Showing posts with label impact. Show all posts
Showing posts with label impact. Show all posts

Thursday, April 3, 2014

Cave-Dwelling Hermit Tribe Discovered In Fort Bragg Impact Area

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Cave-Dwelling Hermit Tribe Discovered In Fort Bragg Impact Area

Tuesday, April 1, 2014

Carbon Delirium: The Last Stage of Fossil-Fuel Addiction and Its Hazardous Impact on American Foreign Policy

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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Carbon Delirium: The Last Stage of Fossil-Fuel Addiction and Its Hazardous Impact on American Foreign Policy

Friday, November 22, 2013

Typhoon Unlikely to Have Long-Term Impact on Philippines Outsourcing Industry

Typhoon Unlikely to Have Long-Term Impact on Philippines Outsourcing Industry
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/c8433__p-89EKCgBk8MZdE.gif





CIO – As the total impact of Typhoon Haiyan on the Philippines becomes clear and rescue and aid work continues, it appears that
the country’s flourishing IT and business process outsourcing industry emerged largely unscathed.


“In the outsourcing industry, the main issues are not loss of life or property damage. The main issues are absenteeism due
to family issues or volunteer work and also intermittent power grid issues.” – Frances Karamouzis, Research Vice President, Gartner


Manila, which for around 65 percent of the nation’s $ 16 billion IT and customer management business, was largely unaffected
by the killer storm. The typhoon, which ripped across the country on November 8, killed more than 5,000 people, according
to the United Nations, and displaced more than three million.


“In some cases, recovery may never take place because they have been all but wiped out,” says Jerry Durant, a partner with
outsourcing consultancy NeoGroup based in Manila. “But this has zero impact on sourcing as it presently stands.”


The Impact on Outsourcing


“In the outsourcing industry, the main issues are not loss of life or property damage,” says Frances Karamouzis, research
vice president at Gartner. “The main issues are absenteeism due to family issues or volunteer work and also intermittent power
grid issues.”


Cebu, the second largest outsourcing hub accounting for around 15 percent of industry revenues, was closer to the path of
the storm, taking an indirect hit. The city and surrounding area employs 95,000 people in outsourcing, according to the Cebu
Investment Promotion Center with the 17 new outsourcing offices opened there in the last year generating 11,000 new jobs.


Some of the major providers, such as Teleperformance, Convergys, and Aegis have indicated that they have no damages to facilities and the large majority of employees are safe.


Cognizant, which also has a Cebu facility, said it had no loss of life or major issues. But “there [has been] employee absenteeism
as people are understandably checking on family and helping with relief efforts,” says Karamouzis.


In addition, employees are impacted on a psychological level as they have personal ties to affected areas, says Durant.


Accenture and Country’s Trade Group Need to Speak Up


The industry employs about 750,000 professionals in IT and business process outsourcing and is led by 10 to 15 very large
vendors (including IBM, Cognizant, Capgemini, Dell, HCL, Genpact, WNS, Infosy, and EXL) and dozens of mid-tier providers.
The biggest player is Accenture, which Gartner estimates employs around 35,000 people there.


But neither Accenture nor the country’s industry trade group, the Business Processing Association of the Philippines (BPAP), has issued a public statement or regular updates on the effects of the storm that has left clients in the dark.


“This is a sign of immature approach to the current realities of this world of information, social media, et cetera,” says
Karamouzis, who said officials at the BPAP indicated to her that they don’t feel the storm will have a long-term impact on
the industry.




Netflash




Read more about Typhoon Unlikely to Have Long-Term Impact on Philippines Outsourcing Industry and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Grid EX II and the Impact Of An EMP Attack On America

Dave Hodges
Activist Post


The following material is grim, very grim. Let me get the dramatics out of the way in the very beginning. If a nation-wide EMP attack ever takes place in America, given our present level of preparedness, it will prove to be the most cataclysmic event in human history.


This is an article that I did not want to write. However, it is an article which represents completely known information but is normally not available outside academic and government-sponsored conferences. I have synthesized and simplified much of the research in the hope of making the material understandable and useful to the general public.


Many authors who would write such an article would be immediately accused of fear-mongering. In this instance, I believe there is much to fear. Short of a 3-mile-wide asteroid landing in the ocean, I cannot think of a more devastating event than an EMP attack. If anything, the scenarios I present are on the very conservative side.


I strongly concur with my Congressman, Trent Franks, that an EMP attack is the most devastating event that our country could ever face. Congressman Franks represents a small group of Congressmen who have desperately been trying to attract attention to the possibility that a nation-wide EMP attack would prove more devastating than if a dozen of our cities were to be hit by a nuclear attack. America could mostly recover from the latter, but there might not be any recovery from a nationwide EMP attack.


This article is not an inventory of all things that could go wrong following an EMP attack, it is a cross-section. Suffice it to say that there would be nobody who would be left untouched by an EMP attack.


Our Power Grid Is Very Vulnerable


Our power grid is susceptible to hurricanes, flooding, lightning strikes and Coronal Mass Ejections (CME). The grid is also vulnerable to Electromagnetic Pulse (EMP). Dr. John Casti, author of the book, X Events The Collapse of Everything states that EMP is only something that we have known about since the 1950s when the United States detonated nuclear weapons in above-ground testing in the South Pacific. When one sets off a nuclear weapon, a pulse is emitted which “short circuits” all electronics and permanently damages them.




In 2010, an executive summary from the Federal Energy and Regulatory Commission, warned that an EMP would destroy the power grid or, at minimum, would seriously damage it. The most malicious threat would be a High Altitude Electromagnetic Pulse (HEMP). A HEMP attack would have a devastating impact on all the normal channels of government coordination and communication, including intelligence and data gathering assets, and nuclear forensics. Indeed, with a severe societal breakdown, the basic continuity of government agencies would be at risk. Under such circumstances, it is judged unlikely that the source of a HEMP attack, given even a minimal attempt to disguise it, would ever be known.


Our constitutional freedoms and liberties as well as our 300 million handguns would prove to be an effective deterrent against an occupying force.


If the globalists desire totally to collapse the resistance of America an EMP/HEMP would be an excellent method to eliminate the American civilian threat. The cap-and-trade extreme environmentalists would jump for joy because all industrial activity would be immediately halted.


In two years following an EMP attack, with the majority of people dead (see below), there would be no opposition to a Chinese/Russian military occupation for the remaining populace.


You say that you don’t believe that this will happen? Then explain to me why the Russians and the Chinese are being allowed to participate in Grid EX II (see the previous article)? Until this question can be satisfactorily answered, then we must view their presence on our soil as provocative to say the least.


Adding to the likelihood that an EMP would be used to subdue this country is the fact that United States military system is protected against EMP, whileAmerican businesses and the general public are not. Therefore, critical infrastructure controlled by the globalists could survive as the rest of us fight for our survival.


The Most Devastating Delivery Method of a HEMP


Most experts agree that the most effective delivery method for a nation-wide EMP, or HEMP attack would be the Club-K Container Missile System. In its advertised versions, it is designed for launching four or six cruise missiles, it could obviously be converted for a long-range ballistic missile. A Scud-D ballistic missile would fit quite easily into this container as well. These delivery devices would be readily available on the open market and a cargo ship could be rigged to launch such missiles.


I have publicly heard Congressman Trent Franks speak to the fact that ah EMP attack would likely consist of two high-altitude nuclear explosions over the mid-continental United States. The resulting EMP, or HEMP to be more accurate, would take out the power grid.


Grid EX II


I emphatically stated in my last article that I do not believe that the November 13-14 Grid EX II drill will produce an EMP event. I want to emphasize that it is not likely that a false flag EMP attack will occur this week as part of the Grid EX II drill. However, it is highly likely that such an attack will take place in our future. Remember, outgoing DHS director, Janet Napolitano, stated in her August 2013 farewell address that it is not a matter of if but when such an attack will occur.


Even if the attack did not take the form a false flag attack, Russia, China and North Korea all possess devastating EMP capabilities. Russia is considered the leader in EMP weapons technology.


I want to emphatically reiterate that I am highly concerned about the presence of two nations, who have both threatened to nuke the United States in the past two years, and the fact that they are being allowed to participate in the simulated take-down drill involving our power grid. Treason or insanity? You decide.


The reasons that I do not think that we will see a false flag event, despite the fact that this event is unfolding like so many false flag events of the past (e.g. 9/11, 7/7 London bombings and the Boston Marathon bombing), is due to the fact that the bad guys are not ready. The military’s leadership has not been sufficiently purged and Obama needs more time to complete an absolute takeover of the American military from a leadership standpoint. Secondly, the martial law troops consisting of the Russians and Chinese, both a part of Grid EX II, need to be trained how to carry their roles on American soil.


I do believe that it is likely that we will see sporadic power outages in isolated portions of the country as a part of a beta test. However, just like the EBT beta test a few weeks ago, the event should not last very long; and if you are unlucky enough to get caught in the in the wrong place at the wrong time, don’t panic.


Just like the Boston Marathon bombing, the Grid EX II is a dress rehearsal for the event and the subsequent martial law enforcement from the Chinese and Russian troops which are participating in the drill.


A Cross-Section of Effects of A HEMP


Nearly all of the commercial sector is not protected. Most data backups of commercial systems are protected from just about every other threat, but not protected against EMP; and most data backups are located within the area likely to be affected by the EMP attack. Computer systems and the information they contain are especially vulnerable. As Max says in the narration in the first episode of the old Dark Angel television series, “ . . . the electromagnetic pulse turned all the one and zeros into plain old zeros . . .”


An EMP attack would literally send thousands of small and mid-sized businesses in the United States into bankruptcy in less than a millisecond. Other than your printed statements, the banks would have no records of your ledger sheet.


Education


Education records would be destroyed and only hard copies of transcripts would serve as the remnants of an extinct system. If there is a silver-lining, at least Common Core would stop wreaking its havoc on American students before the damage was too widespread.


Hospitals


America would see catastrophic conditions immediately take place in our hospitals and convalescent centers. Within a few days, old age homes would lack the resources and services of the staff to help preserve the lives of those who are virtually helpless. Patients on the operating table would stand a good chance of not surviving. Hospital back-up generating systems would be rendered unusable. Food and water would become a scarce resource. Many hospital personnel would walk off the job by the beginning of the third day. The only medical personnel that would stay would be those that live too far away from home to walk. People would not be able to get their life-sustaining medications and services, most of which are electrically powered. Our worst fears would be realized.


Transportation


In one of the most dramatic effects, airplanes would fall from the skies. Untold thousands of people would immediately plunged to their death. And their deaths might be considered merciful compared to the fate that the majority of the rest of us would face over the next two years. Most automobiles will not work unless they have all pre-electrical parts. Even then, how long would gasoline be available? Many people on the various subways, would be hopelessly trapped depending on the time that an electromagnetic pulse would be released. And we can all be sure, that the release of an EMP, through false flag planning, would occur at the optimal time to ensure the maximum loss of life.


Schools and Children


One of the most tragic developments arising from an EMP attack with the fate of schoolchildren geographically isolated from their parents who have already commuted to work. Reuniting parents and their children would be next to impossible for the majority of Americans who have a 30-minute commute or more to work (20 miles). In an earlier article this year, I identified and detailed the questionnaire which went out to all school personnel which was inventorying staff school sets such as law enforcement experience, construction as well electrical and engineering talents. Sounds like a strange set of skills to be surveying at our public schools. What do the originators of this document know that they rest of us should?


If you were a teacher, how long would you stay on the job and ignore the welfare of your family?


Getting home and reuniting with family will be problematic.


Communications


Your cell phones, your land lines, text, Twitter, emails and faxes will not work. Nearly all broadcast stations, especially television stations, would go off the air. Due to the high level of computerized automation, the equipment in most radio and television studios would be so completely destroyed that most commercial stations would be damaged beyond repair. Radio studios are actually more vulnerable to permanent damage than many portable radio receivers. When America emerges from the event, the NSA police state surveillance grid would be permanently in place for the extreme martial law dictatorship that will follow.


According to a statement of Damon Penn, a DHS official, made to a committee of the U.S. House of Representatives on July 8, 2011, a limited number of critical radio stations are being retrofitted with some EMP protection. However, most of us will be without the benefit of mass communication. Smoke signals anyone?


Somewhere between 250,000 to 500,000 people will die in the first few minutes. Perhaps as many as 1-2 million would be dead within three days.


Water-Borne Diseases


The greatest threat to human survival, in the aftermath of a HEMP, would be the public’s ability to obtain clean drinking water. This access would be greatly imperiled.


In 2010, when Haiti was hit by a major earthquake which killed over 200,000 people, the misery did not stop with the survivors. Six weeks following the earthquake, Haiti announced its first cholera outbreak in over a century. The cholera outbreak went on to claim 8,000 more lives. The disease thrives in places where there is insufficient water treatment, poor sanitation and inadequate hygiene. This is what precisely would happen in most areas following an EMP attack.


Keeping drinking water clean and separate from human sewage and other contaminants would prove to be humanity’s biggest challenge. Cholera would also prove to be the biggest threat to long-term survival. It is likely that in the 24 months following the event, that most people would succumb to cholera and other water-borne diseases.


Cholera is a horrible disease which grants its victims a very painful and agonizing death. In the 20th century, the human lifespan in United States increased by 35 years. Thirty of those 35 years was due to improvements in sanitation. Following an EMP attack, effective sanitation would all but disappear.


Access to Water


Human beings require approximately 2 liters of water per day in order to survive. If we do not get that water, we will die in approximately 5 days. With regard to a HEMP attack, our water supplies are especially vulnerable. The power to distribute water is highly concentrated within the United States. Only eight municipalities provide 82% of the drinking water in the United States.


There are multiple technologies which are used to pump water from the source to its final destination. Some require no electricity; however, most do. And even if your water system was powered by non-electrical means, how would the personnel and staff, who monitors and maintains your water supply, get to work without proper transportation?


In all of Southern California, the water must make its way over mountains. What will happen when all electricity is gone? The resulting casualty rates stemming from civil disorder and death due to lack of water would be unimaginable.


In a time of a HEMP attack, the availability of water, as well as the safety of water would come into question for the vast majority of Americans. The availability of clean water supplies would be the most critical threat and would claim the most victims.


These grim possibilities makes one wonder why T. Boone Pickens is buying up the Ogallala reservoir. What does he know that the rest of should know?


Food


The food supply would be imperiled as well. What do crops need to grow? With hydroelectric power gone, where would the water come from for many food-growing regions in the country? Our food supplies would dry up and disappear, thus exacerbating the threat.


Most people will perish within 30 days of famine, thus making water shortages the greatest threat to survival.


Social Chaos


Survivors would undoubtedly form collectives to forcefully procure food and water. The levels of violence would be horrific. Yet, I was unable to locate any government or academic documents which attempted to project how bad it will get. It is safe to say that it will be a waste of time to call 911 and that every person would be under threat of attack 24/7/365.


How Bad Will It Get?


Sociologists tell us that there are five levels of societal development.

  1. Nomadic Hunting and Gathering

  2. Horticulture and Pastoral

  3. Agriculture

  4. Industrial

  5. Post-industrial.

Much of America is entering into the Post-Industrial phase. An EMP attack would reduce most Americans to a violent existence in the first stage: Nomadic Hunting and Gathering. Without easy access to water, most would not be able to maintain a Horticulture and Pastoral society for long. And those who did would face dire threats from those seeking resources. This would make the death curve for the elderly and the infirm skyrocket. Child mortality would be dramatically rise. I am not predicting a return to 10,000 Years BC. However, a pre-Revolutionary War existence would largely be out of reach because of the lack of obtainable clean water. Water is the organizing foundation for any society. Society, as we know it, would collapse.


Conclusion


I have read the Naval War College projections which tell us that within two years of the event, 90% of all Americans would be dead. In the video below, Congressman Franks predicts a 60% mortality rate. The fact remains that nobody know for certain how many of us would perish. However, it is safe to say that most of us would.


In a future article, I will prepare a short list of things that I think all of us, even those with limited budgets, can be doing to prepare.


I will close the most grim article that I have written with the words of Congressman Trent Franks who at the seven-minute mark tells us his view of the expected casualty rates following an EMP attack.



Dave is an award winning psychology, statistics and research professor, a college basketball coach, a mental health counselor, a political activist and writer who has published dozens of editorials and articles in several publications such as Freedoms Phoenix, News With Views and The Arizona Republic.


The Common Sense Show features a wide variety of important topics that range from the loss of constitutional liberties, to the subsequent implementation of a police state under world governance, to exploring the limits of human potential. The primary purpose of The Common Sense Show is to provide Americans with the tools necessary to reclaim both our individual and national sovereignty.





Activist Post



Grid EX II and the Impact Of An EMP Attack On America

Grid EX II and the Impact Of An EMP Attack On America

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Grid EX II and the Impact Of An EMP Attack On America

Saturday, June 15, 2013

AP IMPACT: Snowden"s life surrounded by spycraft








This photo provided by The Guardian Newspaper in London shows Edward Snowden, who worked as a contract employee at the National Security Agency, in Hong Kong, Sunday, June 9, 2013. The man who told the world about the U.S. government’s gigantic data grab also talked a lot about himself. Mostly through his own words, a picture of Edward Snowden is emerging: fresh-faced computer whiz, high school and Army dropout, independent thinker, trustee of official secrets. And leaker on the lam. (AP Photo/The Guardian) MANDATORY CREDIT





This photo provided by The Guardian Newspaper in London shows Edward Snowden, who worked as a contract employee at the National Security Agency, in Hong Kong, Sunday, June 9, 2013. The man who told the world about the U.S. government’s gigantic data grab also talked a lot about himself. Mostly through his own words, a picture of Edward Snowden is emerging: fresh-faced computer whiz, high school and Army dropout, independent thinker, trustee of official secrets. And leaker on the lam. (AP Photo/The Guardian) MANDATORY CREDIT





FILE – This Sept. 19, 2007, file photo, shows the National Security Agency building at Fort Meade, Md. The government is secretly collecting the telephone records of millions of U.S. customers of Verizon under a top-secret court order, according to the Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Cailf., chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee. The Obama administration is defending the National Security Agency’s need to collect such records, but critics are calling it a huge over-reach. (AP Photo/Charles Dharapak, File)





A real estate sign stands in front of a home in Waipahu, Hawaii, Sunday, June 9, 2013, where Edward Snowden, source of disclosures about the U.S. government’s secret surveillance programs, lived with his girlfriend until recently. A Hawaii real estate agent says Snowden and his girlfriend moved out of the home near Honolulu on May 1, leaving nothing behind. (AP Photo/Anita Hofschneider)













Buy AP Photo Reprints







FORT MEADE, Md. (AP) — In the suburbs edged by woods midway between Baltimore and the nation’s capital, residents long joked that the government spy shop next door was so ultra-secretive its initials stood for “No Such Agency.” But when Edward Snowden grew up here, the National Security Agency’s looming presence was both a very visible and accepted part of everyday life.


When Snowden —the 29-year-old intelligence contractor whose leak of top-secret documents has exposed sweeping government surveillance programs — went to Arundel High School, the agency regularly sent employees from its nearby black-glass headquarters to tutor struggling math students.


When Snowden went on to Anne Arundel Community College in the spring of 1999 after leaving high school halfway through his sophomore year, he arrived on a campus developing a specialty in cybersecurity training for future employees of the NSA and Department of Defense, though, according to the records, he never took such a class.


And when Snowden joined friends in his late teens to edit a website built around a shared interest in Japanese animation, they chartered the venture from an apartment in military housing at Fort George G. Meade, the 8-square-mile installation that houses the NSA center dubbed the Puzzle Palace and calls itself the “nation’s pre-eminent center for information, intelligence and cyber.”


In this setting, it’s easy to see how the young Snowden was exposed to the notion of spycraft as a career, first with the Central Intelligence Agency and later as a systems analyst for two companies under contract to the NSA. But details of his early life — in the agency’s shadows and with both parents working for other branches of the federal government — only magnify the contradictions inherent in Snowden’s decision to become a leaker.


What, after all, did he think he was getting into when he signed up to work for the nation’s espionage agencies? And what specifically triggered a “crisis of conscience” — as described by a friend who knew him when he worked for the CIA — so profound that it convinced him to betray the secrets he was sworn to keep?


The latter is a question that even Snowden, in interviews since his disclosures, has answered piecemeal, describing his decisions as the same ones any thoughtful person would make if put in his position.


“I’m no different from anybody else,” he said in a video interview with The Guardian, seated with his back to a mirror in what appears to be a Hong Kong hotel room, the tropical sunlight filtering through a curtained window. “I don’t have special skills. I’m just another guy who sits there day to day in the office, watches what’s happening and goes: This is not our place to decide. The public needs to decide whether these programs and policies are right or wrong.”


Posts to online blogs and forums, public records and interviews with Snowden’s neighbors, teachers and acquaintances reveal someone who prized the American ideal of personal freedom but became disenchanted with the way government secretly operates in the name of national security.


Those who knew him describe him as introspective, but seem puzzled by where the mindset led him.


“He’s very nice, shy, reserved,” Jonathan Mills, the father of Snowden’s longtime girlfriend, told The Associated Press outside his home in Laurel, Md. “He’s always had strong convictions of right and wrong, and it kind of makes sense, but still, a shock.”


Snowden, who was born in 1983, spent his early years in Elizabeth City, N.C., before his family moved to the Maryland suburbs when he was 9. His father, Lonnie, was a warrant officer for the U.S. Coast Guard, since retired. His mother, Elizabeth, who goes by Wendy, went to work for the U.S. District Court in Maryland in 1998 and is now its chief deputy of administration and information technology. An older sister, Jessica, is a lawyer working as a research associate for the Federal Judicial Center in Washington, according to LinkedIn.


In the suburbs south of Baltimore, the younger Snowden attended public elementary and middle schools in Crofton. In the fall of 1997, he enrolled at Arundel High School, a four-year school with about 2,000 students.


At all three schools, many parents worked for the military, nearby federal agencies and the contractors serving them. But those employed at the NSA were tight-lipped, said Jerud Ryker, a math teacher who retired from Arundel in 1998. He recounted conversations over the years with people who mentioned they worked for the spy agency.


“Oh, what do you do?” Ryker says he asked. The answer was always the same: “Nothing that I can talk about.”


At Arundel, Snowden stayed only through the first half of his sophomore year, a school district spokesman said. Former teachers and classmates interviewed in the days since he surfaced as the leaker said they had no recollection of him.


It’s not clear why he left. Four years later, in a post Snowden wrote for the anime website jokingly explaining his irritation with cartoon convention volunteers, he wrote: “I really am a nice guy, though. You see, I act arrogant and cruel because I was not hugged enough as a child, and because the public education system turned its wretched, spiked back on me.”


Years later, he “made a big deal of it (failing to finish high school), just in our everyday conversations,” Mavanee Anderson, who met Snowden when they worked together in Switzerland in 2007, said in an interview with MSNBC. “I think he was slightly embarrassed by it.”


With high school behind him, Snowden registered at the community college, taking for-credit classes from 1999 to 2001 and again from 2003 to 2005, as well as some non-credit classes in between, spokeswoman Laurie Farrell said. Snowden told friends and reporters that he later earned a high school GED certificate.


In 2001, Snowden’s parents divorced and his father moved to Pennsylvania. The next year his mother bought a gray clapboard-sided condominium in nearby Ellicott City, Md., and her son, then 19, moved in by himself. His mother dropped by with groceries from time to time and a girlfriend visited on weekends, said Joyce Kinsey, a neighbor who lives across the street from the unit, where Snowden’s mother now resides.


Otherwise, Snowden appeared most often by himself, said Kinsey, who recalled seeing him working on a computer through the open blinds “at all times of the day and night,” a period that coincided with his work on the anime venture, Ryuhana Press.


During this same time, it appears Snowden became a prolific participant in a technology blog, Arstechnica, under the pseudonym TheTrueHOOHA, posting more than 750 comments between late 2001 and mid-2012. In 2002, he posted a query asking for advice about getting an information technology job in Japan and mentioned he was studying Japanese. Later he argued that by pirating poorly made software he was justly punishing companies for their ineptitude.


But he also touched on questions of security and privacy.


In one October 2003 thread, he asked so many questions about how to hide the identity of his computer server that another discussion participant asked why he was being so paranoid.


Snowden’s answer: “Patriot Act. If they misinterpret that actions I perform, I could be a cyb4r terrorist and that would be very … bad.”


In another post that fall, he mulled the politics of personal identity.


“This is entirely dependent on the individual — as is the definition of freedom. Freedom isn’t a word the can be (pardon) freely defined,” he wrote. “The saying goes, ‘Live free or die,’ I believe. That seems to intimate a conditional dependence on freedom as a requirement for happiness.”


In that discussion, Snowden mentioned that he had identified himself as a Buddhist in paperwork he filled out for the Army. And in May 2004, he enlisted, with aspirations of becoming a Green Beret.


“I wanted to fight in the Iraq war because I felt like I had an obligation as a human being to help free people from oppression,” he told The Guardian. “Most of the people training us seemed pumped up about killing Arabs, not helping anyone.”


Snowden reported to Fort Benning, Ga., in June 2004, where “he attempted to qualify to become a special forces soldier but did not complete the requisite training and was administratively discharged,” said an Army spokesman, Col. David H. Patterson Jr.


Snowden left the Army at the end of that September. He mentioned on the tech forum that he was discharged after breaking both legs in accident, a detail the Army could not confirm.


He returned home, enrolling again in classes at the community college and working through most of 2005 as a security guard at the University of Maryland’s Center for Advanced Study of Language, a mile off campus. The center, affiliated with the Department of Defense, says on its LinkedIn page that it was founded after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to help the intelligence community improve language preparedness. But a university spokesman said the center’s work is not classified.


When he went public with his decision to leak the NSA’s documents, Snowden told interviewers that he studied at Maryland, Johns Hopkins University and the University of Liverpool.


A Maryland spokesman, Crystal Brown, said Snowden did not take classes at the school’s flagship campus. However, Robert Ludwig, a spokesman for the University of Maryland University College, which offers classes online and at military bases, said Snowden registered for one term in its Asia Division in the summer of 2009, but did not earn a certificate or degree.


Johns Hopkins said it had no record of Snowden taking classes. The only possibility, the school said, is that he might have enrolled at a private, for-profit entity that offered career training under the name Computer Career Institute at Johns Hopkins University. The university said it ended its relationship with the training school in 2009 and it had since shut down, making it impossible to check any records.


Liverpool said in a statement that Snowden had registered for an online masters’ program in computer security in 2011, but never completed it.


Snowden has said that he was hired by the CIA to work on information technology security and in 2007 was assigned by the agency to work in Geneva, Switzerland. Anderson, Snowden’s friend at the time, made the same assertion.


The Swiss foreign ministry confirmed that Snowden lived and worked in Geneva, where it says he was accredited to the United Nations as a U.S. Mission employee from March 2007 to February 2009.


Snowden appears to have been well-known among U.S. staff in Geneva, though none of those contacted by the AP would comment about him. But Anderson, who met Snowden when she spent part of 2007 as a legal intern at the mission, said many others can’t speak out in his defense, for fear of losing their jobs. In both the cable TV interview and an op-ed piece for Tennessee’s Chattanooga Times Free Press, she recalled him fondly as very intelligent — and increasingly troubled about his work.


“During that time period he did quit the CIA, so I knew that he was having a crisis of conscience of sorts,” Anderson said in the TV interview. “But I am still surprised, even shocked. He never gave me any indication that he would reveal anything that was top secret.” She could not be reached for additional comment.


Snowden told The Guardian he was discouraged by an incident in which he claimed CIA agents tried to recruit a Swiss banker to provide secret information. They purposely got him drunk, Snowden said, and when he was arrested for driving while intoxicated, an agent offered to help as a way to forge a bond.


“Much of what I saw in Geneva really disillusioned me about how my government functions and what its impact is in the world,” he said.


Snowden has said he left the embassy to take a job with private contractors for the NSA — first with Dell, the computer company.


That work appears to have taken him to multiple locations. Public records show Snowden had a mailing address with the U.S. military in Asia, and he has said that he worked at an NSA installation on a U.S. military base in Japan. His girlfriend, Lindsay Mills, wrote on her blog that the two had fallen in love with Japanese street festivals.


By then, Snowden and Mills — who was raised in Laurel, Md., on the opposite side of Fort Meade from where Snowden grew up — had long been a couple, albeit a study in contrasts. The 28-year-old Mills, who earned a bachelor’s degree in fine arts from the Maryland Institute College of Art, styles herself a performer, frequently posting carefully composed photos to a blog and Facebook page, many of them showing her scantily clad, pole dancing and doing acrobatics.


A friend of Mills from Laurel High School, Erin Shaw, said that back then Mills was a creative spirit, notable in the photography work they did together on the school newspaper, The Shield. But she also was relatively quiet, making it a surprise that she ended up comfortable as a performer, rather than in an arts-related job behind the camera or backstage, Shaw said.


“Lindsay is a wonderful, sweet, caring person who is artistic and beautiful,” Shaw said, speaking in the midst of a move from Texas to California. “The idea of caring about state secrets does not occur to me that is anything she would be part of or care about.”


After Japan, Snowden’s work took him back to Maryland. In March 2012, he listed an address in Columbia when he made a donation to Rep. Ron Paul’s campaign for president. But when he made another contribution to the campaign two months later, Snowden listed an address in Hawaii. Mills, his girlfriend, joined him in Hawaii in June of last year, and they settled into a rented blue house on a corner lot fringed with palmettos.


Neighbors said the couple were pleasant, quiet and kept to themselves.


Angel Cunanan, a 79-year-old doctor who lives next door, said he would wave to them and say hello in the morning.


“Sometimes I said, ‘Why don’t you come in for a cup of coffee?’ But they never did,” Cunanan said. Cunanan says Snowden said he worked for the military.


Another neighbor, Carolyn Tijing, said the couple always left the blinds closed and stacked the garage from floor to ceiling with moving boxes, so high they blocked any view inside.


Mills’ online posts hint at a happy home life in Hawaii together: pictures of sunsets, time on the beach and his-and-hers cups of Japanese shaved ice.


But by January of this year, Snowden secretly was edging forward with a plan to leak NSA documents, contacting documentary filmmaker Laura Poitras with an anonymous offer to share information on U.S. intelligence. The following month he contacted Glenn Greenwald, an American living in Brazil who writes on surveillance issues for The Guardian, as well as Barton Gellman, a reporter for The Washington Post.


In March, Snowden switched employers, moving to contractor Booz Allen Hamilton in Hawaii. The company confirmed he was employee for less than three months, at an annual salary of $ 122,000.


Snowden and Mills prepared for a May 1 move a couple of blocks away, because the owner of the rental wanted to put it up for sale.


“E and I received the keys to our next abode yesterday,” Mills wrote on her blog on April 15. “We took time to envision what each room could look like once we crammed our things in them. And even discussed hanging silks in the two-story main room.”


Mills headed back to the East Coast for a visit and when she returned to Hawaii, she wrote, Snowden unexpectedly told her he, too, needed to get away; he told his employer that he needed some time off for medical treatment. On May 20, Snowden flew to Hong Kong.


Three weeks later, as intelligence officials raced to control the damage from the NSA leaks, Snowden revealed himself as the person responsible.


“When you’re in positions of privileged access,” Snowden told The Guardian, “you see things that may be disturbing…until eventually you realize that these things need to be determined by the public — not by somebody who is simply hired by the government.”


___


Geller reported from New York. AP writers Oskar Garcia and Anita Hofschneider in Hawaii; John Heilprin in Geneva; Kimberly Dozier, Jack Gillum and Jessica Gresko in Washington, D.C.; Emery Dalesio in Raleigh, N.C.; Brock Vergakis in Elizabeth City, N.C.; Sylvia Hui in London; and AP researchers Judith Ausuebel, Rhonda Shafner and Monika Mathur in New York contributed to this story. Geller can be reached at features @ ap.org. Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/AdGeller


The AP National Investigative Team can be reached at investigate@ap.org


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