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The NSA Is Still Listening to You
Bush went away, but domestic surveillance overreach didn't. It's now the law, and the ACLU is fighting back
This summer, on a remote stretch of desert in central Utah, the National Security Agency will begin work on a massive, 1 million-square-foot data warehouse. Costing more than $1.5 billion, the highly secret facility is designed to house upward of trillions of intercepted phone calls, e-mail messages, Internet searches and other communications intercepted by the agency as part of its expansive eavesdropping operations. The NSA is also completing work on another data warehouse, this one in San Antonio, Texas, which will be nearly the size of the Alamodome.
The need for such extraordinary data storage capacity stems in part from the Bush administration's decision to open the NSA's surveillance floodgates following the 9/11 attacks. According to a recently released Inspectors General report, some of the NSA's operations -- such as spying on American citizens without warrants -- were so questionable, if not illegal, that they nearly caused the resignations of the most senior officials of both the FBI and the Justice Department.
Last July, many of those surveillance techniques were codified into law as part of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Amendments Act (FAA). In fact, according to the Inspectors General report, "this legislation gave the government even broader authority to intercept international communications" than the warrantless surveillance operations had. Yet despite this increased power, congressional oversight committees have recently discovered that the agency has been over-collecting on the domestic communications of Americans, thus even exceeding the excessive reach granted them by the FAA.
I am an author and journalist specializing in national security issues and terrorism, and often communicate with parties in the Middle East as part of my work. Because of concerns that my communications might have been monitored, in early 2006, shortly after NSA's warrantless surveillance program was revealed by the New York Times, I became a plaintiff in a lawsuit brought by the American Civil Liberties Union against the NSA that argued that the program was illegal and should be shut down. We prevailed in federal district court, with Judge Anna Diggs Taylor finding that President Bush had violated both the law and the Constitution, but lost on the government's appeal when the court ruled the plaintiffs could not prove that they were personally victims of the secret eavesdropping program. In a decision worthy of Lewis Carroll, the appeals court held both that the government could refuse to confirm or deny whether it had monitored plaintiffs' communications and that plaintiffs could not challenge the constitutionality of the program unless they could show that their communications had been monitored. A dissenting judge pointed out that the court's decision was inconsistent with Supreme Court precedent and would effectively render the program unreviewable by the courts.
On Wednesday, the ACLU will once again appear in federal court, this time in a separate lawsuit charging that the new FAA statute is unconstitutional. The ACLU is right. While the FAA prohibits the agency from intentionally "targeting" people within the U.S., it places virtually no restrictions on the targeting of people outside the U.S. even if those targets are communicating with U.S. citizens and residents. The law essentially allows the agency virtually unfettered access to the international communications of innocent Americans in clear violation of the Fourth Amendment.
Also troublesome is the fact that the FAA emasculates the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the one independent check and balance between the agency and the American public. Originally established as a response to the discovery by Congress in the mid-1970s that the NSA had been illegally eavesdropping domestically for decades, the FISA court required the government to show that there was probable cause to believe that its surveillance target was an agent of a foreign government or terrorist group in order to obtain a necessary warrant. But the new law does away with this requirement, and now the NSA does not even have to identify the targets of its surveillance at all as long as it is targeting people outside the U.S., leaving the agency free, for example, to target human rights activists or media organizations overseas, even if they are communicating with family or editors back in the U.S. As former NSA "voice interceptor" Adrienne Kinne told me in my book, "The Shadow Factory: The Ultra-Secret NSA From 9/11 to the Eavesdropping on America," the agency targeted both groups during the Bush administration, including eavesdropping on intimate bedroom conversations.
Further removing the FISA court from any meaningful role, the new law even gags the judges, prohibiting them from asking the government who, what, where or why it is launching any particular surveillance program.
Finally, the FAA fails to place any meaningful limitations on the NSA's retention of phone calls, e-mail and other communications that it collects -- necessitating the colossal data storage mausoleums it is now building. The agency need only show that it has "reasonably designed" procedures to minimize information retention, which must give way to the NSA's need "to obtain, produce, and disseminate foreign intelligence information." And because "foreign intelligence" is very broadly defined, this allows the NSA to conduct immense data mining operations within those centers.
Among the most striking discoveries to come out of the Inspectors General report was that, despite the enormous expansion of the NSA's capabilities, including turning its giant ear inward for the first time in three decades, no one could point to any significant counterterrorism success. Instead, it warned that while the agency had little difficulty collecting vast amounts of data, the trouble was analyzing it all. It was a problem akin to Jorge Luis Borges' "Library of Babel," a place where the collection of information is both infinite and at the same time monstrous, where the entire world's knowledge is stored, but not a single word understood. In this "labyrinth of letters," Borges wrote, "there are leagues of senseless cacophonies, verbal jumbles and incoherences." In addition to the civil liberties and constitutional defects in the new surveillance law, another compelling argument against it is that it only increases the amount of "senseless cacophonies" in America's Library of Babel.
- Posted in



46 Comments so far
Show AllDoes anyone have any idea where/when the funding for the NSA superfacility being built in Utah came from?
Can anyone pinpoint the bill the funding originates from and when it passed?
Yet another example of the corporate news media failing us.
Can we have a Fairness Doctrine NOW?
You beat me to it, Cygnus.
Methinks this is going to make a few somebodies a whole lot of coin. Best of all, the USInc taxpayer gets to fund the illegal invasion of his/her own privacy!
It might not be a failure of media. Much of the "black budget" is secret from Congress too.
-TIA
I hope the NSA is listening. Some day we will be able to to use this information to investigate those who will stop at nothing to perpetuate the status quo. If the NSA would kindly give us the intercepts needed to prosecute the Texas Cabal we could be a safer planet within a few years....
I wonder if in your "status quo" and "Cabal" you include the man currently lounging in the White House, who voted in favor of EXPANDING warrant-less wiretapping and FISA (protecting the "cabal" retroactively) and who has a DOJ (Department of Injustice) actively working to insure that the "Texas Cabal" will not be prosecuted?
"Safer Planet?" What a fool you must be.
Yup, biomusicologist. Me too. I had considered a "triangulating" sort of vote for Obama, mulling over the "wasted third party vote" theory. But Mr Constitutional Scholar's vote for FAA ( and the bailouts) are what put me on the proper path to real change and hope, a vote outside the DUOPOLY.
NSA/FAA is a mechanical-electronic STASI (the former DDR's secret police, who were considered to be monitoring everyone - though that proved false, they only managed to cover some 10 percent).
Noone's allowed to have secrets anymore, except the ones controlling that the rest have no secrets.
Live with it: simply assume that anything you say or write or communicate in our hijacked communication-channels is monitored for the worst possible interpretation of what's communicated. Then find some relief in the fact that human capacity to sift through the data-masses is lacking.
In a world where we might trust that noone need go hungry or starve to death (currently 30,000 daily, 10 m every year, 1 every 3 seconds), the need to monitor the rebelliousness of the starving billion and anyone disgusted by that state of human affairs, would be near non-existent. And cheaper to achieve. But with much weaker profit-streams from the enslaved sweatshop-workers at bottom to US the wealthiest "internet-billion".
1 billion living on the verge of starvation-death, 1 billion in gluttony, and 5 billion striving in between - that's roundly the global human condition.
Meanwhile global population is in an ongoing state of explosion, increasing by over 200,000 people every day, 80 million more every year. This population-increase is the basis for global economic growth.
The population-growth causes humans to devour 125 % of the planet's annual produce of resources that we use. This is unsustainable, meaning it won't go on long because the resources are getting exhausted. Now we've exhausted the air: i.e. the air's capacity for absorbing CO2 while staying stable enough for humans to live with little worry of weather-catastrophies.
Changing habitual thought-patterns seems to be the most diffucult task for human beings.
Sounder thinking would have the NSA monitoring the causes of climate extreming, rather than reactions to the exploitation of our surroundings and our selves as humans.
Sioux Rose
ULLERN: Profound words & analysis. Thank you for sharing it.
Thank you right back, Rose. You're most graciously welcome.
James,
To avoid computerized spying on your phone conversations you can just use the Skype IP phone. Skype to Skype voice and chat are encrypted using AES cryptography. This is high quality encryption that is approved by the US government for Secret and Top Secret material.
What makes the electronic spying authorized by Bush so devastatingly stupid is that the universal availability of high quality cryptography makes it completely ineffective.
Regards,
Wait . . . aren't there always back doors for government in these programs?
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
Wait . . . aren't there always back doors for government in these programs?
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
Wait . . . aren't there always back doors for government in these programs?
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
Wait . . . aren't there always back doors for government in these programs?
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
The AES algorithms are published and can be used by anyone. There are several open source implementation crypto libraries which are considered to be of high quality.
Skype with AES is far more secure than wringing your hands and using your cell phone.
Pretty Good Privacy is available as an addin for Thunderbird email encryption with similar high quality encryption. However I prefer the high quality S-Mime encryption that is built into most modern email clients.
Wait . . . aren't there always back doors for government in these programs?
"According to all myth, the female - not the male -- gives life"
It can't be said too often!
· Yr Obd't Servant
The "senseless cacophanies" vacuumed up and retained by NSA in colossal data storage mausoleums are the raw material for future assaults upon freedom of association and everyone's personal privacy. Nobody needs to listen in. Nobody needs to contemporaneously separate out the wheat from the chaff. The whole data mining operation is an end unto itself.
Once stored as Library of Babel gibberish, it is retrievable at NSA's leisure, long after the fact - not unlike the surveillance videos in some bank lobbies and commercial stores that run 24/7, or the master 911 Central Dispatch phone traffic recordings (which, in my community, are automatically retained for at least 90 days before potentially being erased or recycled). Nobody needs to actually be staring at the monitor screen to catch a shoplifter or armed robber in the act. Sure, it would be great if a patrol car could be instantaneously dispatched to the scene of every breaking emergency, but a permanent real time record of the frantic citizen's call for help over a crime in progress has been generated nonetheless.
It is the power to retrieve and reassemble the digitally stored data after the fact(in whole, or perhaps selectively) that gives the wholesale data mining records custodian/analyst such enormous power. Reality can be reconstructed from five minutes ago, five days ago, or from five years ago. Noise can be filtered out, voice recognition technology focused in, context clarified or context blurred.
The only limits upon such a system as a tool for political manipulation are the imagination, integrity, and range of target selection choices that is possessed by the system's faceless operators. And that's classified. No such agency. Don't worry. Be happy.
Bill from Saginaw
Sioux Rose
BILL: Astute analysis. That was my take, too. However, I had two comforting thoughts. One was that a natural disaster would probably hit the facility and wipe the proverbial slate clean. And the 2nd, was a new take on the final scene from "Raiders of the Lost Arc" when the all-important arc is placed in some generic wood crate and then filed away at the bottom of a huge Smithsonian-Institute like basement facility. Lost again, buried again, forever. That brings us to the idea of the library of Babel... perhaps by the time the data might be needed, the individual at the controls will not understand what is being said, or what bearing it has. Or perhaps some electro-magnetic storm of strong magnitude, something yet to emerge from the imbalances of rapid climate change, might alter the ions rendering these acoustically-spying materials unretrievable.
The Las Gaux cave art remains as it was etched into rock, some pretty secure matter. Ever notice how floppy disks and CDs have such a short life expectancy? They seem sensitive to dust particles, their operations easily thrown off kilter? That's the beauty of these systems... they are so fine-tuned that like all those mono-culture fields forced into neat, even rows of sameness, if a few hardy microbes get a hold on the first plant, a whole new "Domino Theory" relative to "industrial farming" moves into action. Mother Nature eventually will have the last say. On the other hand, do I necessarily want my "bedroom talk" on some goon's computer screen? Isn't that how they got Elliot Spitzer?
Sioux Rose -
My understanding is that Elliot Spitzer got busted when one of the escort agency call girls gossiped about some of the particulars of their trysts.
The person hearing this gossip figured out the john in question might be Governor Spitzer (who had decades worth of powerful partisan enemies, given his background as a prominent prosecuting attorney and Democratic Party heavyweight). This tipster contacted federal law enforcement authorities, who were apparently already investigating the escort agency for reasons unrelated to Spitzer or this particular woman. Credit card charge records paid to the escort agency however came back traceable to Mr. Spitzer, thus corroborating both the tipster and the original gossip. And the rest, as they say, is history.
I had never heard that NSA electronic surveillance had anything to do with Spitzer's fall from grace. There was some suggestion that the Patriot Act may have had some role in facilitating the feds' ability to obtain the credit card records of the escort agency, documents that ultimately became the crucial evidentiary link to the governor.
Regardless, the systematic archiving of "bedroom talk" into a giant digital data storage facility for possible future retrieval is what makes the wholesale vacuuming up of such electronic communications so dangerous to privacy interests in the first place. Remember, there are now sixteen different federal agencies with potential access to classified national security information (all under the umbrella of Homeland Security). An intelligence agency's current political agenda, or an individual agency analyst's personal agenda, may be perfectly legitimate or unbelievably slimey. This is simply the risk that every citizen is exposed to, once the Library of Babel threshold has been crossed and the database gets compiled.
Bill from Saginaw
Sioux Rose
BILL: Okay. I stand corrected. Your last paragraph is chilling for its truth.
BARDAMU: Thanks for the computer-savvy explanation. Shucks! I thought one good lightning bolt would take of it all!
I dunno, Sioux. Maybe if we distribute it somehow.
Unfortunately, the digital update of that final LOST ARC warehouse can be housed in a few hard drives, redundantly stored at little expense, converted on-the-fly by programs similar to Dragon Software's NATURALLY SPEAKING to alphanumeric text, then globally searched.
Longterm digital storage just requires periodic copy to fresh media. The Net was originally developed to prevent loss of command controls and the loss of this kind of data during widespread emergency that takes out most of a network.
Plenty will slip through the cracks with the mass of data. Plenty will not.
As long as government can dispense with formal accusation and trial, the quality and source of information are relatively minor issues - from the POV of a despot bent on efficient oppression.
I was going to write something, but now I'm too scared.
Ha! Good comment!
"...no one could point to any significant counterterrorism success."
Exactly. And it's not because of "the trouble was analyzing it all." It's because there are no hoards of terrorist sleeper cells in the suburbs waiting for the jihad call. 8+ years of unfettered monitoring - and they got nothing.
Yet, the spying continues and expands. Why? Since there clearly are no Al Qaeda terrorists to hunt down in America, and we know 'our' government isn't gathering all this data for the hell of it, what is the real agenda?
Nutty conspiracy theories aside, I think it's all actually bullshit - I don't think 'they' plan on ever doing anything with the data. I think it's just yet another way to pad the pockets of all those involved in such a massive operation, with the added benefit of the 'Big Brother Is Watching' propaganda deterrent.
And, every once in a while, if a Gov gets out of line, his affair with the goat will be leaked...
We are flirting with fascism.
Thank goodness Obama was elected...
...choke...
I'd like to expand on the cryptography comment.... any terrorist worth their salt will eventually subscribe to the available cryptography. So I would assume that if the NSA could sift through all these communications and identify a possible suspect, then they would have to apply their other tools to decode any msgs. A daunting task, even for a super computer.
What is more probable is using all these stored communications for recreating events or supporting other evidence, either in trial or as cases develop.
What is even more probable, and where we shouldn't buy into data mining not being possible, is prediciting habits of consumers. I do data mining and predicitions for a living. The more data I have the better. but it is also the type of data. What we've been told the NSA is collecting is useful, but with many limitations. Now, combine the communications tracking with credit tracking, and I could make trillions predicting consumer behavior. I could also predict political behavior (which is the first to get stolen). wasn't there a case of some domestic corporation tapping NSA computers a while back?
For criminal investigations, the easiest, best way are the ones that have warrents.
One might start with PGP, "Pretty Good Privacy" as purveyed by Phil Zimmermann. Cheers.
Why is the governement doing this to us? Because We The People are the enemy. This is the beginning of the Police State.
camus13
Speaking of Fascism below are the 14 characteristics. Please read them and see how many fit the good old USA
American Fascism
Dr. Lawrence Britt has examined the fascist regimes of Hitler (Germany), Mussolini (Italy), Franco (Spain), Suharto (Indonesia) and several Latin American regimes. Britt found 14-defining characteristics common to each:
1. Powerful and Continuing Nationalism - Fascist regimes tend to make constant use of patriotic mottos, slogans, symbols, songs, and other paraphernalia. Flags are seen everywhere, as are flag symbols on clothing and in public displays. TOP
2. Disdain for the Recognition of Human Rights - Because of fear of enemies and the need for security, the people in fascist regimes are persuaded that human rights can be ignored in certain cases because of "need." The people tend to look the other way or even approve of torture, summary executions, assassinations, long incarcerations of prisoners, etc.
3. Identification of Enemies/Scapegoats as a Unifying Cause - The people are rallied into a unifying patriotic frenzy over the need to eliminate a perceived common threat or foe: racial , ethnic or religious minorities; liberals; communists; socialists, terrorists, etc.
4. Supremacy of the Military - Even when there are widespread domestic problems, the military is given a disproportionate amount of government funding, and the domestic agenda is neglected. Soldiers and military service are glamorized.
5. Rampant Sexism - The governments of fascist nations tend to be almost exclusively male-dominated. Under fascist regimes, traditional gender roles are made more rigid. Divorce, abortion and homosexuality are suppressed and the state is represented as the ultimate guardian of the family institution.
6. Controlled Mass Media - Sometimes to media is directly controlled by the government, but in other cases, the media is indirectly controlled by government regulation, or sympathetic media spokespeople and executives. Censorship, especially in war time, is very common.
7. Obsession with National Security - Fear is used as a motivational tool by the government over the masses.
8. Religion and Government are Intertwined - Governments in fascist nations tend to use the most common religion in the nation as a tool to manipulate public opinion. Religious rhetoric and terminology is common from government leaders, even when the major tenets of the religion are diametrically opposed to the government's policies or actions.
9. Corporate Power is Protected - The industrial and business aristocracy of a fascist nation often are the ones who put the government leaders into power, creating a mutually beneficial business/government relationship and power elite.
10. Labor Power is Suppressed - Because the organizing power of labor is the only real threat to a fascist government, labor unions are either eliminated entirely, or are severely suppressed.
11. Disdain for Intellectuals and the Arts - Fascist nations tend to promote and tolerate open hostility to higher education, and academia. It is not uncommon for professors and other academics to be censored or even arrested. Free expression in the arts and letters is openly attacked.
12. Obsession with Crime and Punishment - Under fascist regimes, the police are given almost limitless power to enforce laws. The people are often willing to overlook police abuses and even forego civil liberties in the name of patriotism. There is often a national police force with virtually unlimited power in fascist nations.
13. Rampant Cronyism and Corruption - Fascist regimes almost always are governed by groups of friends and associates who appoint each other to government positions and use governmental power and authority to protect their friends from accountability. It is not uncommon in fascist regimes for national resources and even treasures to be appropriated or even outright stolen by government leaders.
14. Fraudulent Elections - Sometimes elections in fascist nations are a complete sham. Other times elections are manipulated by smear campaigns against or even assassination of opposition candidates, use of legislation to control voting numbers or political district boundaries, and manipulation of the media. Fascist nations also typically use their judiciaries to manipulate or control elections.
Do we make all 14?????????????????????????
________________________________
An interesting note to end this article: As of January 2004, the United States fulfills all fourteen points of fascism and all seven warning signs are present. But we're not alone. Israel also fulfills all fourteen points and all seven warning signs as well.
"Do we make all 14?????????????????????????"
With flying colors.
Warrantless wire taps is only one part of this unconstitutional nightmare,
Try 24/7 ground surviellance.
And they let you know they are doing it to provoke you into acting crazy so they can intensify the surviellance.
That is some sick shizel.
But trust me , thats what they are doing to 1000s of Americans around the country.
You have to have suspects to build your spy network.. So you create them.
And thats what warrantless surviellance does, and immunity protects these unconstitutional criminals.
WHAT A MESS. WELL, I LOOK AT IT THIS WAY, WHEN THE SPYS START TO MESS WITH THELIFES OF OUR ELECTED OFFICIALS AND THE JUDICIARY, OR WEALTHY PEOPLE AND FORTUE 500 CORPORATAIONS, AND YOU KNOW IT WILL, BEACUSE THATS WHERE THE MONEY IS, WE WILL TRASH ALL WARRANTLESS SURVIELLANCE.
YOU GO AHEAD AND BUILD THOSE BILLION DOLLAR SPY CNETERS, WE WILL ALL TAKE PLEASURE WHEN THE GOVERNMENT SAYS TO BURN THEM DOWN. WE WILL SELL TICKETS AND ENJOY THE BON FIRE.
Considering the prevalence of doublespeak in our culture (especially within the government), I find it ironic that the government places any importance on monitoring communications at all.
to view a partial list of crimes committed by FBI agents over 1500 pages long see
forums.signonsandiego.com/showthread.php?t=59139
to view a partial list of FBI agents arrested for pedophilia see
dallasnews.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=3574
And people are surprised by this revelation because of why? They can even listen to conversations over a baby monitor. Stuff that goes out over the airwaves is not protected, never has been. Cell phones and wireless home phones are subject to anybody listening in, not just the NSA. I believe that project ECHELON is still active in one form or another....
The data mining aspect of the NSA's electronic eavesdropping project has other uses besides pure spying. Folks probably recall the DARPA project to build a data mining system called "Total Information Awareness (TIA)." I think there also was another DARPA project designed to predict disasters and trade on the stock market based on that information.
A New York Times article reported that technology developed by Microsoft's current Chief Architect, Ray Ozzie, was involved in an early version of TIA.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/12/23/technology/
23PEEK.html?pagewanted=1
Supposedly, TIA was shelved by an angry Congress. Yet how could that be, given that Congress approved the FAA bill. And Bamford describes the FAA in this article as allowing greater crimes than the Bush administration's Fourth Amendment violations - in fact, making them legal. (And yes, Obama voted for that FAA bill as a senator.)
As someone in this thread mentioned, certain types of data are valuable in such data mining operations. A lot of that data can be extracted from commercial databases. By using commercial databases, the government legally doesn't violate the Fourth Amendment - it could be argued. In the spy trade, it's called using a "cutout."
My guess is that there are lots of usable commercial data available for that purpose. Bank transactions, grocery store "card" use and even social networking Web sites.
Someone else in this thread listed the 14 signs of fascism, with one of them being an obsession with national security.
Although I haven't read it, there's a book called "IBM and the Holocaust" by Edwin Black. IBM provided the Third Reich with a punch-card system that was used to classify its citizens and concentration camp prisoners.
http://search.barnesandnoble.com/IBM-and-the-Holocaust/
Edwin-Black/e/9780914153108/?itm=3
-TIA
In a world where we might trust that noone need go hungry or starve to death (currently 30,000 daily, 10 m every year, 1 every 3 seconds), the need to monitor the rebelliousness of the starving billion and anyone disgusted by that state of human affairs, would be near non-existent
There are many ways to remain anonymous online. One promising free opensource anonymous network is called i2p (http://www.i2p2.de/)
It allows anonymous email addresses, anonymous website hosting, filesharing, web access and lots of other stuff.
smeg
Yep. It's getting pretty ridiculous. No bad guys to chase means that pretty soon the common citizen is going to be the target. Already these turds are flying huge unmanned airships over the continental US that hover at 60,000 feet (above all weather) and intercept all wireless communications. (airliners fly in the 30,000 foot range) Northrop got the contract and a friend of mine was a test pilot on them.
Watergate proved that crooked men will use crooked means to spy on political enemies. Now the whole gov will have access to everything that you ever do.
Yes the Hindenberg has showed up in 1937 Berlin. It won't be long before the brownshirts and book burners show up at your front door. Better get out while you still can.
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
Ray Berthiaume
And did you know an Israeli company has the contract to collect all these calls?
No, I didn't Ray. But it all adds up. The MOSSAD will listen in to anyone getting traction for us to pull IsNotReal's AIPAC funding and then send a squad in to eliminate the free speecher.
With allies like this, who needs terrorists?
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
The only way we will ever stop this encroachment is to make our Congress start prosecuting the violations of US-Federal Laws (including Torture) and of our Constitution.
THIS is about the violations of Our Federal Laws and nothing else.
SIGN THE PETITIONS
Demanding both a Commission of Inquiry and a Special Prosecutor For All Their Crimes
at
ANGRYVOTERS.ORG
http://ANGRYVOTERS.ORG
You should also
contact AG Holder directly &
Demand a Special Prosecutor.
Department of Justice Switchboard - 202-514-2000
Office of the AG - 202-353-1555
Email: AskDOJ@usdoj.gov
U.S. Department of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20530-0001
NOTE: IF your group has a related petition, send me the url and I'll include it on our website. We have all the petitions for investigation and prosecution of the criminals in the Bush Administration in one place where you have quick and easy access. Takes just a few minutes to sign them all.
.
Borges wrote, "there are leagues of senseless cacophonies, verbal jumbles and incoherences".
Are you sure he wasn't talking about congrssional hearings?
what we have here is a modern ussr and east germany with state of the art technology. other tactics are when city and state
emergency workers come to tour home they are asked to spy on you.
your neighbors spy on you if they don't like your politics.
i live in a neighborhood where 55% of the citizens voted for
mc cain and i wear shirts and hats with statements like
prosecute dick and w and arrest bush cheney and rumsfeld.
i try to jog their senses a bit and engage in dialogue where i
inform them of the facts as presented in reality instead
of fixed news which they a love. i think these folks would
drop a dime so to speak in a ny micro second.