of National Defense, said China’s defense spending is reasonable and moderate, and its growth depends on the nation’s economic performance.


The country’s defense spending is rising along with other kinds of social spending, such as education and social welfare, he said. “It is unrealistic and unreasonable for China’s defense spending to remain at the same level,” he added.


Qian, also a member of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultative Conference, said many Asian countries have increased their defense budgets.


Asia’s defense spending surpassed that of the European Union in 2012, and reached $ 320 billion in 2013, Qian said.


The increase was driven by geopolitical changes in Asia, with the emergence of “hot” regional issues, territorial disputes and an Asian strategy adjustment by some countries, Qian said.


Zhong Zhenming, an international relations scholar at Tongji University in Shanghai, said some countries have continued to create an unstable environment for China while accusing it of becoming a regional threat.


China’s increased military strength is partly in response to provocative moves taken by some countries, who should review their own polices first, Zhong said.


Chen Kai, vice-chairman of the China Arms Control and Disarmament Association, said a considerable part of China’s military strength has been aimed at securing world peace, including anti-piracy patrols in the Gulf of Aden and the Chinese navy’s involvement in escorting shipments of Syrian chemical weapons this year.


Chen said that compared with China’s defense strategy, Japan has repeatedly adopted aggressive policies, and it is absurd for such countries to accuse China of being a military threat.


Ren Yuanzhe, a researcher at China Foreign Affairs University, said China requires more financial support, as it is experiencing military reforms under the new leadership.


Zhao Yanrong and He Liu contributed to this story.






Peace quest spurs defense push

Interest Payments on Debt to Exceed Defense Budget in 5 Years


New analysis by the Senate Budget Committee Republican staff finds that, under President Obama’s proposed budget, interest payments on debt will exceed the defense budget in just 5 years.


Here’s a chart put together by the Republicans, who are led by Ranking Member Jeff Sessions, on the Senate Budget Committee:



“Interest costs to finance national debt exceed defense spending by FY 2020,” the chart reads.



The Weekly Standard



Interest Payments on Debt to Exceed Defense Budget in 5 Years

Monday, February 24, 2014

Pill mixup led to Kennedy "drugged driving" trial: defense




WHITE PLAINS, New York Mon Feb 24, 2014 2:13pm EST



Kerry Kennedy, (2nd L) daughter of assassinated Senator Robert F. Kennedy and ex-wife of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, exits the Westchester County Courthouse in White Plains, New York, next to her mother, Ethel Kennedy (bottom), and her brother, Douglas Harriman Kennedy (C), February 24, 2014. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

Kerry Kennedy, (2nd L) daughter of assassinated Senator Robert F. Kennedy and ex-wife of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, exits the Westchester County Courthouse in White Plains, New York, next to her mother, Ethel Kennedy (bottom), and her brother, Douglas Harriman Kennedy (C), February 24, 2014.


Credit: Reuters/Eduardo Munoz




WHITE PLAINS, New York (Reuters) – A Kennedy family member’s groggy behavior during her 2012 arrest for sideswiping a tractor trailer in New York was not the result of a criminal act but mistakenly taking a sleeping pill instead of her usual thyroid medication, her lawyers argued at her trial Monday.


Kerry Kennedy, 54, daughter of assassinated Senator Robert F. Kennedy and the ex-wife of New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, has pleaded not guilty to a charge of driving while impaired.


“This case is about a mistake, plain and simple,” defense attorney Gerald Lefcourt said in his opening statement in Westchester County Court in White Plains, about 35 miles north of New York City.


Lefcourt said it was a regrettable medication mixup that led to Kennedy’s arrest for erratically driving her silver Lexus on Interstate 684 near North Castle in Westchester County the morning of July 13, 2012.


Kennedy, who wore a grey dress and jacket and black-rimmed glasses in court, is expected to be on trial for about a week.


Her mother, Ethel Kennedy, widow of Senator Kennedy, was also in the courtroom as Lefcourt described Kennedy as a devout Catholic and a devoted humanitarian and mother who would never willfully drive while impaired.


“If she would have realized her mistake and known she was not in the right condition to drive her car that day, she would never have continued on the road,” he told the jury.


Kennedy, who is also the niece of assassinated President John F. Kennedy, “is not seeking any advantage here because of her famous family,” Lefcourt said. “On the other hand, she should not be punished because of it.”


A jury trial is unusual for a relatively minor unclassified misdemeanor. If convicted, Kennedy could face up to a year in prison, but with no prior criminal record, it is unlikely she would serve any time behind bars, court officials said.


A toxicology report taken after Kennedy’s arrest showed she had the drug zolpidem, which is sold under the brand name Ambien, in her system. The drug is a slow acting medication to induce sleep and overcome insomnia.


Prosecutors said Kennedy continued to drive her car after realizing she was impaired, endangering herself and other drivers, before running off the road and passing out behind the wheel.


Nobody was injured during the incident.


“It was an ominous and regrettable day for this defendant Kerry Kennedy,” said Assistant District Attorney Stefanie DeNise during opening statements. “Still she continued to operate her car in an unsafe manner.”


Kennedy drove about five miles while swerving into other lanes of traffic, the grassy median and eventually a tractor trailer, prosecutors told the jury.


(Editing by Barbara Goldberg and Grant McCool)






Reuters: Politics



Pill mixup led to Kennedy "drugged driving" trial: defense

Friday, February 21, 2014

Krauthammer: Ukrainian Defense Minister Ignoring Hagel"s Calls Shows How Weak, Irrelevant US Has Become



When it comes to working with the United States, Russia is “playing a zero sum game,” Charles Krauthammer said on Fox News Thursday.


“The premise of the whole reset policy was that we are not in competition and Putin could not believe his luck, to come across a naif from the White House who believed that,” he said. “The Russians did not cooperate on Iran. They’re running Syria. They’re arming Syria. Thumbing their nose at us with Snowden and now Ukraine. And they are playing a zero sum game.”


“The fact that no one answers our call in the Defense Ministry in Kiev is a sign of how weak and irrelevant the U.S. has become,” he continued. “I can assure you that if Putin’s on the line, the phone is answered.”




Townhall’s Featured Blog



Krauthammer: Ukrainian Defense Minister Ignoring Hagel"s Calls Shows How Weak, Irrelevant US Has Become

Sunday, February 16, 2014

​Iran: Homemade air defense system ready in 2 yrs, ‘better than S-300’

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​Iran: Homemade air defense system ready in 2 yrs, ‘better than S-300’

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Israeli Defense Minister: "Obsessed With Peace? How DARE You?"


“American efforts to broker a peace deal in the Middle East were engulfed in a diplomatic row on Tuesday when the US state department lambasted a senior Isra…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



Israeli Defense Minister: "Obsessed With Peace? How DARE You?"

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Florida Man Hops Fence to Shoot and Kill 21-year-old in a Hoodie—Then Claims Self Defense



Does "stand your ground" include chasing someone?








On Thursday, an Orlando man shot and killed a 21-year-old who was fleeing his yard. He didn’t appear to be stealing anything, according to witness accounts. He didn’t appear to be threatening anybody. But Claudius Smith said he feared he was a burglar, followed him over the fence to a neighboring apartment complex, where he shot him after he said he felt threatened, according to a confession documented in an Orlando Police Department report. Smith even said he feared victim Ricardo Sanes was armed “because his pants were falling down” and his hands were in his hoodie pockets, according to a report obtained by the Orlando Sentinel.


Now, questions are emerging about whether Smith will also invoke the state’s Stand Your Ground law, which gained notoriety over the shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, shot in a Florida residential development while wearing a hoodie. Law enforcement officials don’t seem to believe Stand Your Ground applies. Smith has already been charged with second-degree murder. But that doesn’t stop a judge from granting Stand Your Ground immunity later. In one of the most recent Florida court decisions on Stand Your Ground, an appeals court granted Stand Your Ground immunity to a man who went to his car to get a gun before the fatal incident.


According to statements by Smith’s girlfriend, Angela Kemraj, to police, the incident started when she saw a man in the yard on surveillance cameras and reported it to Smith. She said they saw the individual in dark clothes and a hoodie leaving their yard without anything in his hands, and climbing over the fence to a neighboring apartment complex. Smith then left the apartment and climbed over the fence. Two minutes later, Kemraj said she heard gunshots. Soon after, Smith came back to the apartment and said Sanes tried to rob him, without mentioning the shooting. During initial police questioning, Smith later denied knowledge about the shooting, and only later confessed, claiming he shot in self-defense.


 

 

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Florida Man Hops Fence to Shoot and Kill 21-year-old in a Hoodie—Then Claims Self Defense

Florida Man Hops Fence to Shoot and Kill 21-year-old in a Hoodie—Then Claims Self Defense



Does "stand your ground" include chasing someone?








On Thursday, an Orlando man shot and killed a 21-year-old who was fleeing his yard. He didn’t appear to be stealing anything, according to witness accounts. He didn’t appear to be threatening anybody. But Claudius Smith said he feared he was a burglar, followed him over the fence to a neighboring apartment complex, where he shot him after he said he felt threatened, according to a confession documented in an Orlando Police Department report. Smith even said he feared victim Ricardo Sanes was armed “because his pants were falling down” and his hands were in his hoodie pockets, according to a report obtained by the Orlando Sentinel.


Now, questions are emerging about whether Smith will also invoke the state’s Stand Your Ground law, which gained notoriety over the shooting of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin, shot in a Florida residential development while wearing a hoodie. Law enforcement officials don’t seem to believe Stand Your Ground applies. Smith has already been charged with second-degree murder. But that doesn’t stop a judge from granting Stand Your Ground immunity later. In one of the most recent Florida court decisions on Stand Your Ground, an appeals court granted Stand Your Ground immunity to a man who went to his car to get a gun before the fatal incident.


According to statements by Smith’s girlfriend, Angela Kemraj, to police, the incident started when she saw a man in the yard on surveillance cameras and reported it to Smith. She said they saw the individual in dark clothes and a hoodie leaving their yard without anything in his hands, and climbing over the fence to a neighboring apartment complex. Smith then left the apartment and climbed over the fence. Two minutes later, Kemraj said she heard gunshots. Soon after, Smith came back to the apartment and said Sanes tried to rob him, without mentioning the shooting. During initial police questioning, Smith later denied knowledge about the shooting, and only later confessed, claiming he shot in self-defense.


 

 

Related Stories


AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed



Florida Man Hops Fence to Shoot and Kill 21-year-old in a Hoodie—Then Claims Self Defense

Tuesday, January 21, 2014

France prepares $2 billion ‘cyber war’ defense upgrade

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France prepares $2 billion ‘cyber war’ defense upgrade

Tuesday, December 31, 2013

​Privacy as last line of defense: Snowden’s revelations changed the world in 2013



Annie Machon is a former intel­li­gence officer for the UK’s MI5, who resigned in 1996 to blow the whistle. She is now a writer, public speaker and a Director of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition.




Published time: December 31, 2013 14:50

Demonstrators hold placards supporting former US intelligence analyst Edward Snowden during a protest against government surveillance on October 26, 2013 in Washington, DC. (AFP Photo / Mandel Ngan)


When asked if Edward Snowden deserves to be the Man of the Year, and I have been many times, my answer has to be a categorical, resounding, “Yes.”


Sure, it has been an eventful year and there are a lot of contenders. But the former NSA contractor Edward Snowden stands out for me for three key reasons: his personal and conscious courage, the sheer scale of his disclosures and the continuing, global impact of what he did. Purely because of his actions, we, the world’s citizens, are now able to have a discussion about the nature of our civilization and potentially call a halt to the frightening slide into a global surveillance dystopia.


For the actions of Snowden have indeed laid bare the fact that we are living in a global crisis of civilization. To date it is estimated that we have only seen about 1 percent of the documents he disclosed – the merest hint of the tip of a monstrous iceberg. What further horrors await us in 2014 and beyond?


The personal risk


First of all, there is the personal aspect. Snowden has said that he does not want to be the story, he wants the focus to remain on the information. I respect that, but it is worth reminding ourselves of the scale of sacrifice this young, just 30-year-old man has made. He had a well-paid job with a consulting firm in Hawaii servicing the US National Security Agency, good career prospects and an apparently happy relationship. All this he threw away to alert the world to the secret, illegal and dystopian surveillance system that has stealthily been smothering the world.


But Snowden faced far more than merely throwing away a comfortable professional life. Over the last few years the US government, apparently learning well from its former colonial master the UK about the art of crushing of whistleblowers, has been waging a war against what it now deems the “insider threat” – i.e. persons of conscience who speak out. President Obama has used the Espionage Act (1917) to persecute and prosecute more whistleblowers than all previous presidents in total before him.


This is indeed a “war on whistleblowers.” John Kiriakou, a former CIA officer who refused to participate in the torture program and then exposed it, it is currently languishing in prison; Thomas Drake, an earlier NSA whistleblower, was threatened with 35 years in prison; young Chelsea Manning was maltreated in prison, faced a kangaroo court, and is currently serving a 35-year sentence for the exposure of hideous war crimes against civilians in the Middle East. So the list goes on…


So not only did Edward Snowden turn his back on his career, he knew exactly the sheer scale of the legal risk he was taking when he went public, displaying bravery very much above and beyond the call of duty.


The intelligence apologists in the media have inevitably shouted “narcissism” about his brave step to out himself, rather than just leak the information anonymously. However, these establishment windbags are the real narcissists. Snowden correctly assessed that, had he not put his name to the disclosures, there would have been a witch-hunt targeting his former colleagues and he wanted to protect them. Plus, as he said in his very first public interview, he wanted to explain why he had done what he had done and what the implications were for the world.


The disclosures


The sheer scale and nature of the disclosures so far has been breathtaking, and they just keep coming. They show that a vast, subterranean surveillance state that has crept across the whole world, unknown and unchecked by the very politicians who are supposed to hold it to account. Indeed, not only have we learned that we are all under constant electronic surveillance, but these politicians are targeted too. This is a global secret state running amok and we are all now targets.


Only on Sunday, Der Spiegel reported more egregious examples of how the spies bug us: hardware hacks, computer viruses and even microwave wavelengths attacking both our computers and us. Perhaps tinfoil hats might not be such a bad idea after all….


The implications


Snowden’s disclosures have laid bare the fact that the internet has been thoroughly hacked, subverted and indeed militarized against the people. The basic freedom of privacy, enshrined in the UN Declaration of Human Rights in the immediate aftermath of the Second World War, has been destroyed.


Without free media, where we can all read, write, listen and discuss ideas freely and in privacy, we are all living in an Orwellian dystopia, and we are all potentially at risk. These media must be based on technologies that empower individual citizens, not corporations or foreign governments, and certainly not a shadowy and unaccountable secret state.


The central societal function of privacy is to create the space for citizens to resist the violation of their rights by governments and corporations. Privacy is the last line of defense historically against the most potentially dangerous organization that exists: the state.


By risking his life, Edward Snowden has allowed us all to see exactly the scale of the threat now facing us and to allow us the opportunity to resist. Every citizen on the planet owes him a debt of gratitude.


Therefore there is no ‘balance between privacy and security’ and this false dichotomy should not be part of any policy debate.


The statements, views and opinions expressed in this column are solely those of the author and do not necessarily represent those of RT.




RT – Op-Edge



​Privacy as last line of defense: Snowden’s revelations changed the world in 2013

Thursday, December 12, 2013

Congress Rushing to Approve 2014 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)


Joe Wolverton, II, J.D.
New American
December 12, 2013


The House and Senate Armed Services Committees have reached an agreement on the fiscal year 2014 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).


e706780b43ac1d9045daf15d3361e855_MAs approved by the committees, the text of the latest iteration of the bill is derived from H.R. 1960, which passed the House on June 14 by a vote of 315-108 and S. 1197, a version passed by a Senate committee by a vote of 23-3, later that same day.


House and Senate leaders hurried to hammer out a mutually acceptable measure so as to get the whole package passed before the end of the year.


Reading the mainstream (official) press, one would believe that the NDAA is nothing more nefarious than a necessary replenishing of Pentagon funds. Readers of The New American know, however, there is much more than budget issues contained in the legislation.


For two years, the NDAA included provisions that purported to authorize the president of the United States to deploy the U.S. military to apprehend and indefinitely detain any person (including an American citizen) who he believes “represent[s] an enduring security threat to the United States.”


Such an immense grant of power is not only unconscionable, but unconstitutional, as well.


Regardless of promises to the contrary made every year since 2011 by President Obama, the language of the NDAA places every citizen of the United States within the universe of potential “covered persons.” Any American could one day find himself or herself branded a “belligerent” and thus subject to the complete confiscation of his or her constitutional civil liberties and to nearly never-ending incarceration in a military prison.


Finally, there is in the NDAA for 2014 a frightening fusion of the federal government’s constant surveillance of innocent Americans and the assistance it will give to justifying the indefinite detention of anyone labeled an enemy of the regime.


Section 1071 of the version of the 2014 NDAA approved by the House and Senate committees this week expands on the scope of surveillance established by the Patriot Act and the Authorization for the Use of Military Force (AUMF).


Section 1071(a) authorizes the secretary of defense to “establish a center to be known as the ‘Conflict Records Research Center.’” According to the text of the latest version of the NDAA, the center’s task would be to compile a “digital research database including translations and to facilitate research and analysis of records captured from countries, organizations, and individuals, now or once hostile to the United States.”


In order to accomplish the center’s purpose, the secretary of defense will create an information exchange in cooperation with the director of national intelligence.


Key to the functioning of this information exchange will be the collection of “captured records.” Section 1071(g)(1), defines a captured record as “a document, audio file, video file, or other material captured during combat operations from countries, organizations, or individuals, now or once hostile to the United States.”


When read in conjunction with the provision of the AUMF that left the War on Terror open-ended and the prior NDAAs’ classification of the United States as a battleground in that unconstitutional war, and you’ve got a powerful combination that can knock out the entire Bill of Rights.


Finally, when all the foregoing is couched within the context of the revelations regarding the dragnet surveillance programs of the NSA, it becomes evident that anyone’s phone records, e-mail messages, browsing history, text messages, and social media posts could qualify as a “captured record.”


After being seized by the NSA (or some other federal surveillance apparatus), the materials would be processed by the Conflict Records Research Center created by this bill. This center’s massive database of electronic information and its collaboration with the NSA converts the United States into a constantly monitored holding cell and all its citizens and residents into suspects. All, of course, in the name of the security of the homeland.


Although the outlook is dire, there are those willing to stand and oppose the threats to liberty posed by the NDAA.


For example, libertarian icon and former presidential candidate Ron Paul recently interviewed Daphne Lee, a lady who calls herself “just a mom” but who made an impassioned speech in Nevada against the indefinite detention provisions of the 2012 NDAA. After talking to Lee, Paul announced that he would work to fight enforcement of unconstitutional provisions of the NDAA nationwide.


Additionally, the People Against the NDAA (PANDA) organization is promoting passage of anti-NDAA legislation in towns, counties, and states. On a website devoted to chronicling these efforts, PANDA lists 27 cities, 17 counties, and 25 states that have enacted or are considering bills or resolutions refusing to execute any element of the NDAA that violates the constitutionally protected liberties of its citizens.


While these bills are at various spots along the process of becoming laws, one state recently signed on to thwart the abuse of power authorized by the NDAA.


On October 1, Governor Jerry Brown announced that he had signed AB 351 into law.


The new statute, called the California Liberty Preservation Act, outlaws the participation of any agency of the state of California, any political subdivision of the state, employee of a state or local agency, or member of the California National Guard from


knowingly aiding an agency of the Armed Forces of the United States in any investigation, prosecution, or detention of a person within California pursuant to (1) Sections 1021 and 1022 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012 (NDAA), (2) the federal law known as the Authorization for Use of Military Force, enacted in 2001, or (3) any other federal law, except as specified, if the state agency, political subdivision, employee, or member of the California National Guard would violate the United States Constitution, the California Constitution, or any law of this state by providing that aid….


… knowingly using state funds and funds allocated by the state to those local entities on and after January 1, 2013, to engage in any activity that aids an agency of the Armed Forces of the United States in the detention of any person within California for purposes of implementing Sections 1021 and 1022 of the NDAA or the federal law known as the Authorization for Use of Military Force, if that activity would violate the United States Constitution, the California Constitution, or any law of this state, as specified.



Interpreted broadly, the Liberty Preservation Act would outlaw state cooperation in any federal act which violates the state or federal constitutions. Although Governor Brown almost certainly didn’t intend the provisions of the law to be applied this liberally, the black letter could arguably be used to protect citizens of California from deprivation of a wide panoply of fundamental rights, including the right to keep and bear arms.


It will be worth watching court dockets in California to see if anyone relies on this language to fight the state’s infamous disarmament statutes.


Originally sponsored by State Assemblyman Tim Donnelly, a conservative Republican (now running for governor), the bill’s senate sponsor was one of that body’s “most liberal lawmakers,” Mark Leno.


“Indefinite detention, by its very definition, means that we are abrogating, suspending, just throwing away the basic foundations of our Constitution and of our nation,” Leno said.


After being warned by some of his fellow Democrats that siding with Donnelly was tantamount to political suicide, Leno stood firm in defense of liberty. “It doesn’t matter where one finds oneself on the political spectrum,” he said. “These two sections of this national defense act are wrong, unconstitutional and never should have been included.”


Then, in November, a similar bill was introduced to the Ohio State House of Representatives by state Representatives Jim Butler and Ron Young. This concurrent resolution condemns “Section 1021 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012” and urges “the Attorney General of the State of Ohio to bring suit to challenge the constitutionality of Section 1021 of the National Defense Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012.”


While neither the California law nor the Ohio resolution is a perfect example of absolute nullification of an unconstitutional federal act, both stand as examples to other state legislatures of attempts to heed the counsel given by James Madison to states that want to resist federal consolidation of all power.


In The Federalist, no. 46, Madison recommended that an effective way to thwart federal overreach is for agents of the states to refuse “to cooperate with officers of the Union.”


In order for Fiscal Year 2014 NDAA to become the “law,” the House of Representatives must pass the bill this week and the Senate would have to follow suit by the end of next week. This gives Americans only a few short days to contact their federal representatives and senators and encourage them to reject any version of the NDAA that infringes on the timeless civil liberties protected by the Constitution.


This article was posted: Thursday, December 12, 2013 at 1:47 pm









Infowars



Congress Rushing to Approve 2014 National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA)

Sunday, December 8, 2013

Chuck Hagel Offers Troops Rare Hope On Defense Budget

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Chuck Hagel Offers Troops Rare Hope On Defense Budget

U.S. defense chief to visit Pakistan for talks with prime minister


U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel walks into a building to meet with troops at Camp Bastion, Afghanistan December 8, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Mark Wilson/Pool




Reuters: Politics



U.S. defense chief to visit Pakistan for talks with prime minister

Thursday, December 5, 2013

U.S.: China air defense zone provocative, should not be implemented


A group of disputed islands, Uotsuri island (top), Minamikojima (bottom) and Kitakojima, known as Senkaku in Japan and Diaoyu in China is seen in the East China Sea, in this photo taken by Kyodo September 2012.


Credit: Reuters/Kyodo




Reuters: Politics



U.S.: China air defense zone provocative, should not be implemented

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

U.S. court questions Google defense against Oracle over Android

U.S. court questions Google defense against Oracle over Android
http://currenteconomictrendsandnews.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/12/f18e3__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif



Google’s Android 4.3 operating system, is announced to be installed in the new Nexus 7 tablet, during a Google event at Dogpatch Studio in San Francisco, California, July 24, 2013.


Credit: Reuters/Beck Diefenbach




Reuters: Business News




Read more about U.S. court questions Google defense against Oracle over Android and other interesting subjects concerning Business at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, November 29, 2013

Chinese jets shadowed US and Japanese planes in new air defense zone


RT
November 29, 2013


Chinese fighter jets were scrambled and followed US and Japanese planes that had entered the newly-proclaimed Chinese air defense zone in the disputed area of the East China Sea, Xinhua reports.


The Chengdu J-10 was designed to be a multi-role, all-weather aircraft. Credit: Retxham via Flickr

The Chengdu J-10 was designed to be a multi-role, all-weather aircraft. Credit: Retxham via Flickr



Two US surveillance aircraft and 10 Japanese F-15 jets were ‘tailed’ by Chinese pilots on Friday.


China ordered an urgent dispatch of its Su-30 and J-10 fighter jets to an area in the East China Sea after the foreign aircraft “invaded” the air defense zone, they said.


The reported intrusions came in defiance of the East China Sea Air Defense Identification Zone (ADIZ), established by Beijing last week.


China’s move has triggered outrage from several states in the region and critical rhetoric from the US, as the vast zone covers disputed areas, including the islets claimed by both China and Japan.


Earlier on Thursday, the Chinese Air Force conducted its first air patrol flights over the zone, as Japan and South Korea sent their own military aircraft into the zone’s airspace in an act of defiance.


China has stressed its decision to enforce the airspace identification zone – which requires all aircraft flying over or near it to identify themselves – follows common international practices and “is a necessary measure in China’s exercise of self-defense rights.”


No international flights will be affected by the setup of the zone, Chinese Air Force spokesman, Shen Jinke, told Xinhua.


Japan and its US ally blasted the decision as “unacceptable” and rejected the “unilateral” declaration, saying it would create dangerous tension. However, Chinese officials gave a reminder that both countries have long had their own ADIZ, and that the Japanese never discussed theirs with their neighbor.


“If they want it revoked, then we would ask that Japan first revoke its own air defense identification zone and China will reconsider it after 44 years,” China’s Defense Ministry spokesman, Yang Yujun, said in a statement posted on the ministry’s website on Thursday.


While possible action against the zone’s infiltrators has been vaguely defined as “defensive emergency measures,” The Global Times, a Chinese state media newspaper, on Friday called for “timely countermeasures without hesitation,” should Tokyo violate the new ADIZ.


At the same time, the paper suggested China could ignore violations by some other states, including the US. Two US military B-52 bombers flew over the area on Monday without prior notice, with a Pentagon spokesman telling Reuters we “have continued to follow our normal procedures.”


This article was posted: Friday, November 29, 2013 at 2:34 pm


Tags: domestic news, foreign affairs, war










Infowars



Chinese jets shadowed US and Japanese planes in new air defense zone