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US Anonymous Hacker Faces Life In Prison While Others Given Lighter Sentences

May 18, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update, World News

By   –  mintpressnews.com

This March 5, 2012 booking photo provided Tuesday, March 6 by the Cook County Sheriff’s Department in Chicago shows Jeremy Hammond. Hammond, already facing charges of computer hacking, was added to an indictment in New York, Wednesday, May 2, 2012, boosting the accusations against him by including him in much of the wider conspiracy to hack into corporations and government agencies worldwide. (AP Photo/Cook County Sheriff’s Department)

This March 5, 2012 booking photo provided Tuesday, March 6 by the Cook County Sheriff’s Department in Chicago shows Jeremy Hammond. Hammond, already facing charges of computer hacking, was added to an indictment in New York, Wednesday, May 2, 2012, boosting the accusations against him by including him in much of the wider conspiracy to hack into corporations and government agencies worldwide. (AP Photo/Cook County Sheriff’s Department)

Mint Press News Update:

The three British co-defendants who pleaded guilty to being members of the Lulzsec hacktivist group were sentenced by a U.K. court Thursday.

Ryan Ackroyd, 26, the most technically-experienced of the three, received the longest sentence; he will spend 15 months in prison.

Jake Davis, 20, will be imprisoned for one year and Mustafa al-Bassam, 18, will not see jail time, but will have to complete 300 hours of community service.

By contrast, American co-defendant Jeremy Hammond has already spent 14 months awaiting trial in a federal case that carries charges that could result in up to 42 years of prison time. Hammond has also been denied bail or access to family members, unlike his British co-defendants.

“It’s a disturbing commentary on the U.S. criminal justice system that Jeremy Hammond, a young activist who is an asset to his community, will spend longer in pre-trial detention for his alleged participation in these online protests than any of his international co-defendants will when they have fully served their sentences,” National Lawyers Guild Executive Director Heidi Boghosian said in a press release.

 

Prior Mint Press News coverage:

Accused of publishing internal emails of the private intelligence agency Strategic Forecasting (Stratfor) through the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks, 28-year-old Jeremy Hammond has been in prison since March 2012 without parole or the ability to see his family.

The Chicago native faces the most extreme punishment with a possible 42-year-to-life sentence in prison and has been charged with five felony counts. Three of the felonies Hammond has been charged with fall under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA). Each count carries a 10-year maximum prison sentence.

Included in the leaked emails was evidence suggesting that Stratfor spied on activists for Dow Chemical and monitored Occupy Wall Street activity for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

Hammond’s trial has not been scheduled yet, but another status hearing has been scheduled for Friday, May 17. His co-defendants in the U.K., however, were scheduled to be sentenced today.

Three British Internet activists — 26-year-old Ryan Ackroyd, 20-year-old Jake Davis and 18-year-old Mustafa al-Bassam — all confessed today to being members of the hacktivist organization Anonymous’ subgroup, LulzSec, and for carrying out cyberattacks on the U.K.’s National Health Service, Sony and News International.

While the sentences the hacktivists received in England have not yet been announced, their punishments are not expected to be as severe as Hammond’s. The hacktivists co-defendants in Ireland and the U.K. have received varying degrees of reprimand for their involvement in similar cyberattacks. The two Irish Internet activists will not be charged in Ireland, which does not have an extradition treaty with the United States.

The U.K. activists could be extradited to the U.S. for prosecution, but Abi Hassen, Mass Defense Coordinator for the National Lawyers Guild, in an interview with Mint Press News, said it wouldn’t be a smart move. “U.S. attorneys were holding off until the case was resolved in the U.K.,” Hassen said, adding that prosecuting the activists may be viewed as a slap in the face to the U.K.’s judicial system.

“Jeremy is a gifted person who cares deeply about the world,” said Hammond’s twin brother, Jason Hammond. “My family is shocked at the treatment he has received by the Department of Justice. Jeremy is accused of committing a non-violent crime yet we are forbidden from seeing him or speaking to him on the phone. He has been denied bail and he’s facing what amounts to a life sentence.”

U.S. Congress has enacted legislation to protect whistleblowers from retaliation. But in cases like Hammond’s where actions by the U.S. government were highlighted, whistleblowers like Hammond are instead viewed as aiding the enemy. A similar case would be that of Bradley Manning, who released hundreds of thousands of sensitive U.S. files to WikiLeaks in 2010, hoping to generate a discussion about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

 

Extreme punishment in the U.S.?

While President Obama has publicly called for the increased protection of whistleblowers, the Obama administration has prosecuted more people for leaking information than all previous presidents combined. In his first 26 months in office, civilian and military prosecutors charged five whistleblowers under the Espionage Act.

According to a press release from the Jeremy Hammond Defense Committee — a coalition of family members, activists, lawyers and other supporters who are working together to protect free speech and support Jeremy Hammond — the U.K.’s sentencing structure allows people convicted of crimes to serve out the second half of their sentences on “licence,” the equivalent of the United States’ parole, meaning that Ackroyd, Davis and al-Bassam will likely leave prison after serving a few years at most.

Hassen said the varying degrees of punishment for the same crime are interesting since the judicial system in the U.S. was modeled after European systems like those in the U.K.

Hassen said the CFAA law treats any activity on the Internet the same and allows prosecutors to dump charges on people, regardless of intent or damages.

“The CFAA criminalizes an incredible amount of activity online,” he said, giving an example of Aaron Swartz, the 26-year-old information activist who was threatened with decades in prison for downloading freely available documents from the academic database JSTOR. Swartz took his own life earlier this year.

“I think the main thing is that this law is a terrible law that [Hammond] is being charged under. It reeks of injustice and it’s just so so broad and so vague,” Hassen said.

Written in 1984, before the mainstream emergence of the Internet, Hassen told Mint Press News the CFAA was intended to protect government computers. “There were 12 computers on the Internet when the law was written and so today with the interpretation of the law, terms of service violations can affect just about anybody and make you icable for decades in prison,” he said.

“We have seen again and again the aggressive behavior of prosecutors who are exploiting the vague language in the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act to threaten young activists with decades in prison. Jeremy Hammond’s treatment and disproportionate sentencing is a mark of overzealous prosecutions that have destroyed young lives and continue to intimidate some of our brightest and most engaged young people,” Hassen said.

 

Hammond’s battle for freedom

As Mint Press News previously reported, concerning for Hammond supporters is that the judge presiding over his trial, Judge Loretta Preska, is married to Thomas Kavaler, a lawyer and former client of Stratfor, whose email and encrypted password were leaked in the Stratfor hack. Kavaler is a partner at Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP — where Preska was also a partner before becoming a judge — a firm that has represented more than 20 victims of the hack.

Preska maintains she can remain impartial because she says that her husband did not have his credit-card information revealed, only his email address, which was already publicly available, and called the fact that she was presiding over the same case that affected her husband “merely a coincidence.”

Hassen says it’s really hard to know what the outcome in Hammond’s trial will be, since Hammond has not been able to participate in his own defense. Hammond has been denied bail because his skills as a hacktivist are viewed as an extreme danger to society, Hassen said, something Hassen and other Hammond supporters find “extremely disturbing” since even stalkers and those who have threatened to kill people sometimes receive bail.

Hassen explained that since the nature of the alleged crime is a computer crime and involves the Internet, Hammond is being kept in jail without access to the Internet and the ability to use a computer.

Last month Hassen said that over the past couple months, Hammond had spent about 11 hours with his defense team. “How does his defense team help prepare his defense when there are no computers in jail and he is not allowed to have Internet access,” he said, adding Hammond’s lawyers are trying to comb through millions of lines of evidence code, such as chat logs.

“It’s hard to know how he can adequately prepare for trial under these circumstances. A defendant should be able to work with his attorneys. People given bail have [a] much higher success rate.”

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Chomsky warns austerity policy has left European democracy in tatters

April 2, 2013 in Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

US linguist and political activist to give Frontline Defenders lecture in RDS, Dublin

Veteran US political activist and intellectual Noam Chomsky has warned that the European Union’s response to the economic crisis has left European democracy in a worse condition than that of the United States. Photographer: Dara Mac Donaill/The Irish Times

Veteran US political activist and intellectual Noam Chomsky has warned that the European Union’s response to the economic crisis has left European democracy in a worse condition than that of the United States. Photographer: Dara Mac Donaill/The Irish Times

The veteran US political activist and intellectual Noam Chomsky has warned that the European Union’s response to the economic crisis has left European democracy in a worse condition than that of the United States.

Speaking ahead of a public lecture in Dublin this week, Prof Chomsky (84), a leading figure in the study of linguistics and a prominent critic of US foreign policy, said the European Central Bank was imposing unfair and counterproductive austerity measures on the people of Ireland and other EU member states hit by the debt crisis.

“I’m not a great admirer of the [Federal Reserve], but I think they’ve been much more constructive and thoughtful and progressive than the ECB has been. I mean, take Ireland. It was a crisis of the banks. It wasn’t the Government; it wasn’t the population. It’s fundamentally bank corruption,” he said.

“It’s the same in Spain. Spain had close to a balanced budget in 2007 and pretty good economic fundamentals. But the housing bubble, fuelled by Spanish and indeed German banks, you know they were the lenders, went way out and caused a great crisis for which the public is now paying.”

He warned that austerity policies were not only damaging democracy, but were stifling economic growth and failing to tackle the debt burden. “It’s been quite harmful everywhere it’s been applied,” he said.

Prof Chomsky is delivering the inaugural Frontline Defenders Annual Lecture at the RDS on Wednesday, which is being held in partnership with UCD School of Philosophy and TCD.

In an interview with The Irish Times today, he suggests that US president Barack Obama is more a representative of the traditional centre-right than of the left.

Saudi govt warns of ‘suitable measures’ towards internet censorship against WhatsApp, Skype, Viber

April 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

Saudi Arabia says it will take “suitable measures” if providers of internet messaging applications such as WhatsApp fail to comply with its rules. The move comes a week after the government warned providers to comply with censorship requirements.

Internet applications such as Skype and Viber are also at risk of being banned if they do not meet the government’s specific demands. “Some telecom applications over the Internet protocol currently do not meet the regulatory conditions” in the kingdom, the Communications and Information Technology Commission said in a Sunday statement carried by SPA state news agency.

Saudi Arabian Intenet Censorship Policy Limits the Free Flow of Information and Ideas, Limiting Free Speech

Saudi Arabian Intenet Censorship Policy Limits the Free Flow of Information and Ideas, Limiting Free Speech

The commission has told service providers in Saudi Arabia to work with developers of such applications to “quickly meet the regulatory conditions,” but did not explain how they violated the government’s rules.

“The commission will take suitable measures regarding these applications and services if those conditions are not met,” it said. Read the rest of this entry →

Ex-CNN Reporter: I Received Orders to Manipulate News to Demonize Syria and Iran

April 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Politics, World News

[Apparently, MSNBC and Faux got the same orders.]  Ex-CNN reporter Amber Lyon revealed that during her work for the channel she received orders to send false news and exclude some others which the US administration did not favor with the aim to create a public opinion in favor of launching an aggression on Iran and Syria. Lyon was quoted by the Slovak main news website as saying that the mainstream US media outlets intentionally work to create a propaganda against Iran to garner public opinion’s support for a military invasion against it. She revealed that the scenario used before launching the war on Iraq is being prepared to be repeated where Iran and Syria are now being subject to constant ‘demonization’.

How Big Corporations Are Unpatriotic – and Big Government Backing them is Fascist

April 1, 2013 in Finance, Headline, Politics, World News

By Ralph Nader – This piece first appeared on Ralph Nader’s website, Nader.org

fascism-checklist-bigMany giant profitable U.S. corporations are increasingly abandoning America while draining it at the same time.

General Electric, for example, has paid no federal income taxes for a decade while becoming a net job exporter and fighting its hard-pressed workers who want collective bargaining through unions like the United Electrical Workers Union (UE). GE’s boss, Jeffrey Immelt, makes about $12,400 an hour on an 8-hour day, plus benefits and perks, presiding over this global corporate empire.

Telling by their behavior, these big companies think patriotism toward the country where they were created and prospered is for chumps. Their antennae point to places where taxes are very low, labor is wage slavery, independent unions are non-existent, governments have their hands out, and equal justice under the rule of law does not exist. China, for example, has fit that description for over 25 years.

Other than profiteering from selling Washington very expensive weapons of mass destruction, many multinational firms have little sense of true national security. Read the rest of this entry →

Like 500 years ago, geeks are becoming the last line of defense for free speech

April 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Editorial, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

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rt.com

Businesses are attacking liberties that challenge their interests, and normally powerless people are defending freedom of speech. This is a world upside down, the direct opposite of how it should be – and yet, entirely predictable when we look at history.

In the past week, the spam protection service Spamhaus was subjected to a relentless attack that gives a glimpse of things to come. The attack initially rendered the service inoperable, effectively killing many crucial spam filters around the world for the duration of the attack.

However, geeks rose to the occasion, mounted countermeasures, and dissipated the attack, restoring the functionality of the world’s spam filters in a matter of hours.

There is an escalating war on free speech happening right now. What Spamhaus does is easy to describe: it maintains a list of electronic junkmailers to the best of its ability, giving any and all e-mail services in the world the ability to sort out e-mail from known junkmailers. Publishing the list is obviously part of exercising free speech. Read the rest of this entry →

France & Germany – Building A Path To A Low-Carbon Future

April 1, 2013 in Finance, Headline, Politics, World News

By: Jeffrey D. Sachs - economywatch.com

The surest bet on the future of energy is the need for low-carbon energy supplies; And while early movers, such as France & Germany, may pay a slightly higher price today for these strategies, they and the world will reap long-term economic and environmental benefits.

green-warNEW YORK – The surest bet on the future of energy is the need for low-carbon energy supplies. Around 80 percent of the world’s primary energy today is carbon based: coal, oil, and gas. We will need to shift to no- or low-carbon energy by mid-century. The big questions are how and when.

Low-carbon primary energy means three options: renewable energy, including wind, solar, geothermal, hydropower, and biomass; nuclear energy; and carbon capture and sequestration, which means using fossil fuels to create energy, but trapping the CO2 emissions that result and storing the carbon safely underground.

There are three compelling reasons for the world to make the shift to low-carbon energy. First, higher levels of CO2 are making the world’s oceans acidic. If we continue with business as usual, we will end up destroying a vast amount of marine life, severely damaging the food chains on which we rely.

Second, CO2 is dangerously changing the world’s climate, even if many Big Oil interests would have us believe otherwise. (So, too, did the tobacco companies spend vast sums on political lobbying and bogus science to deny the links between smoking and lung cancer.) Read the rest of this entry →

How Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa Are Standing Up to the American Empire – BRICS

April 1, 2013 in Finance, Headline, Politics, World News

Western corporate media is flooded with stories about the weakening of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa, but these are defensive measures.

Reports on the premature death of the BRICS (Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa) have been greatly exaggerated. Western corporate media is flooded with such nonsense, perpetrated in this particular case by the head of Morgan Stanley Investment Management.

Reality spells otherwise. The BRICS meet in Durban, South Africa, this Tuesday to, among other steps, create their own credit rating agency, sidelining the dictatorship – or at least “biased agendas”, in New Delhi’s diplomatic take – of the Moody’s/Standard & Poor’s variety. They will also further advance the idea of the BRICS Development Bank, with a seed capital of US$50 billion (only structural details need to be finalized), helping infrastructure and sustainable development projects.

Crucially, the US and the European Union won’t have stakes in this Bank of the South – a concrete alternative, pushed especially by India and Brazil, to the Western-dominated World Bank and the Bretton Woods system.

As former Indian finance minister Jaswant Singh has observed, such a development bank could, for instance, channel Beijing’s know-how to help finance India’s massive infrastructure needs.

The huge political and economic differences among BRICS members are self-evident. But as they evolve as a group, the point is not whether they should be protecting the global economy from the now non-stop crisis of advanced casino capitalism.  Read the rest of this entry →

CIA aids huge arms smuggling to Syria

March 31, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Politics, World News

rt.com

51.siThe CIA reportedly has a hand in clandestine supply of arms to Syrian rebels by Gulf States. At least 3,500 tons of have been delivered – some ending up on the black market, with the Turkish government an active player, a media report says.

The flow of arms continues with the help of US agents as Washington criticizes Iran and Russia for delivering weapons to the Syrian regime, the New York Times says. Secretary of State John Kerry pressed Iraq on Sunday to close its airspace to Iranian flights just as the latest arms delivery from Qatar for Syrian rebels was landing in Turkey, according to the daily’s report.

The newspaper cites air traffic data, US and foreign officials and rebel commanders in its investigation. Read the rest of this entry →

Throwing the First Cyber-Stone – Implications of Cyber Warfare and the Stuxnet Scandal

March 30, 2013 in Editorial, Headline, Politics, World News

Director of National Intelligence James Clapper calls cyber-attacks a top national security concern, but these U.S. alarms sound hypocritical after the joint U.S.-Israeli cyber-sabotage of Iran’s nuclear industry, as Dutch computer expert Arjen Kamphuis explains.

From wired.com —  Legal Experts: Stuxnet Attack on Iran Was Illegal ‘Act of Force’

A cyberattack that sabotaged Iran’s uranium enrichment program was an “act of force” and was likely illegal, according to research commissioned by a NATO defense center.

“Acts that kill or injure persons or destroy or damage objects are unambiguously uses of force” and likely violate international law, according to the Tallinn Manual on the International Law Applicable to Cyber Warfare, a study produced by a group of independent legal experts at the request of NATO’s Cooperative Cyber Defense Center of Excellence in Estonia.

By Arjen Kamphuis  -

A few years ago, Israeli and American intelligence developed a computer virus with a specific military objective: damaging Iranian nuclear facilities. Stuxnet was spread via USB sticks and settled silently on Windows PCs. From there it looked into networks for specific industrial centrifuges using Siemens SCADA control devices spinning at high-speed to separate Uranium-235 (the bomb stuff) from Uranium-238 (the non-bomb stuff).

Iran, like many other countries, has a nuclear program for power generation and the production of isotopes for medical applications. Most countries buy the latter from specialists like the Netherlands that produces medical isotopes in a special reactor. The Western boycott of Iran makes it impossible for Iran to purchase isotopes on the open market. Making them yourself is far from ideal, but the only option that remains.

Cascade of gas centrifuges used to produce enriched uranium. (Photo credit: U.S. Department of Energy)

Cascade of gas centrifuges used to produce enriched uranium. (Photo credit: U.S. Department of Energy)

Why the boycott? Officially, according to the U.S., it’s because Iran won’t give sufficient openness about its weapons programs, in particular, military applications of its nuclear program. This concern is fairly recent and, for some reason, has only been reactivated after the U.S. attack on Iraq in 2003 (a lot of the original nuclear equipment in Iran was supplied by American and German companies with funding from the World Bank before the 1979 revolution).

The most curious aspect of the West’s allegations about Iran is that they are never more than vague insinuations. When all 16 U.S. intelligence agencies in 2007 produced a joint study there was a clear conclusion: Iran is not developing a nuclear weapon. (To see a recent speech by the leader of this study, click here.)

And that’s what’s strange. For if the 16 American intelligence services and their Israeli colleagues, the Mossad, can all agree that Iran is not making nuclear weapons, how do you justify an attack against Iran’s civilian industrial infrastructure via the Stuxnet computer virus? And this is the equivalent of a military attack as would be clear if you consider what would happen if Iran had been caught in a cyber-attack on Western installations in Borssele or Indian Point.

Stuxnet is designed for a single purpose: the damage of nuclear enrichment facilities in Iran, a country that may just be performing these activities in accordance with the international agreements stipulated in the Non-Proliferation Treaty. Iran, like most other countries in the world, signed this Convention. The countries outside the NPT are Israel, India, Pakistan, North Korea (which withdrew) and the newly independent South Sudan.

Under the NPT, a civilian nuclear industry is allowed, a detail that sometimes escapes the attention of editors. I’m not saying the Iranian government is filled with darlings, but Iran has not attacked anyone in the past 200 years, unlike some NATO countries. Read the rest of this entry →

Cyprus Impending Economic Collapse Has Moscow On Edge

March 30, 2013 in Finance, Headline, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

Recent events in Cyprus have turned into a widespread public protest as politicians decide how to save the small island nations banking system.  People have truned to the streets and have engaged in general strikes to protest this new and rather scary form of austerity. The measures have frozen anyone from withdrawing more than €100 per day, and will result in the freezing of any deposits greater than €130,000.  The nations banks are in trouble, and seeking a  €13billion bailout from the EU,  in turn they will need to seize a percentage of all the money deposited in the banks so that they are able to secure the bailout immediately.

more news on the topic and specifically as it relates to bitcoin finances here : hongpong.com

A People’s Revolt in Cyprus: Richard Wolff on Protests Against EU Plan to Seize Bank Savings

From democracynow.org

The eyes of the financial world are on the small Mediterranean island of Cyprus today. The government of Cyprus has brokered a last-ditch $13 billion bailout deal with European officials to stave off the collapse of its banking sector. Under the deal, all bank deposits above approximately $130,000 will be frozen and used to help pay off the banking sector’s debts. An earlier version of the deal collapsed last week when Cypriots took to the streets to protest paying a tax of up to 10 percent on their life savings. The plan led to mass demonstrations as well as panicked bank withdrawals as Cypriots rushed to protect their savings. “It’s a demonstration of people power in this little corner of the world that’s very impressive, and the basis, I think, for some optimism about opposition,” says Richard Wolff, economics professor emeritus at University of Massachusetts, Amherst, and visiting professor at New School University. He is the author of several books including, most recently, “Democracy at Work: A Cure for Capitalism.”
Another report on the topic from –  rt.com

Moscow hopes Cyprus won’t need its help

Russia’s Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev said Moscow needs to study the consequences of the Cyprus bailout deal agreed in Brussels, especially for Russia. Meanwhile Vladimir Putin ordered to restructure the € 2.5 billion Cyprus loan issued in 2011.

We have to figure out what this story turns into in the long run, what the consequences for the international financial and monetary system will be – and thus, for our own interests as well,” Medvedev said in Russia’s first official reaction to the deal agreed over the weekend.

As the EU 10 billion bailout loan has been secured, First Deputy Prime Minister Igor Shuvalov, a close ally of President Vladimir Putin, said “the situation looks like no further help [for Cyprus] from the Russian government will be required.

He added that Moscow will reconsider extending the loan to Cyprus due to be repaid by 2016, after studying the full details of the Brussels package.

On Monday spokesperson Dmitry Peskov said President Putin instructed “the government and the Russian ministry of finance to work with their partners on the issue of restructuring the loan previously issued to Cyprus.Read the rest of this entry →

Condemned to Endless War: The Sisyphean US terror policy

March 30, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

By Sam Sacks, a political commentator and journalist, the last five years spent covering politics in Washington, DC.  –  rt.com

US Army troops from C-Company. 1st platoon, 1-23 infantry prepare to deploy 'A-pops' - charges fired by rocket onto surfaces suspected to have IED (improvised explosive devices) traps which explode and trigger the safe detonation of the devices at the village of Gerandai in Panjway district, Kandahar Province on September 21, 2012. (AFP Photo)

US Army troops from C-Company. 1st platoon, 1-23 infantry prepare to deploy ‘A-pops’ – charges fired by rocket onto surfaces suspected to have IED (improvised explosive devices) traps which explode and trigger the safe detonation of the devices at the village of Gerandai in Panjway district, Kandahar Province on September 21, 2012. (AFP Photo)

Remember all that talk about leaving Afghanistan in 2014? None of it was serious.

A promise by the administration to leave Afghanistan came as recently as last October, in the vice presidential debate, when Vice President Joe Biden promised, “We are leaving… We are leaving [Afghanistan] in 2014.”

Сan someone define the word “leaving?”

Because, according to the former commander in Afghanistan, when it comes to 2014 plans in that country, we’re not going anywhere.

Speaking to the Brookings Institution this week in Washington, DC, the retired General John Allen saidout of all the options for American forces in Afghanistan after the supposed 2014 withdraw date, the “zero option” – removing all US troops – was never really an option at all.

“I was never asked to conduct any analysis with respect to the zero option,” General Allen told Brookings.  Read the rest of this entry →

CISPA, the Privacy-Invading Cybersecurity Spying Bill, is Back in Congress

March 24, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

BY MARK M. JAYCOX  —  eff.org

It’s official: The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act was reintroduced in the House of Representatives yesterday. CISPA is the contentious bill civil liberties advocates fought last year, which would provide a poorly-defined “cybersecurity” exception to existing privacy law. CISPA offers broad immunities to companies who choose to share data with government agencies (including the private communications of users) in the name of cybersecurity. It also creates avenues for companies to share data with any federal agencies, including military intelligence agencies like the National Security Agency (NSA).

EFF is adamantly opposed to CISPA. Will you join us in calling on Congress to stop this and any other privacy-invasive cybersecurity legislation?

As others have noted, “CISPA is deeply flawed. Under a broad cybersecurity umbrella, it permits companies to share user communications directly with the super secret NSA and permits the NSA to use that information for non-cybersecurity reasons. This risks turning the cybersecurity program into a back door intelligence surveillance program run by a military entity with little transparency or public accountability.”

Last year, CISPA passed the House with a few handful of amendments that tried to fix some of its vague language. But the amendments didn’t address many of the significant civil liberties concerns. Those remaining problems were reintroduced in today’s version of CISPA. Here’s a brief overview of the issues:

Companies have new rights to monitor user actions and share data—including potentially sensitive user data—with the government without a warrant.

First, CISPA would still give businesses1 the power to use “cybersecurity systems” to obtain any “cybersecurity threat information” (CTI)—which could include personal communications—about a percieved threat to their networks or systems.  The only limitation is that the company must act for a “cybersecurity purpose,” which is vaguely defined to include such things as “safeguarding” networks.

CISPA overrides existing privacy law, and grants broad immunities to participating companies. Read the rest of this entry →

Dancing the World into Being – Idle No More

March 7, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

A Conversation with Idle No More’s Leanne Simpson

by Naomi Klein and Leanne Simpson via Common Dreams

In December 2012, the Indigenous protests known as Idle No More exploded onto the Canadian political scene, with huge round dances taking place in shopping malls, busy intersections, and public spaces across North America, as well as solidarity actions as far away as New Zealand and Gaza. Though sparked by a series of legislative attacks on indigenous sovereignty and environmental protections by the Conservative government of Stephen Harper, the movement quickly became about much more: Canada’s ongoing colonial policies, a transformative vision of decolonization, and the possibilities for a genuine alliance between natives and non-natives, one capable of re-imagining nationhood.

Throughout all this, Idle No More had no official leaders or spokespeople. But it did lift up the voices of a few artists and academics whose words and images spoke to the movement’s deep aspirations. One of those voices belonged to Leanne Simpson, a multi-talented Mississauga Nishnaabeg writer of poetry, essays, spoken-word pieces, short stories, academic papers, and anthologies. Simpson’s books, including Lighting the Eighth Fire: The Liberation, Protection and Resurgence of Indigenous Nations and Dancing on Our Turtle’s Back: Stories of Nishnaabeg Re-Creation, Resurgence and a New Emergence, have influenced a new generation of native activists. Read the rest of this entry →

Bradley Manning Takes ‘Full Responsibility’ for Giving WikiLeaks Huge Government Data Trove

March 1, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update, World News

BY SPENCER ACKERMAN  –  wired.com

manningVSbush_warCrimesFORT MEADE, Md. — Wearing his Army dress uniform, a composed, intense and articulate Pfc. Bradley Manning took “full responsibility” Thursday for providing the organization WikiLeaks with a trove of classified and sensitive military, diplomatic and intelligence cables, videos and documents.

In the lengthiest statement to a military tribunal Manning has provided since his nearly three-year long ordeal began, Manning, 25, said WikiLeaks did not encourage him to provide the organization with any information. But he also sketched out his emotionally fraught online interactions with his WikiLeaks handler, a man he knew as “Ox” or “Nathaniel” over Internet Relay Chat and Jabber, and whom the government maintains was Julian Assange.

Manning’s motivations in leaking, he said, was to “spark a domestic debate of the role of the military and foreign policy in general,” he said, and “cause society to reevaluate the need and even desire to engage in counterterrorism and counterinsurgency operations that ignore their effect on people who live in that environment every day.” Manning said he was in sound mind when he leaked, and did so deliberately, regardless of the legal circumstances.

Remarkably, Manning said he first tried to take his information to the Washington Post, the New York Times and Politico, before contacting WikiLeaks.

The statement came as Manning pleaded guilty on Thursday to 10 of 22 charges the Army has levied against him. Manning admitted to improperly storing classified information; having unauthorized possession of such information; willfully communicating it to an unauthorized person; and other “lesser-included” offenses. Each of the 10 offenses to which Manning pleaded guilty carries a sentence of up to two years’ imprisonment, for a total of 20 years in prison. Read the rest of this entry →

50,000 march to voice opposition to Keystone pipeline in DC

February 19, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

On February 17th, thousands of people from around the nation converged on Washington D.C. for the largest environmental protest in U.S. history.  Over 50,000 people were in the march that included people from the Sierra Club, 350.org, Indigenous Environmental Network, #IdleNoMore (u.s and canada) and many others.

The real truth of this story is that the protest was a call to action for our elected leaders to follow through on their promises and do something about climate change, starting with blocking the Keystone XL pipeline that threatens to poison the groundwater and land for millions of people that have not even been informed by the corporations or politicians that are going through with the plan.

In the words of James Hansen, Nasa scientist who speaks out about climate change,  this renowned scientist has come forward to say that exploitation of the tar sands and building the subsequent Keystone XL pipeline will mean “game over for climate” and result in a planet that humans are no longer able to live on.

The sad part of this  is, this massive action was virtually ignored by mainstream media.  A story on fair.org takes a look at this part of the event,  and how little the national media cared to cover the biggest environmental action in U.S. history.  Here is the only decent report we have found on the subject ( and even this does not really do justice to the gravity of the event,  and along with all the other articles we have seen – fails to mention or recognize the importance of the native community and their treaty rights that are being violated in this struggle ).

By   –  washingtonpost.com

A crowd that organizers said numbered approximately 50,000 braved the cold on Sunday and marched to urge President Obama to reject the Keystone XL pipeline and to show leadership on other climate issues they called urgent.The group rallied on a slice of the Mall just north of the Washington Monument before heading down Constitution Avenue, up 17th Street and past the White House chanting slogans such as “We are unstoppable, another world is possible” and “Hey, hey, ho, ho, Keystone pipeline’s got to go.”
The president wasn’t home, however. He was in Florida playing golf with Tiger Woods and Jim Crane, a Houston businessman who owns the Houston Astros as well as the residential compound where Obama is spending the holiday weekend. Read the rest of this entry →

48 Arrested at Keystone Pipeline Protest as Sierra Club Lifts 120-Year Ban on Civil Disobedience

February 15, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

democracynow.org

Forty-eight people, including civil rights leader Julian Bond and NASA climate scientist James Hansen [link to video of him speaking on climate change], were arrested Wednesday in front of the White House as part of an ongoing protest calling on the Obama administration to reject the Keystone XL tar sands pipeline. The action came before a rally planned for Sunday on Washington’s National Mall, which organizers have dubbed “the largest climate rally in history.” We speak to Sierra Club Executive Director Michael Brune, who was arrested in the first act of civil disobedience in the organization’s 120-year history.

International treaty to protect the Sacred from Tar Sands signing ceremony

February 12, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Documentary, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

By   –  intercontinentalcry.org

From January 23 – 25, 2013, a Ceremonial Grand Council was held on Ihanktonwan homelands to affirm a unifying International Treaty between Indigenous Peoples and allies who seek to protect the sacred from the Tar Sands and the Keystone XL Pipeline.

The International Treaty–signed by Tribal elders and their Allies–builds upon the Save the Fraser River Declaration, Rights of Mother Earth Accord, Indigenous Leaders Spiritual Declaration, and the UN Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. Read the rest of this entry →

Lie After Lie After Lie: What Colin Powell Knew Ten Years Ago Today and What He Said

February 6, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Politics, World News

By   –  huffingtonpost.com

 

Colin Powell’s Own Staff Had Warned Him Against His War Lies

Colin Powell’s Own Staff Had Warned Him Against His War Lies

Colin Powell made his Iraq presentation at the United Nations ten years ago today, on February 5th, 2003.

As much criticism as Powell has gotten for this — hecalls it ”painful” and says, “I get mad when bloggers accuse me of lying” — it hasn’t been close to what he deserves. That’s because there’s no question that Powell was consciously lying: he fabricated “evidence” and ignored repeated warnings that what he was saying was false.

We know this because of some good reporting and what’s seeped into the public record via one of the congressional investigations of pre-war Iraq intelligence. The record is still incomplete, because Congress never bothered to look at how Powell used the intelligence he received, and the corporate media has never taken a close look at what happened. But with what’s available we can go through Powell’s presentation line by line to demonstrate the chasm between what he knew and what he told the world. As you’ll see, there’s quite a lot to say about it.

Powell’s speech can be found on the archived State Department website here. All other sources are linked below.

PUBLIC CERTAINTY, PRIVATE DOUBT

On that February 5 in front of the UN Security Council, was Colin Powell certain what he was saying was accurate? He certainly was:

POWELL: My colleagues, every statement I make today is backed up by sources, solid sources. These are not assertions. What we’re giving you are facts and conclusions based on solid intelligence.

Later, regarding whether Iraq had reconstituted a nuclear weapons program, he said:

POWELL: [T]here is no doubt in my mind…

That’s in public. What about in private? According to Larry Wilkerson, Powell’s chief of staff, here’s what Powell was thinking at the time:

WILKERSON: [Powell] had walked into my office musing and he said words to the effect of, I wonder how we’ll all feel if we put half a million troops in Iraq and march from one end of the country to the other and find nothing. Read the rest of this entry →

The 32 most alarming charts from the government’s climate change report

January 30, 2013 in Finance, Headline, Politics, World News

By Philip Bump  —  grist.org
Just reading about the government’s massive new report outlining what climate change has in store for the U.S. is sobering. In brief: temperature spikes, drought, flooding, less snow, less permafrost. But if you really want to freak out, you should check out the graphs, charts, and maps.For the more visually oriented bunker builders out there, here are the 32 most alarming images from the 1,200-page draft report. (Click any of them to embiggen.)Things will be different.
Analysis suggests that temperatures could rise as much as 11 degrees by the end of the century. On this chart, note the lines labelled SRES A2 and SRES B1. Those are the two greenhouse gas emission scenarios used as worst- and best-case scenarios in many of the charts that follow.

1 temperature projections

It’s possible that sea levels could only rise eight inches. It is also possible that they could rise over six-and-a-half feet. Read the rest of this entry →

We Are Legion: The Story of the Hacktivists

January 27, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Documentary, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

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State of the World Address

January 21, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Editorial, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Uncategorized, World News

Nick Hathaway –  Roguemedia.org

Things are not well for our planet.  If you were not already aware of this,  you need to start paying more attention.  Possibly,  get off the couch or armchair,  and do something about it..

Where to start, really?  How do you begin talking about all the problems facing us, the human race, right now?  Do i start with global warming and climate change that we are all seeing happen right now?  Do i talk about some of the biggest and most fascist governments this world has ever seen, squaring off in a cold war style fight for the earths resources with no thought at all about the possible outcome, the inevitable wars, or if it is even good  for our planet and way of life to use some of these resources and pollute our air and water, not to mention the land we get our food from….

stateOfTHeWorldDo I talk about the corporations that now seem to in fact run these governments? Do I talk about all the dis-information these governments are trying to feed us, the people,  so we buy into the lie and just keep going to work day after day,  not doing anything about the problems facing our planet.

There is really so much to say,  so much to do, that it is amazingly difficult at times to even pick a place to start.

We all need to do our part,  think globally,  act locally within your community.  Start getting communities meeting with each other face to face and start talking about how to deal with the world around us.  TURN OFF YOUR TV !!   GET OFF THE COMPUTER AND TALK TO PEOPLE !!   MAKE A DIFFERENCE !  DIRECT ACTION, NOW !!!!

The truth is,  we do not have time to wait for politicians to try “fix” the problems,  THE FIX IS IN, and they have rigged the game for so long we are all FUK’T if we don’t get up and do something about it now.

 

 

 

Pakistan Turmoil Boils Over: Court orders arrest of Prime Minister

January 21, 2013 in Headline, Politics, World News

ISLAMABAD, Pakistan – aim.org — Hours after the Pakistani Supreme Court pushed for elections to resume later this year, it decided to issue an arrest order for the country’s Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf.

pakistan-qadri-300x168Analysts on the ground are saying that the Supreme Court may be working with the Pakistani military behind the scenes to oust the most recent civilian leader. It also does not help that Muslim cleric Muhammed Tahirul Qadri has been vocal and public about corrupt Pakistani officials causing problems for the country.

“There is no doubt that Qadri’s march and the Supreme Court’s verdict were masterminded by the military establishment of Pakistan,” said Fawad Chaudhry, an aide to Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf, ”The military can intervene at this moment as the Supreme Court has opened a way for it.”

Regardless of the recent arrest order, the ruling coalition of Pakistan’s government led by the Pakistan Peoples Party (PPP) can elect another prime minister if Ashraf is ousted from power. Ashraf himself replaced his predecessor, Yusuf Raza Gilani, after Gilani was disqualified by the judiciary to be the country’s prime minister. Read the rest of this entry →

Kim Dotcom: the internet cult hero spoiling for a fight with US authorities

January 20, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

German-born former hacker says his eyes have been opened to US tactics after his Megaupload site was shut down last year

 in Auckland  –  guardian.co.uk


In massive, swaggering capital letters, “Mega” stretches across the grassy slope in front of Dotcom Mansion. A huddle of electricians and carpenters are removing the wooden stencils and wiring in the fluorescent tubes. They are up to G. All around the vast grounds of Kim Dotcom‘s luxury home just north of Auckland, New Zealand, gardeners and technicians are busy, like Oompa-Loompas at the Chocolate Factory, setting up for the big night, overlooked by life-size inflatable giraffes and hippos.

On Sunday, almost a year after the internet entrepreneur and several of his associates were arrested in a spectacular dawn raid on the mansion, about 200 invited guests will gather at the opulent estate for the launch of Mega. The new cyberlocker service is a simplified, super-encrypted successor to Megaupload, the file-sharing site that once reputedly accounted for 4% of all internet traffic, and which US prosecutors had taken offline moments before the helicopters descended in New Zealand a year ago.

After spending almost a month in prison in early 2012, Dotcom and his co-accused were awarded bail – the first of a series of court victories that have left the prosecution case looking increasingly wobbly. With any hearing for extradition to the US to face criminal copyright charges having been pushed back, it is hard not to see the extravagant unveiling of the new site as a two-finger gesture aimed at US authorities. Read the rest of this entry →

Secrets and Lies of the Bailout

January 18, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Update, World News

The federal rescue of Wall Street didn’t fix the economy – it created a permanent bailout state based on a Ponzi-like confidence scheme. And the worst may be yet to come

By MATT TAIBBI  —  rollingstone.com

20130104-national-affairs-306x-1357314071It has been four long winters since the federal government, in the hulking, shaven-skulled, Alien Nation-esque form of then-Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, committed $700 billion in taxpayer money to rescue Wall Street from its own chicanery and greed. To listen to the bankers and their allies in Washington tell it, you’d think the bailout was the best thing to hit the American economy since the invention of the assembly line. Not only did it prevent another Great Depression, we’ve been told, but the money has all been paid back, and the government even made a profit. No harm, no foul – right?

Wrong.

It was all a lie – one of the biggest and most elaborate falsehoods ever sold to the American people. We were told that the taxpayer was stepping in – only temporarily, mind you – to prop up the economy and save the world from financial catastrophe. What we actually ended up doing was the exact opposite: committing American taxpayers to permanent, blind support of an ungovernable, unregulatable, hyperconcentrated new financial system that exacerbates the greed and inequality that caused the crash, and forces Wall Street banks like Goldman Sachs and Citigroup to increase risk rather than reduce it. The result is one of those deals where one wrong decision early on blossoms into a lush nightmare of unintended consequences. We thought we were just letting a friend crash at the house for a few days; we ended up with a family of hillbillies who moved in forever, sleeping nine to a bed and building a meth lab on the front lawn.

How Wall Street Killed Financial Reform

But the most appalling part is the lying. The public has been lied to so shamelessly and so often in the course of the past four years that the failure to tell the truth to the general populace has become a kind of baked-in, official feature of the financial rescue. Money wasn’t the only thing the government gave Wall Street – it also conferred the right to hide the truth from the rest of us. And it was all done in the name of helping regular people and creating jobs. “It is,” says former bailout Inspector General Neil Barofsky, “the ultimate bait-and-switch.” Read the rest of this entry →

Insecticide ‘unacceptable’ danger to bees, report finds

January 18, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Headline, Politics, World News

  —  guardian.co.uk

Campaigners say the conclusion by the European Food Safety Authority is a ‘death knell’ for neonicotinoid pesticides

Bees-007The world’s most widely used insecticide has for the first time been officially labelled an “unacceptable” danger to bees feeding on flowering crops. Environmental campaigners say the conclusion, by Europe’s leading food safety authority, sounds the “death knell” for the insect nerve agent.

The chemical’s manufacturer, Bayer, claimed the report, released on Wednesday, did not alter existing risk assessments and warned against “over-interpretation of the precautionary principle”.

The report comes just months after the UK government dismissed a fast-growing body of evidence of harm to bees as insufficient to justify banning the chemicals.

Bees and other pollinators are critical to one-third of all food, but two major studies in March 2012, and others since, have implicated neonicotinoid pesticides in the decline in the insects, alongside habitat loss and disease. In April, the European commission demanded a re-examination of the risks posed by the chemicals, including Bayer’s widely used imidacloprid and two others.

Scientists at the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA), together with experts from across Europe, concluded on Wednesday that for imidacloprid “only uses on crops not attractive to honeybees were considered acceptable” because of exposure through nectar and pollen. Such crops include oil seed rape, corn and sunflowers. EFSA was asked to consider the acute and chronic effects on bee larvae, bee behaviour and the colony as a whole, and the risks posed by sub-lethal doses. But it found a widespread lack of information in many areas and had stated previously that current “simplistic” regulations contained “major weaknesses”. Read the rest of this entry →

We’re Not Broke – The true story of corporate welfare, and Tax Evasion of a scale never before seen

January 17, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

We’re Not Broke is the story of how multi-national corporations make record profits, yet dodge billions of dollars of income tax ( tax evasion of a scale Al Capone could only have dreamed of, Why are these criminals not in jail ?), and how seven fed-up citizens take their frustration to the streetsand vow to make the corporations pay their fair share.
2012 Onshore Productions, LLC

Pakistan ‘s politicians smell plot to derail polls in cleric’s march plans

January 15, 2013 in Headline, Politics, World News

 in Islamabad  –  www.guardian.co.uk

Parties fear that Tahir-ul-Qadri’s million man march to protest against corruption could threaten first peaceful transfer of power

Tahir-ul-Qadri's supporters in Lahore

Tahir-ul-Qadri’s supporters in Lahore. The cleric’s demands for reform include the disqualification of any parliamentary candidates who have broken the law or not paid their taxes. Photograph: Arif Ali/AFP/Getty Images

A Muslim cleric’s plan to stage a “million man march” against political corruption in Pakistan‘s capital city next week has triggered consternation among political parties who fear a plot to derail the country’s first ever democratic transfer of power in upcoming elections.

Tahir-ul-Qadri, the religious leader who dramatically returned to Pakistan last month after years of living in Canada, has said he will turn Islamabad into “Tahrir Square” – the area in Cairo that became the epicentre of Egypt’s revolution last year.

“This is not a matter of coming for one day and then dispersing,” he told the Guardian. “We will sit there until our demands are fulfilled so that the election will be guaranteed to be fair, honest and free of all corrupt practices.” Read the rest of this entry →

Demonstrations have not been a success – Diversity of Tactics required

January 11, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, World News

Joost van Steenis - downwithelite.wordpress.com

 

guillotineEach year there are in Washington about ten big demonstrations.

In the last thirty years eight demonstrations attracted even more than 500,000 participants. (Wikipedia)

1969-11-15 Against the War in Vietnam

1971-04-24 Against the War in Vietnam

1987-10-11 For lesbian and gay rights

1989 April March for Women’s lives

1993-04-25 For lesbian and gay rights

1995-10-16 Million Man March

2000-11-02 CallDC for God’s move in this nation

2004-04-25 March for Women’s lives

The result of these demonstrations was disappointing. They hardly influenced politicians and the pressure on the 1% was minimal. Demonstrations and other mass actions have a propagandistic effect but it is not a real force politicians have to take into account. Mass actions also divide the 99% because they hinder the normal life of many citizens as is obvious with a strike in the public transport.  – A Diversity of Tactics must be used to have success.

In mass actions as demonstrations, petitions, strikes, even referendums and other electoral events many people protest at the same time against decisions. But successes are not encouraging.

Read the rest of this entry →

In Less Than 30 Days, the Final Battle Over Keystone XL Will Begin

January 10, 2013 in ANON NeWs, Finance, Headline, Occupy, Politics, Video Perspective, World News

By Brian Merchant  –  motherboard.vice.com

NOkEYSTONExlThe nation’s most infamous oil pipeline is winding its way out of the shadows again. While the mainstream media has ignored the civil disobedience movement against the Keystone XL in Texas, where protesters have diligently obstructed construction of its southern leg, it’s not going to ignore this: Nebraska’s environmental agency has completed a review of a new route that ropes the pipeline through “less sensitive areas.” And it essentially gives the go-ahead. The state’s governor, Dave Heineman, now has 30 days to grant it his final seal of approval.

see video, and full article below:

Read the rest of this entry →