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Friday, 23 August 2013

Bold and Daring: The Way Progressive News Should Be
  • Marcy Wheeler/Empty Wheel; The Really Bad Committee Obama is Creating To Review NSA Policy
  • The Confidential Memo at the Heart of the Global Financial Crisis
  • Snowden: UK Government Now Leaking Documents About Itself
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an in depth discussion of Obama's creation of a committee to purportedly review surveillance policies-- but that's really designed to make us more comfortable with them continuing doing what they have been doing. Her article about Cass Sunstein, the guy who advocated for using sock puppets to confuse and disrupt online Conspiracy Theory discussions.

Blowing the lid off of the conspiracy to impoverish the world.

This is the first time the Independent has published any revelations purportedly from the NSA documents, and it's the type of disclosure which journalists working directly with NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden have thus far avoided. That leads to the obvious question: who is the source for this disclosure? Snowden this morning said he wants it to be clear that he was not the source for the Independent.

By Julian Gresser, Esq.
FUKUSHIMA: A Blueprint for Action by Julian Gresser Esq.
The escalating danger of the nuclear disaster at Fukushima requires bold innovation. The author offers a method of quickly assembling the best minds in the world to solve its many problems.
Greg has uncovered a bombshell memo that shows how vile Larry Summers is. His article gives the details. This interview covers what's in the memo and then expands to give background on the roots and top levels of one of the most malevolent conspiracies in the world.

Imagine the Congolese poet's shock and fear when she received a letter from "SECO" demanding to know about her "relationship" with the M23 rebel leader Colonel Sultani Makenga. Her crime? She wrote a poem in an ethnic language and posted it on her Facebook Page.

More than 1000 acres found to have been planted with genetically altered maize crops have been destroyed in Hungary. Standing up to the biotech giants of Monsanto, Dow, and BASF, the country has boldly banned GMO seed.

Once a government watchdog fooled the media about another Fannie and Freddie "scandal," others ran with it.

Corporate profits at all-time highs, CEO's salaries and bonuses skyrocketing; at the same time millions of unemployed Americans are barely surviving and this nation's economy remains stagnant and lifeless. How much longer can such a conflicted condition continue until this entire House of Cards collapses?

Wednesday's sentencing marks one of the most important watersheds in U.S. history. It marks the day when the state formally declared that all who name and expose its crimes will become political prisoners or be forced, like Edward Snowden, and perhaps Glenn Greenwald, to spend the rest of their lives in exile. Our nation has become a vast penal colony.

my first day checking it out, with more info from wikipedia on the new Aljazeera America

This is my second column discussing Federal Reserve (Fed) regulation in the context of the question of who President Obama should appoint to be Ben Bernanke's successor. This column focuses on the sudden discovery by economists (and, purportedly, Obama) that the Fed Chair's most important function is to regulate. (If that sounds like common sense to you, (1) you are not an orthodox economist and (2) you do not understand the Fed's culture.) This column begins the process of explaining why most of the economists and finance scholars (Robert Prasch is the exception) writing to urge that the new Fed Chair be chosen based on their regulatory skills demonstrate that they lack any understanding of the fundamentals of financial crises and supervision (and aiding prosecutions). This column begins my response to Amar Bhide's op ed entitled "Wanted: A Boring Leader for the Fed."

By Paul Sedkowski
Legislation Intoxication
We're drowning in laws. Up to 160,000 new ones swamping us each year in the US alone. Who's responsible? Why do we put up with it? What's the solution? This article is an attempt to answer these questions.

There is a once in a lifetime opportunity to get your OWN local radio station - but almost nobody knows about it. There are fewer than 70 days left to apply - so who will step up to the microphones?

A huge part of our economy is invisible, invaluable, and under siege. "The commons" is a term that denotes everything we share as opposed to own privately. Some parts of the commons are gifts of nature: the air and oceans, the web of species, wilderness, and watersheds. Others are the product of human creativity and endeavor: sidewalks and public squares, the Internet, our languages, cultures, technologies, and infrastructure.

The editor-in-chief of Utne Reader said " YES! Magazine's message of hope and optimism is both inspiring and essential in these uncertain times." I think he summed it up well. Helping people to see how we can make our way through these turbulent times to something better is an urgent task. Sometimes at YES! we say that "no" is a losing strategy. You can't resist the old; you must build the new. That's what we spotlight.

Does the media have to be owned by megalithic corporations? Or do sites such as Oped and documentary films made by producers like Peter Charles Downy have a chance? Downy's latest release is "United Natures" which comes on the heals of his "Anima Mundi."

Were the Sixties just on "pause" for a few years?

Right groups slammed the move on the part of London police, which used Britain's controversial anti-terrorism legislation to apprehend Miranda. UK officials, meanwhile, attempted to justify the detention of Miranda on the grounds that he was believed to be carrying classified information that could aid terrorists.

our national security system's definition of "terrorism" has become so broad that it apparently now includes lawful and peaceful protests by citizens exercising their constitutional freedoms of speech and assembly. That seems like a sign of totalitarian behavior. But it's also a sign of fear. A mobilized public can change the world at any moment. Those who oppose your cause know that.

You can now add "spymaster" to Amazon CEO Jeff Bezos's various titles.On June 14, a US GAO report elaborated on previous reports that Amazon had won a $600 million contract to build a "private cloud" for the CIA. (The GAO report was generated when IBM, which had been competing for the contract, protested that it had lost unfairly.)Just look at the two key players in spying on democracy in Boghosian's book title: government surveillance and corporate power. In Bezos's purchase of the Washington Post,you have the critical mass combination.And that's not to mention the potential for combining intelligence surveillance, customer buying habits and marketing information, and news preferences.Those who argue that Bezos is socially progressive on issues such as gay marriage and therefore will be a positive influence on the Post forget that President Obama is socially progressive, but

Environmentalists today marched in Washington, DC, to the Department of the Interior to Protest against Fracking

By Bob Alexander
Happy Anniversary To Us!
A health care system designed to make a profit from pain and sickness is a health care system designed by psychopaths. You know the propaganda has taken hold when FOX viewers, who would be bankrupted by a medical catastrophe, parrot the FOX mouthpieces and decry the evils of a single-payer health care system.

By Robert De Filippis
What, Me Worry?
Why do we focus on the ridiculous and ignore the substantive issues we face in the country today?

Texas Gov. Rick Perry and other neo-Confederate politicians are citing the Tenth Amendment in claiming the federal government has no authority to protect minority voting rights. But they're wrong both in their constitutional analysis and their ignorance of the Fifteenth Amendment.

By Eric Walberg
Egypt's 'color coup'
A new tactic has been added to the US democracy promotion arsenal, where "color revolutions' are too difficult, and "postmodern coups' fail.

By Dave Lefcourt
A Tragedy Come Full Circle
The Arab Spring so promising in Egypt almost 3 yrs. ago has ended w/ the military releasing Hosni Mubarak from prison. This has to bring disgust to the protesters who put their lives on the line & were the catalysts behind the military removing him from power. It's a contemptuous spitting in the face of the Egyptian people by Gen'l al Sisi who had Mubarak's released & a sure sign the military is the preeminent power in Egypt.

Irony can also be a powerful tool when used by activists in their actions.

By Bob Burnett
Why Don't Republicans Understand the Economy?
On September 9 th , when Congress returns from its summer vacation, negotiations will begin on a new Federal budget and a US debt limit increase. As a quid pro quo Republicans will demand restrictions on Obamacare. Once again, this raises the specter of the GOP pushing the government into default. Why don't Republicans understand that's a terrible idea that would crater the economy?
By Kathy Malloy
Private Parts
The media should be Manning's greatest defender, for her unflinching bravery in the pursuit of journalistic integrity. But no, there's a sexy angle to expose, so they splash that around instead of discussing the gross miscarriage of justice that turned this hero into a prisoner.



Latest Articles

"Stop And Frisk" and Justin Timberlake
A song parody addressing New York City's "Stop and Frisk" policy based on Justin Timberlake's "Suit and Tie."
Treatment of the homeless by the city of Nashville, Tennessee.

This piece is meant to build on three previous Dollar Vigilante posts written by Gary Kinghorn, relating to the voluntary nature of our level of participation in a corrupt and failing system.

Ryan has been among the prime beneficiaries of the money-in-politics moment ushered in by the High Court. As the House Budget Committee chairman, he has collected millions of dollars from individuals and groups that stand to benefit from initiatives such as Social Security privatization and the development of voucher schemes to "reform" Medicaid and Medicare.


Best News Links from the Web

The Absent Father Impact on Children: Divorce & Separation
This article draws attention on the growing divorce rate and family separation; leaving a growing number of children without fathers. It discusses two major implications of this and inspires moving forward.
"Some will object to my statement that Manning is being tortured today. They will acknowledge that he was held in solitary confinement and forced to sleep naked for months on end (among other inhumane practices), and that unquestionably was torture. But all that is over, and now he is "only" being imprisoned because of his actions. And he may still be sentenced to decades in prison, but he will not be subjected to inhumane conditions again (they hope). And he was provided a trial, but of course, it was a show trial from beginning to end, so perhaps we'd best not dwell on that. But at least he had a trial, and he was able to put on a defense, although a defense hideously constricted in its scope by the court's rulings, where every issue of significance was forbidden to be spoken of, so perhaps we'd better not dwell on that, either."

So, another BRIC hits the wall. Actually, I've never much liked the whole "BRIC" -- Brazil, Russia, India, and China -- concept: Russia, which is basically a petro-economy, doesn't belong there at all, and there are large differences among the other three. Still, it's hard to deny that India, Brazil, and a number of other countries are now experiencing similar problems. And those shared problems define the economic crisis du jour.

Washington is split over how to respond to the latest attack, which it believes may have killed between 1,000 and 1,800 people. Military leaders such as John Dempsey, the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, have urged caution, for fear of becoming further embroiled in a Middle East conflict when it is unclear whether the rebels would back US interests. "Syria today is not about choosing between two sides but rather about choosing one among many sides," Dempsey said in the letter dated 19 August to Representative Eliot Engel. "It is my belief that the side we choose must be ready to promote their interests and ours when the balance shifts in their favor. Today, they are not."

On paper,the Senate bill's "benign" goal is to ensure that new rules appropriately balance costs and benefits.But this is simply a euphemism for more deregulation, which itself is a euphemism for unleashing the corporate hounds on a hapless public. The bill would hollow out protection for investors, patients,consumers and workers.For example,it would essentially eliminate the possibility of the meager financial reforms in Dodd-Frank from ever seeing the light of day.This bill is just a warm-up act. While the public and the media sleep, the real corporate "Death Star," the TransPacific Partnership (TPP), is being forged in secret. The term "partnership" hardly sounds ominous.But for the last two years TPP negotiations that could have unprecedented consequences to citizens throughout the world have been going on among a dozen Pacific Rim nations.No information has been made available

Rand Paul Teaming Up With Dems? For This Cause, He Thinks It's Worth It
As Sen. Rand Paul (R-Kentucky) explores the possibility of a presidential run, he's trying his hand at something that's become a rite of passage for the GOP's other 2016 hopefuls: Expanding the appeal of the Republican Party by turning to policies important to minority voters. Specifically, the state of the nation's schools... and the lies about charter schools as a choice are flying... see first comment at the end.
Former Secretary of State Colin Powell took aim at North Carolina's new voting law Thursday, saying it hurts the Republican Party, punishes minority voters and makes it more difficult for everyone to vote. "I want to see policies that encourage every American to vote, not make it more difficult to vote," said Powell, a Republican, at the CEO Forum in Raleigh.

The U.S. Justice Department announced Thursday that it will challenge Texas's Voter ID law, saying it violates the Voting Rights Act, as well as the Constitution's 14th and 15th Amendments. In a separate case, the Justice Department will also join in a challenge to the state's GOP-drawn redistricting plans.

After halting all trading in stocks listed on its exchange because of a technical problem, Nasdaq said at 3:25 p.m. ET that it had resumed trading in all shares. The shutdown began at about 12:15 p.m. ET. Until 3:25 p.m., the Nasdaq composite stood unmoving at 3,631, with a gain of 31 points, or nearly 1 percent. After it resumed trading it rose further and closed at 3,639, up 39 points. After Nasdaq suspended trading on its own exchange, the NYSE and the BATS exchanges halted all trading in Nasdaq listed securities. Nasdaq, heavily concentrated with technology stocks, is home to bellwether shares such as Apple, Microsoft, Ebay, Yahoo and more recently Facebook.

Nine fired workers and one current one were arrested at the end of a rally at which they gave Walmart a deadline to raise wages and reinstate fired workers. The planned act of civil disobedience concluded a noon rally at which workers announced a Labor Day deadline for Walmart to raise wages and reinstate workers they allege were fired for their activism. Twenty workers who joined a June strike by the labor group OUR Walmart have since been terminated; another fifty-some have been otherwise disciplined by Walmart.

Thursday's announcement that Army Pfc. Chelsea Manning wants to live as a woman thrust the issue of treatment of transgender Americans into the national spotlight. Manning's announcement, coming just a day after being sentenced to 35 years in military prison for giving classified documents to WikiLeaks, also comes at a moment when the treatment of transgender Americans in the workplace, schools and prison have become a more prominent part of the nation's political and legal debate.