FBI is controlled by the government.
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FBI is controlled by the government.
No. That came due to pressure following a public outcry.
The term "War on Drugs" has enjoyed widespread use in mainstream US discourse ever since Richard Nixon popularised it in 1971 and the US has, in latter years, spent $51 billion annually on policies purportedly geared towards eradication, prohibition and incarceration. Although the Obama administration eschewed use of the term popularised by Nixon (as it was deemed to be "counter-productive"), Obama did not significantly alter long-standing drug enforcement policy.
Is Trump's hard-line stance - which, in accordance with pre-existing US convention, misguidedly (or perhaps mendaciously) regards drugs as a criminal matter rather than a public health issue - really anything novel then?
Have you ever seen Eugene Jarecki's The House I Live In?:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QlPNRaXj2OQ
It's worth a watch if the US's (failed) anti-drug policies are something in which you're interested.
Anyhow, even if Trump was to sincerely and effectively work towards resolving drug-related problems in the US to your satisfaction - whilst presumably granting unique exemption from any hard-line crackdown on psychoactive substances for drugs like (regulated) alcohol, which is the most medically and socially harmful drug of all, (regulated) nicotine or (legal) caffeine* - does that negate or mitigate his many other failings and prejudices? You must have great time for Rodrigo Duterte too?...Quote:
Originally Posted by Wanda Bershen
*For what it's worth, I don't advocate criminalisation of the sale, exchange, possession, use or abuse of alcohol, nicotine or caffeine, but I feel that tolerance or acceptance of their legality or regulation by those who simultaneously purport to have a hard-line "zero tolerance" stance on traditionally-banned psychoactive substances is paradoxical. It's demonstrative of gross double standards and, thus, questionable motives.
Really interesting read on FISA here from back in 2013. It's amazing what we now accept as normal. Well worth a read no matter your thoughts on Trump.
https://www.theguardian.com/commenti...rocess-secrecy
Quote:
"On its face, the 2008 law gives the government authority to engage in surveillance directed at people outside the United States. In the course of conducting that surveillance, though, the government inevitably sweeps up the communications of many Americans. The government often says that this surveillance of Americans' communications is 'incidental', which makes it sound like the NSA's surveillance of Americans' phone calls and emails is inadvertent and, even from the government's perspective, regrettable.
"But when Bush administration officials asked Congress for this new surveillance power, they said quite explicitly that Americans' communications were the communications of most interest to them. See, for example, Fisa for the 21st Century, Hearing Before the S. Comm. on the Judiciary, 109th Cong. (2006) (statement of Michael Hayden) (stating, in debate preceding passage of FAA's predecessor statute, that certain communications 'with one end in the United States" are the ones "that are most important to us').
The principal purpose of the 2008 law was to make it possible for the government to collect Americans' international communications - and to collect those communications without reference to whether any party to those communications was doing anything illegal. And a lot of the government's advocacy is meant to obscure this fact, but it's a crucial one: The government doesn't need to 'target' Americans in order to collect huge volumes of their communications."
Quote:
When it is time for the NSA to obtain Fisa court approval, the agency does not tell the court whose calls and emails it intends to intercept. It instead merely provides the general guidelines which it claims are used by its analysts to determine which individuals they can target, and the Fisa court judge then issues a simple order approving those guidelines. The court endorses a one-paragraph form order stating that the NSA's process "'contains all the required elements' and that the revised NSA, FBI and CIA minimization procedures submitted with the amendment 'are consistent with the requirements of [50 U.S.C. §1881a(e)] and with the fourth amendment to the Constitution of the United States'". As but one typical example, the Guardian has obtained an August 19, 2010, Fisa court approval from Judge John Bates which does nothing more than recite the statutory language in approving the NSA's guidelines.
Once the NSA has this court approval, it can then target anyone chosen by their analysts, and can even order telecoms and internet companies to turn over to them the emails, chats and calls of those they target. The Fisa court plays no role whatsoever in reviewing whether the procedures it approved are actually complied with when the NSA starts eavesdropping on calls and reading people's emails.
Another worthwhile Greenwald piece on Democrat opportunism and hypocrisy when it comes to condemning Trump on his approach to Russia; 'Democrats Now Demonize the Same Russia Policies that Obama Long Championed': https://theintercept.com/2017/03/06/...ng-championed/
Quote:
Originally Posted by Glenn Greenwald
FISA is not Obama. SkStu is suspended from this forum for 1 week.
Seriously, I'm simply not having /r/The_Donald conspiritard behaviour in here, it's pathetic and I'm not giving it a platform. Call it censorship, call it whatever you want, it's not happening in this forum.
Except you're contradicting yourself FFS.
'America First' is going to be as bad as anything Obama/Clinton did or would have done. Plus lying about jobs that simply don't exist, making healthcare more difficult, groping women and picking on immigrants, non-whites and other minorities is NOT 'Draining the Swamp', it's adding to the pure sh*te blocking it all up. Not to mention clueless sucking up to Putin and now claiming he's going to spend record amounts on military hardware...plus being endorsed by the KKK and other Nazi wannabes like 'the alt-right'.
Yeah, great changes! Not.
That 'swamp' will never be cleared!
Lol. Yeah right. You must be on some good stuff if you ever think there's any chance of that ever happening. And how is he 'following through'? By bullying Mexico? What a joke...
'Leading Putin Critic Warns of Xenophobic Conspiracy Theories Drowning U.S. Discourse and Helping Trump' by Glenn Greenwald: https://theintercept.com/2017/03/07/...helping-trump/
Quote:
Originally Posted by Glenn Greenwald
So much for draining the swamp...must be his Goldman Sachs advisers helping out?
http://www.vox.com/policy-and-politi...e-tax-cut-rich
Sean Spicer must be wincing inside.Quote:
"I think there's no question that the Obama administration, that there were actions about surveillance and other activities that occurred in the 2016 election...The President used the word wiretaps in quotes to mean, broadly, surveillance and other activities."
Spicer also said that Trump was referring to the Obama administration broadly -- and not accusing Obama of personal involvement -- when he tweeted that "Obama had my 'wires tapped' in Trump Tower" and accused Obama of being a "bad" or "sick guy."
A fascinating and frankly alarming TED talk ('How this FBI strategy is actually creating US-based terrorists') by Trevor Aaronson relevant to some previous discussion in this tread:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SGG97dDfZ7E
Quote:
Originally Posted by TED
Susan Rice is hilarious. She lies so often and so prolifically she forgets her lies. First it was 'No one spied, Trump is crazy!' Now its 'We all spy, what's the big deal?'
"I leaked nothing to nobody." Harvard grad who doesn't know (or does) a double negative expresses the affirmative. This is even crazier than her Benghazi lie, and IRS lies. "I don't have a particular recollection of doing that more frequently after the election." --on the unmasking. Let's see her say THAT under oath.
Democracy Now! interview Noam Chomsky on Trump's first 75 days as US president: https://www.democracynow.org/2017/4/...y_on_democracy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QT4MO9uQxgc
Another terrorist attack. This time in Sweden. A country we were talking about recently.
http://www.independent.ie/world-news...-35603395.html
Don't worry, everyone will make the Swedish flag their twitter avatar for 24 hrs, say we won't be cowed and it will be just fine.
Hopefully someday soon we'll be able to have a grown up conversation about the dangers of mass immigration, open borders and the link to radical Islam and opportunistic terrorism without resorting to labels and name calling.
'The Spoils of War: Trump Lavished With Media and Bipartisan Praise For Bombing Syria': https://theintercept.com/2017/04/07/...bombing-syria/
Quote:
Originally Posted by Glenn Greenwald
This is just bizarre:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q4n3SI81m9w
Unsettlingly-explicit war-mongering under the veil and gravitas of "news-reporting" from the supposedly "liberal" MSNBC.
So you think it was ok for Assad to use poisonous gas on children? You think it's ok for him to break the rules of the Geneva Convention?
Maybe we should have waited on the UN, which is the most useless organization out there, to do something about it. The thing I just love about us Irish, is we are such experts on every war we never fought in.
Of course I don't think it's OK for Assad, or anyone for that matter, to use poisonous gas on children.
Talking about the "beauty of [their] weapons" as they watch footage of missiles being sent on their way to rain down on human beings is disconcerting and weird. It's sort of psychopathic.
I would suggest that an investigation into the attack should be carried out so as to obtain evidence and ascertain who is responsible before any action is considered.
I happen to agree with most of what Glenn Greenwald writes here: http://foot.ie/threads/219506-Trump?...=1#post1915566
I have no objection to missile strikes on chemical weapons storage when it would appear Assad has rolled back on previous agreements regarding their use and disposal. What I object to is a "Fire and Forget" style intervention from the US, where the deeper problems of what is occurring in Syria go untackled in favour of a brief demonstration of muscle. It makes me think of the US involvement in the NFZ over Libya, a country still in so much turmoil: is Syria going to just vanish from the headlines soon as well?
This reminded me of when Tetsujin said he could see what deleted/edited posts said.
http://www.thejournal.ie/trump-tweet...28633-Apr2017/
The standard of debate on here is just fantastic recently.
"This video is quite disconcerting."
"So you want Syrian kids to die????????????????"
The response from the US to the attack last week was interesting for a number of reasons. The situation in Syria is complicated, to say the least. As Danny points out above there may even be questions as to who really carried out the attack or, at least, how the series of events went down. The invention by the previous US administration of the term "moderate rebels" was a convenient way for them to arm terrorist groups and promote the preferred American outcome that would see Assad ousted. They ended up arming, heavily, affiliates of Al Queda and Al Nusra and mercenaries that aligned with ISIS - in other words there was no such thing as a group of "moderate rebels". They all wanted death to America and they all wanted to exert control in an area that Assad couldn't. The absolutely disgusting piece in all this is the wanton disregard for human life and innocent civilians.
So, like I said, the response from the Trump administration is interesting for a number of reasons. Aside from flexing some muscle and mitigating the Trump/Putin bromance narrative;
1) strategically, it leaves the door open to work with Russia and Assad in the elimination of ISIS (to the extent that is even possible)
2) tactically, it targets the infrastructure of the Assad regime instead of the possibility of killing people.
3) it draws a line in the sand of what Assad can and cannot do in defeating the groups that want him out (assuming it was Assad who ordered/carried out the strike)
4) Tillerson says its position on Assad remains unchanged - it is up to the people of Syria to determine their influence without US arming any rebellion
It puts the ball in Assad's court in terms of how he wants this to go down, long term. Any more dirty attacks will be met with growing force so it puts a little pressure on Russia to manage its ally as they do not have any interest in being drawn into war with the US.
Anyway, as always, you have the war-mongering going on on both sides of the aisles in the US - McCain, Graham and - more recently - little Marco the loudest of those voices. It is disgusting to be urging the US into another war they should not get into but it also begs the question why? What is in it for these folks and the previous US administration to topple the Assad regime? Answer: it was not borne out of humanitarian concerns - instead you should follow the oil...follow the money.
Saudi/Qatari oil? Or oil controlled by Iran and its geopolitical partners? The overthrow of Assad was desperately needed by Saudi and its buddies in the White House.
http://www.oil-price.net/cartoons/ir...a-pipeline.jpg
I'm not sure if I posted this article before, but it expands on what you're saying in relation to the issue of (proposed) oil pipelines and the geopolitical/strategic significance of Syria in all of that: http://www.mintpressnews.com/migrant...elines/209294/
Quote:
Originally Posted by Mnar Muhawesh
Assad has no chin.
Meh. I don't know.
'Alleged Sarin Gas Attack by President Assad is Fake News': https://sciscomedia.co.uk/sarin-gas-assad-fake-news/
Quote:
Originally Posted by Daniel Margrain
'Former DIA Colonel: “US strikes on Syria based on a lie”': https://gosint.wordpress.com/2017/04...ased-on-a-lie/
I saw an interview with a congressman - I cant remember which one - where he said that it is quite possible that the terrorists released the chemicals knowing that a strike was imminent. He didn't put it forward as the answer but the fact that he felt comfortable and within reason to do so on a MSM program just gave an insight into how things are not (almost ever) what they seem and we really have no idea what is going on.
Whether Dugan's theory or some other theory is what actually happened, the wanton disregard for life and using civilians as pawns in a global power struggle never ceases to disgust me.
By the way, Eva Bartlett is another journalist that I have been listening to over the last year or so when it comes to Syria. She claims to be independent but I have seen her interviewed on RT - either way, she has a great insight into what may really be going on in Syria (or certainly what was going on under the Obama administration). Worth checking out.
Former Defense Intelligence Agency colonel Patrick Lang published a similar account of what is actually supposed to have happened. You can read it in the link in post #276 above. I'd quote his version of events but it'd get me in trouble as it's more than two paragraphs long.
We know the actual Syrian pilot who dropped the chemical weapons.