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Middleboro Review 2

NEW CONTENT MOVED TO MIDDLEBORO REVIEW 2

Toyota

Since the Dilly, Dally, Delay & Stall Law Firms are adding their billable hours, the Toyota U.S.A. and Route 44 Toyota posts have been separated here:

Route 44 Toyota Sold Me A Lemon



Monday, May 11, 2015

RSN: Are Dangerous Bomb Trains Rolling Through Your City?, Scott Walker, Intelligence Leaders Cite Texas Attack to Defend Patriot Act, Obama Lied About Bin Laden Raid





Great article below about Republicans whipping up fear, hysteria and misinformation about TERRORISM and Government snooping.

Will Americans ever stop reacting to the FEAR MONGERING?

Will American Sheep think for themselves?

How much is Surveillance Nation costing us?

Are Republicans whipping up hysteria in preparation for the Presidential Election?

Reports indicate that the Texas Terrorists were known and authorities were warned.

When an Anti-Muslin Hate Group holds an event, what was the expectation?


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Seymour Hersh | Obama Lied About Bin Laden Raid
Osama bin Laden (photo: AP)
Seymour Hersh, London Review of Books
Hersh writes: "The White House's story might have been written by Lewis Carroll: would bin Laden, target of a massive international manhunt, really decide that a resort town forty miles from Islamabad would be the safest place to live and command al-Qaida's operations?"
READ MORE

Saudi King Salman to Skip Camp David Summit
Al Jazeera
Excerpt: "Salman to send his crown prince and defence minister instead in what some call a snub over US-Iran rapprochement."
READ MORE

Hillary Clinton Calls for Guaranteed Paid Family Leave in Mother's Day Address
Elise Viebeck, The Hill
Viebeck writes: "The former secretary of State said it is 'outrageous' that the United States is 'the only developed country' that does not [offer] guaranteed paid leave for workers who have children."
READ MORE




Intelligence Leaders Cite Texas Attack to Defend Patriot Act

Excerpt: "Senior figures take to talk shows after NSA phone data collection ruled illegal. House security chair says Garland 'Isis' attack shows 'terrorism has gone viral.'"
 
 
A nighttime aerial picture of National Security Agency headquarters in Maryland. (photo: Trevor Paglen/REX)
A nighttime aerial picture of National Security Agency headquarters in Maryland. (photo: Trevor Paglen/REX)

Intelligence Leaders Cite Texas Attack to Defend Patriot Act

By Dan Roberts and Martin Pengelly, Guardian UK
11 May 15

ashington’s intelligence leaders flooded US television studios on Sunday, to warn of the dangers of homegrown terrorism in a concerted push that coincided with a looming deadline to reauthorise the domestic surveillance powers of the National Security Agency.
 
Seizing on last week’s failed attack on a Texas contest to draw cartoons of the prophet Muhammad, the chairmen of three congressional security committees, two former CIA directors and the secretary for homeland security all urged greater scrutiny of domestic extremists they claim have been inspired by the Islamic State.
 
“Terrorism has gone viral,” said Michael McCaul, the Republican chair of the House homeland security committee, telling Fox News Sunday there were “thousands of people in the United States who will take up this call to arms when Isis sends out an internet missive, a tweet, to launch a terror act like we saw in Garland in Texas”.
 
“We are very definitely in a new phase in the global terrorism threat where the so-called lone wolf could strike at any moment,” said Jeh Johnson, Barack Obama’s secretary for homeland security, on ABC.
 
Former CIA director Michael Hayden told CNN: “I think the tide’s coming in and we’re going to see more of what we saw in Texas last week.”
 
Little evidence has yet emerged to support Isis claims of direct responsibility for the Garland attack, in which the two gunmen were the only people killed, although FBI director James Comey has argued that the distinction between inspiring and directing attacks is “irrelevant”, claiming social media propaganda meant “it’s almost as if there is a devil sitting on the shoulder saying, ‘kill, kill, kill,’ all day long”.
 
“This threat is like finding a needle in a haystack and it’s going to get worse, not better,” McCaul added. “I think the threat environment today is one of the highest I have ever seen.”
 
Controversial NSA powers to monitor suspicious communication by collecting all American phone records are due to expire at the end of the month, a circumstance that was dramatically complicated by a US appeal court judgment on Thursday ruling the practice first revealed by Edward Snowden to be unlawful.
 
A number of lawmakers warned on Sunday the Garland attack showed why it was essential Congress face down opposition to the so-called “bulk collection” programme and reauthorise the original Patriot Act provision, despite Thursday’s legal challenge.
 
“I hope that the reality of the situation, the reality of the threats we face, will actually play a great part in terms of exactly how Congress responds,” Senate homeland security chairman Ron Johnson told CNN.
 
“Our first line of defence is an effective intelligence-gathering capability,” the Wisconsin Republican added. “I think the demagoguery and the revelations of Edward Snowden have done a great deal of harm to our ability to gather that information.”
 
Richard Burr, Republican chair of the Senate intelligence committee, also insisted the Patriot Act provision should be reauthorised rather than amended when it expires on 1 June.
 
“It’s very effective at keeping America safe,” he told ABC, claiming the alternative USA Freedom Act, which would rely on phone companies to keep records rather than the NSA, “turns us back to pre-9/11” days.
 
But the court of appeals decision, which rejected the argument that bulk collection is permissible even under the existing Patriot Act, has dramatically complicated attempts by Senate Republicans to reauthorise it in the eight remaining days that both chambers are sitting this month. It may force them to choose between backing the more moderate USA Freedom Act or seeing all surveillance authority vanish when the current law lapses.
 
Privacy concerns among Republicans in the House have led committee leadership there to join forces with the White House and many Democrats to back the USA Freedom Act.
 
“I think that’s where we are going to see the Congress heading towards, and the courts have certainly gone in that direction,” McCaul said on Sunday.
 
“As long as we can get information in real time from the private sector, I think we can forge the right balance between [privacy and security].”
 
Dianne Feinstein, the previous chair of the Senate intelligence committee and one of the more hawkish Democrats, agreed the USA Freedom Act was probably the best option remaining for the NSA, though she expressed concerns about whether it would work.
 
“The president, the House and a number of members of the Senate believe that we need to change that programme and the way to change it is simply to go to the Fisa court for a query, for permission to go to a telecom and get that data,” the California senator told NBC.
 
“The question is whether the telecoms will hold the data and the answer to that question is somewhat mixed. I know the president believes the telecoms will hold the data. I think we should try that.”
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Scott Walker: Doctors Should Lie to Pregnant Women to Prevent Abortions
Scott Keyes, ThinkProgress
Keyes writes: "If then-Rep. Scott Walker (R) had gotten his way, Wisconsin doctors who opposed abortion would have been allowed to withhold that information from the woman if the doctor feared she might get an abortion."
READ MORE

US Military Aid to Mexico Continues Despite Repression
Cora Currier and Jesse Franzblau, The Intercept
Excerpt: "Legislation introduced by Senator Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., in 1997, and commonly known as the 'Leahy Law,' prohibits U.S. assistance to foreign security forces credibly believed to have committed a gross human right violation."
READ MORE

Are Dangerous Bomb Trains Rolling Through Your City?
Josh Fox and Lee Ziesche, Eco Watch
Excerpt: "These dangerous trains carrying crude-oil fracked in the Bakken Shale are rolling through the backyards of America, across rivers and streams and into major cities like Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania and Albany, New York."
READ MORE
 
 
 
 

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