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LAUGHING JACKASS AND SINISTER SECRETARY

by Open-Publishing - Friday 10 March 2006
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Democracy Governments USA Peter Fredson

LAUGHING JACKASS AND SINISTER SECRETARY

By Peter Fredson

March 10, 2006

Looking at the TV news yesterday I was struck by two separate views. One was of George Bush signing a document. He had a big grin on his face, and was obviously ecstatic with his success, badly needed after several months of falling polls. Why did that puzzle me?

First the Republican Senators gave Bush the ability to commit the most outrageous attack on civil rights ever perpetrated in this country against our own citizens. They passed a Patriot Act which gave Bush a Nazi-type of secret police that can arrest anyone, anytime, anyplace, for a conversation, a note, a book, and a map, whatever.

No warrant needed, no papers needed, no lawyers involved, no recourse, indefinite detention, including torture and abuse. When I say Nazi-type, I have studied the Nazi way to power and Bush is following the same course. I kid you not.

Yes, I know McCain passed what seemed to be an anti-torture bill, but Bush side-stepped that by saying he could “sign off” on it whenever his whim directed. So Bush was ebullient. Torture and abuse will continue with Bush, the prime advocate.
It is a sad commentary on our day that no one is safe from our President.

However, at the same time Bush suffered the greatest legislative defeat of his life when many of the Republicans joined Democrats to put down his sale of American ports to Dubai. He must have been livid with anger, given that he had blustered for several weeks that he would veto any attempt to derail the docks plan. Yet, there he was sitting at his desk with a huge smile signing some legislation.

Was all this some type of sinister plot to allow curtailing of civil rights for an arrogant president who is committing felonies? What could excuse Republicans for this attack on all our traditions? Perhaps by disguising Republican Congressional maneuvers during the coming election year by bringing up an equally unacceptable give-away of national property.

Republicans can claim to be champions of American democracy by preventing giving away national property, while at the same time dooming all Americans to suffer the loss of any rights that Bush wants to take away. The choice would be up to voters. Bush can claim terror, 9/11, Mushroom clouds, to sucker his fundamentalist base into his alligator grip. They evidently don’t care much about civil rights judging from their lack of protests over the past several years.

So Bush smiles his jackass grin. He really didn’t care who managed ports, but he knows he wants to be emperor and with his absolute grip on our justice system, no citizen is safe from his prying, poking, meddling, spying, mauling, hand-cuffing, beating, jailing, abuse or even torture.

No one is safe from Bush-imposed terror. So, although his cronies have to maneuver to make profit from the port deal (like giving it to Millennium) someone will make a profit, and that’s that.

Next I saw Condi Rice, the Black Angel of Death commissioned by Bush to threaten all other countries that will not kow-tow to his imperial demands. She was glowering, and hissing hate at Iran, as she has done for several months now.

This is all pre-arranged. It is all phony, a scam to frighten the world. Years ago the Bushites determined to invade Iran and Syria as well as Iraq. They used lies and rhetoric to invade Iraq causing a huge national disaster and quagmire. Their use of words like Democracy, Freedom and Sovereignty I regard as satire by villains.

Now that they were so “successful” they want to try the same tactics with Iran. Condi repeats the same tired Mushroom Cloud gambit, over and over.

But now, McCain, knowing that Presidential elections are coming up, gets in on the act, by repeating the horror scenario, as does Rumsfeld, Wolfowitz and every other neocon that can get air-time.

They are determined to do something war-like to Iran. Perhaps Hell-fire missiles, with our new nuclear warheads, and bunker buster bombs. We know that despite all assurances by Condi and Donald, which we no long accept, there are plans to do something stupid and expensive to Iran, while Bush will strut and swagger in his dumb-and-deaf routine, pretending to be a courageous warrior, asking Iran to “bring it on” as he did in Iraq.

There is no doubt but that his intention to stay a failed course is part of his daily fantasy, which he lives in a bubble of harmony, free of criticism or responsibility.

You will hear more of this “Iran Evil Intentions” on every station and newspaper from everybody on the Republican side of his nation. They are committed; intent on causing destruction and death with incalculable cost that will go directly to our military-industrial complex.

War is good business for some people. Profit is the bottom line for the neocons, as the direct road to world domination.

Bush and his thugs have lost all credibility with us as protectors of American democracy, our Constitution, or our values. They stink at it.

Forum posts

  • Every time I see his face, I want to use my fist as a piledriver and do some serious dental alterations on him. That would be before I turned him over to a combined Iraqi / Afghanistani group to try and hang, draw and quarter.

    To me, he looks like a schoolkid who is worrying that Dad is going to come home and give the hiding he deserves for what he has done, but is still bullshitting his friends that everything is under control. He is probably praying every night that he dies before a revolution deposes him and sends him to the guillotine.

  • In a message dated 3/11/06 6:31:42 AM, cort_greene@yahoo.com [Hands Off Venezuela] writes:

    http://www.vheadline.com/readnews.asp?id=50593
    Published: Friday, March 10, 2006
    Bylined to: Arelis Paiva

    Venezuela expresses alarm: FBI terror agents question recognized US academic

    EMBASSY OF THE BOLIVARIAN REPUBLIC OF VENEZUELA
    WASHINGTON DC
    10 de marzo de 2006
    STATEMENT

    The Government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela today expressed its alarm at a report published by New America Media stating that FBI agents had questioned a recognized U.S. academic on his relations with Venezuela, if he had ever been asked to speak in Venezuela’s favor, and on links between Venezuela and terrorism.

    Two agents from the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) visited Miguel Tinker-Salas, a widely respected professor at Pomona College in Claremont, California, on Tuesday, March 7. He was questioned for 20 minutes on a number of issues related to Venezuela. Several of Professor Tinker-Salas’ students were also questioned, and the agents took note of cartoons displayed on his door. Tinker-Salas, who was born in Venezuela and identifies himself as a critic of U.S. foreign policy, noted in the published report that he considered the questions an attempt to intimidate and silence him.

    The Government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela considers this incident a violation of the freedoms of expression, thought and academic inquiry, and views the move as a desperate attempt to link Venezuela to terrorism. The Government of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela also believes this incident draws comparisons to the Cold War, when academics and activists were regularly questioned and intimidated by government officials for their political views.
    The Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela is a pluralistic, free and sovereign country, one that maintains relations with academics of all political leanings. The Embassy of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela recently helped Michael Shifter, Vice President of the Inter-American Dialogue, professor at Georgetown University, and critic of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, in setting up meetings with high government officials, including the Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs for North America, the president of the National Assembly and the country’s vice president, and did so with in respecting his academic activities and inquiries.

    Venezuela condemns the actions taken by the FBI agents, expresses its solidarity with the academic community in the United States, calls upon U.S. authorities to provide an explanation for this incident and their policy towards Venezuela, and demands respect for our sovereignty.

    For more information, please visit us at www.handsoffvenezuela.org. If you want to unsubscribe or change to "daily digest" mode (one email a day), please go to http://lists.handsoffvenezuela.org/mailman/options/news/
    Join HOV and 30 over organizations at the National Venezuela Solidarity Conference to be held in Washington, DC on March 4-6, 2006. For a registration form and to get involved, please visit: http://www.ushov.org/national_venezuela_solidarity.html


    http://www.amnestyusa.org/amnestynow/profiling.html
    Amnesty Magazine
    Political Profiling
    Police Spy on Peaceful Activists

    Under cover of the “war on terrorism,” police are collecting information on activists. In Denver, intelligence files link Amnesty members to “criminal extremism.”

    BY CHIP BERLET and
    ABBY SCHER

    Chip Berlet, senior analyst at Political Research Associates in Boston, has written about human rights for such publications as the New York Times, Boston Globe, and Chicago Sun-Times.

    Abby Scher is a sociologist and journalist who works at the Independent Press Association in New York. She recently wrote about the crackdown on dissent in The Nation.

    Most members of Amnesty International don’t consider themselves part of a criminal extremist network. But that’s how a Denver Police Department’s intelligence database tracked AIUSA members Stephen and Vicki Nash and Mark and Barbara Lee Cohen. The couples fear that Denver police and other agencies that share the files will paint peaceful activists as potential terrorists and "criminalize protest activity," says Stephen Nash.

    Mark Cohen was surprised by the "criminal extremist" label. "None of us have ever been arrested, much less convicted of a crime, for our political activities," he says.

    The Denver case has raised red flags for civil liberties and human rights advocates who have been fighting the Bush administration’s rollback of civil liberties. They say that national and local law enforcement agencies across the country have been hacking away at hard-won protections of the right to peaceful protest. The American Civil Liberties Union of Colorado agrees and has filed a lawsuit charging the police with violating the First Amendment rights of activists. Three Chicano activists, whose files reflect surveillance as far back as 1967, have filed a separate federal lawsuit against the police, claiming their civil rights have been violated.

    Amnesty International is also concerned. "Civil liberties are definitely a human rights issue–they are inseparable," says Curt Goering, senior deputy executive director of AIUSA. "Governments are entitled, even obligated, to take steps to protect the security of their citizens. That’s true here in the U.S. and in other countries–governments face this dilemma all the time. But they need to proceed in ways that are absolutely consistent with international standards of basic human rights and civil liberties."

    Although legislation and court rulings under Bush’s "war on terror" have sharply eroded privacy protections, police spying on activists is not new. Back in 1954, the Denver Police Department’s criminal intelligence bureau began a file system that has grown to some 100,000 records. A few years ago, Denver installed Orion, a spiffy new computerized information retrieval system with entries ranging from convicted criminals to local political activists including the Nashes and Cohens. During the past few years, they had helped form End the Politics of Cruelty (EPOC), a local group that protests police misconduct, and staged protests with the American Friends Service Committee (AFSC). Orion listed AFSC and EPOC members as "criminal extremists." Amnesty International members were filed under "civil disobedience," but because of cross-referencing, when police looked up AI members, the software system associated them with a "criminal extremist" network.

    Why were AFSC and EPOC members identified as "criminal extremists?" "They have been linked to activities that involved extremist activity, criminal activities," detective David Pontarelli said in a deposition cited by the New York Times.

    In other depositions, police blamed a secretary for inaccurately picking categories from Orion’s drop-down lists. The secretary, when asked, was unable to define the term "criminal extremist."

    But whether it was a case of garbage in, garbage out–or witch hunt in, constitutional protections out, a chagrined Denver Mayor Wellington Webb appointed a three-judge panel to investigate. After reviewing files, it recommended deleting information on 208 groups and 3,277 individuals for lack of evidence of criminal activity.

    The existence of the files came to light when Denver police shared them with a neighboring city and copies surfaced, but the Amnesty International activists had long suspected that police were monitoring them. "My main activity for several years was calling for more police accountability," says Mark Cohen, and at every public event we saw police conducting surveillance on us." And not even accurately; their Orion files were filled with errors. Police had falsely listed Stephen Nash and Barbara Levy Cohen (but oddly, not their spouses) as having a direct relationship with an alleged weapons-wielding drug-dealing "outlaw biker" gang. Barbara confesses, "I do ride a bike, but it has pedals."

    The basic civil liberties issue, however, goes beyond accuracy to the question of "whether or not there should be a criminal intelligence file for people who are not breaking the law," says Mark Cohen.

    While the Cohens and Nashes were able to retrieve and check their Orion files, police denied having information on some protesters who later found references to themselves in material released to others. Doug Vaughan, a reporter and long-time activist, filed a separate open-records request. "Police, who denied they had anything on me, coughed up 172 pages suggesting–falsely–that I was associated with ’known supporters of terrorists.’" Police admitted they had "discovered" more file drawers of materials on Vaughan and others pre-dating Orion.

    Some spy files may never be found. In a 1998 memo, written as police were implementing Orion, an intelligence supervisor told subordinates to "shred, toss, or take home" other files, lest the department be sued. Probes of police abuse in Chicago, Los Angeles, and Portland, Ore., sparked similar information purges.

    Denver is only one of many cities in which police spying on peaceful activists has intensified. In the wake of 9/11, local police and city councils, the Department of Justice, and Congress have been operating at a feverish pace to roll back reforms and oversight instituted to address past abuses.

    This February civil liberties advocates took a particularly hard hit when a federal judge gave the New York Police Department the go-ahead to revise surveillance restrictions that were in effect for 17 years. The court imposed them in 1985 to resolve a 14-year-old lawsuit by Black Panthers and other activists. Between 1904 and 1985, the NYPD maintained thousands of files and at times deployed undercover agents provocateurs to disrupt organizing. In the Black Panthers case, it was a police spy who nurtured the idea of bombing New York police stations and department stores. Under the 1985 reforms, the NYPD had to submit spying requests to the "Handschu Authority" (the three-person panel named after the lead plaintiff in the Panthers case) and show that the target of its investigation had criminal intent.

    On Feb. 10, the NYPD’s efforts to overturn the Handschu guidelines bore fruit when U.S. District Court Judge Charles Haight told the city that it no longer needs to show criminal intent or to ask the Handschu Authority to authorize spying requests. Furthermore,
    police may now use the less restrictive FBI protocols governing surveillance of activists.

    According to lawyer Martin R. Stolar, who represented activists trying to maintain Handschu, the effect is that now "there’s no teeth–there’s no threat of legal action. Handschu had somebody put their name on a piece of paper," said Stolar, "which made a difference when you are talking about political surveillance," because someone was then at least nominally accountable. Now the NYPD will have unrestrained access to the mailing lists of organizations and the authority to place spies in mosques and other investigative "targets" without leaving the paper trail required by Handschu. And citizens will have only the police department’s word that it is operating within constitutional limits.

    The man who spearheaded the NYPD’s efforts to overturn Handschu comes by his aversion to oversight naturally. David Cohen, Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s new deputy commissioner for Intelligence, worked for 35 years in intelligence and was the CIA’s director of operations from 1995 to 1997. In the city’s court filings, he wrote, "The counterproductive restrictions imposed on the NYPD by the Handschu Guidelines in this changed world hamper our efforts every day."

    Many cities are similarly invoking the specter of terrorism to knock down hard-won restrictions on police surveillance of law-abiding activists. In Chicago a 1981 legal agreement similar to Handschu prohibited police from wholesale collection of information on non-criminal dissidents. In January 2001, after police complained that they could not adequately investigate terrorism and hate crimes, a Federal Court of Appeals overturned that agreement.

    While the history of domestic spying goes back centuries (see box), surveillance in the post-9/11 era is chillingly comprehensive. The rollback of reforms like Handschu–along with computerized databases and an escalation in information sharing on private citizens between local police and state and federal authorities–is bad enough. But it is accompanied by an overall weakening of balance of powers and of oversight mechanisms.

    The USA Patriot Act and post-9/11 executive orders, for instance, allow government officials to bar the release of detainees and to overturn the bail set by immigration judges. The legislation also authorizes the FBI to conduct wiretaps that it need never disclose and to initiate secret searches without having to show probable cause. The FBI can even force librarians to report which books a patron reads and to ban the library from telling partrons about the feds’ demand.

    Other government proposals seek to enhance massive information-gathering efforts. "Patriot Act II," a Justice Department proposal leaked to the press in early February, calls for even more surveillance to fight global terrorism. This plan would encourage file sharing and would specifically strike down all remaining city or state protections against surveillance abuse. And the proposed Total Information Awareness program would create giant coordinated databases of personal information through which authorities could rummage. Some legislators are trying to curtail funding for this ominously named act.

    The Bush administration maintains these measures are necessary for national security. "We will shield Americans from violations of their civil liberties . . . while we work across the government to stop terrorists from killing more innocent Americans," Justice Department spokesperson Mark Corallo told the Washington Post.

    But critics fear that unless local spying is regulated and federal guidelines tightened, proliferating databases–shared by police, FBI, INS, and other agencies–will become conduits for junk information. There would be no way for people to know what dangerous stew of suspicion, half-truths and lies various agencies at different levels of government had assembled and disseminated.

    As the Denver Post editorialized, this type of information-sharing poses the potential "for great mischief, possibly destroying the reputations of innocent people who have committed no crime." The mere fact that some law enforcement officer "doesn’t like people who hold unpopular views is insufficient grounds to label them ’terrorists,’ even in post-9/11 America."

    Meanwhile, as part of the post-9/11 "war on terrorism," the U.S. government held hundreds of Arab and Muslim immigrants without criminal charges. The main precedent for this kind of roundup is President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s decision to intern more than 100,000 Japanese Americans during World War II. A key committee that would exercise direct oversight on profile-based incarcerations and government spying is the Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security. In a February radio interview, its chair, Rep. Howard Coble (R-NC), said he approved of Roosevelt’s decision, explaining that the Japanese were interned for their own protection. "We were at war," he said. "We were under attack by a sovereign nation. We were not a multicultural society."

    The horrific attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, demonstrated that terrorism is a real and urgent problem. But government surveillance and detention programs may erode civil liberties without stopping criminal violence. Spying on lawful political activity probably won’t even find potential terrorists, says civil liberties lawyer Jethro Eisenstein. "Everything we know about how al Qaeda operates is it’s below the radar."