Gullible Jones wrote:"Considering", right.
http://www.npr.org/sections/thetwo-way/ ... led-online
Them: "We have to do this to protect you."
Us: "Protect us from what?"
Them: "We can't tell you."
Us: "Why not?"
Them: "Because that will make it impossible for us to protect you."
Us: "..."
Them: "Also you go to jail if you try to find out."
* * * * *
I want to believe this is what it looks like, i.e. a protection racket. But my cynical, conspiracy-nut feeling is that there is actually a very good reason for it. Possibly something that would cause widespread panic if disclosed; more likely something that would result in angry mobs attacking the Pentagon.
Seriously, does anyone remotely trust the US government with use of force at this point? Or am I utterly out of touch?
Fisher wrote:So... Let's see if I have this right. You want a secret agency to violate the privacy of thousands of US citizens, reveal our methods to foreign governments, and help congress commit a monumental security breach just so Congress can say they are doing their job after refusing to do their job for most of the last 8 years? All because a program that collects incidental information about US citizens and to date no one has suggested that any of that information has actually been used to arrest or convict any US citizen of any actual crime?
Gullible Jones wrote:h
In particular check out the letter:
https://www.scribd.com/doc/310109056/Le ... or-Clapper
First, we understand that an exact count of how many United States persons have been swept up into Section 702 surveillance efforts may not be feasible. The leadership of the intelligence community has long held this view, and the Inspector General for the National Security Agency--who is an administrative appointee, and not an independent inspector general--has deferred to your office on this issue.6 We understand that limited resources and technical barriers may prevent you from making an exact count.
We are not asking you for an exact count. Today, our request is simply for a rough estimate.
vendic wrote:Given the US history with abuse of its citizens, I personally wouldn't trust them much at all.
MKULTRA and a lot of that other stuff (experiments on black people, kids etc) weren't actually conspiracy theories. That shit happened.
Gullible Jones wrote:Fisher wrote:So... Let's see if I have this right. You want a secret agency to violate the privacy of thousands of US citizens, reveal our methods to foreign governments, and help congress commit a monumental security breach just so Congress can say they are doing their job after refusing to do their job for most of the last 8 years? All because a program that collects incidental information about US citizens and to date no one has suggested that any of that information has actually been used to arrest or convict any US citizen of any actual crime?
Where exactly did I say any of that? No wait, how does what you're saying even make any sense at all?
They're already violating people's privacy.
Foreign governments probably know plenty about our methods.
A single rough number is not a security breach.
We don't know that the information is "incidental". Or that it hasn't been used to arrest people. Because it's, you know, a huge fucking secret.
Look, I know I sound super pompous here, but you are literally not making any sense at all. None!
As for "use of force", see what vendic says above. Yes, China's govt. is undoubtedly worse, because China is an Orwellian totalitarian state with a fetish for executing people. Saying the US is good compared to China is like saying I'm good compared to Charles Manson, i.e. utterly meaningless.
Look - in a lot of ways, I'm very glad to live in the US. Things are very good here, relative to many parts of the world. That doesn't mean I have to be perfectly a-okay with zero accountability for intelligence agencies. Especially since such agencies have a goddamn history of building little fiefdoms on top of piles of corpses, when given absolute free reign.
SciFiFisher wrote:vendic wrote:Given the US history with abuse of its citizens, I personally wouldn't trust them much at all.
MKULTRA and a lot of that other stuff (experiments on black people, kids etc) weren't actually conspiracy theories. That shit happened.
But THAT SHIT isn't happening today.
vendic wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:vendic wrote:Given the US history with abuse of its citizens, I personally wouldn't trust them much at all.
MKULTRA and a lot of that other stuff (experiments on black people, kids etc) weren't actually conspiracy theories. That shit happened.
But THAT SHIT isn't happening today.
Back when it was happening, if asked, the government would say, it's not happening!
What day exactly was it that the US government decided not to do bad shit anymore in secret operations?
The problem here is that even recently, they were found guilty of destroying evidence. Gitmo etc.
While a lot of that stuff was done in the name of intelligence gathering, we now have more effective methods for that.
Even still, extraordinary rendition was recently used. The government was actively stealing from people and using the police to do it, and it still is via civil asset forfeiture. Yes I know that the feds recently made changes, iirc the states however are still allowed to do it.
Then lets look at Haiti, Columbia, Honduras, Chile, Syria, Libya, Iraq with the US government meddling in other states affairs creating a bigger mess that costs the lives of Americans to fix while destabilizing regions and making money for the politicians and their friends.
There's tons of shit happening. It's mostly off-shored now to avoid controversy.
vendic wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:vendic wrote:Given the US history with abuse of its citizens, I personally wouldn't trust them much at all.
MKULTRA and a lot of that other stuff (experiments on black people, kids etc) weren't actually conspiracy theories. That shit happened.
But THAT SHIT isn't happening today.
Back when it was happening, if asked, the government would say, it's not happening!
What day exactly was it that the US government decided not to do bad shit anymore in secret operations?
The problem here is that even recently, they were found guilty of destroying evidence. Gitmo etc.
SciFiFisher wrote:vendic wrote:Given the US history with abuse of its citizens, I personally wouldn't trust them much at all.
MKULTRA and a lot of that other stuff (experiments on black people, kids etc) weren't actually conspiracy theories. That shit happened.
But THAT SHIT isn't happening today.
Thumper wrote:vendic wrote:SciFiFisher wrote:vendic wrote:Given the US history with abuse of its citizens, I personally wouldn't trust them much at all.
MKULTRA and a lot of that other stuff (experiments on black people, kids etc) weren't actually conspiracy theories. That shit happened.
But THAT SHIT isn't happening today.
Back when it was happening, if asked, the government would say, it's not happening!
What day exactly was it that the US government decided not to do bad shit anymore in secret operations?
The problem here is that even recently, they were found guilty of destroying evidence. Gitmo etc.
While a lot of that stuff was done in the name of intelligence gathering, we now have more effective methods for that.
Even still, extraordinary rendition was recently used. The government was actively stealing from people and using the police to do it, and it still is via civil asset forfeiture. Yes I know that the feds recently made changes, iirc the states however are still allowed to do it.
Then lets look at Haiti, Columbia, Honduras, Chile, Syria, Libya, Iraq with the US government meddling in other states affairs creating a bigger mess that costs the lives of Americans to fix while destabilizing regions and making money for the politicians and their friends.
There's tons of shit happening. It's mostly off-shored now to avoid controversy.
Well that settles it. I say we take off and nuke the entire site from orbit. ... It’s the only way to be sure.
SciFiFisher wrote:
I merely observed that we no longer were doing THAT Bad Shit. I didn't say we weren't doing OTHER bad shit. As for experimenting on black people we no longer restrict ourselves to singling out one race over another.
Yosh could tell you but then he would have to kill you.
vendic wrote:What day exactly was it that the US government decided not to do bad shit anymore in secret operations?
The problem here is that even recently, they were found guilty of destroying evidence. Gitmo etc.
geonuc wrote:
"found guilty" - interesting term.
vendic wrote:The problem with the internet is that people don't accept the information, dismissing it out of hand.
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