“End Torture,” Ron Paul Demands “Shut Down The CIA!”

Submitted by Ron Paul via The Ron Paul Institute,

Remember back in April, 2007, when then-CIA director George Tenet appeared on 60 Minutes, angrily telling the program host, “we don’t torture people”? Remember a few months later, in October, President George W. Bush saying, “this government does not torture people”? We knew then it was not true because we had already seen the photos of Iraqis tortured at Abu Ghraib prison four years earlier.
 
Still the US administration denied that torture was torture, preferring to call it “enhanced interrogation” and claiming that it had disrupted so many terrorist plots. Of course, we later found out that the CIA had not only lied about the torture of large numbers of people after 9/11, but it had vastly exaggerated any valuable information that came from such practices.

However secret rendition of prisoners to other places was ongoing.

The US not only tortured people in its own custody, however. Last week the European Court of Human Rights found that the US government transferred individuals to secret detention centers in Poland (and likely elsewhere) where they were tortured away from public scrutiny. The government of Poland was ordered to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars in damages to two victims for doing nothing to stop their torture on Polish soil.
 
How tragic that Poland, where the Nazis constructed the Auschwitz concentration camp in which so many innocents were tortured and murdered, would acquiesce to hosting secret torture facilities. The idea that such brutality would be permitted on Polish soil just 70 years after the Nazi occupation should remind us of how dangerous and disingenuous governments continue to be.
 
This is the first time the European court has connected any EU country to US torture practices. The Obama administration refuses to admit that such facilities existed and instead claims that any such “enhanced interrogation” programs were shut down by 2009. We can only hope this is true, but we should be wary of government promises. After all, they promised us all along that they were not using torture, and we might have never known had photographs and other information not been leaked to the press.
 
There are more reasons to be wary of this administration’s claims about rejecting torture and upholding human rights. The president has openly justified killing American citizens without charge or trial and he has done so on at least three occasions. There is not much of a gap between torture and extrajudicial murder when it comes to human rights abuses.
 
Meanwhile, former CIA director George Tenet and other senior current and former CIA officials are said to be frantically attempting to prepare a response to a planned release of an unclassified version of a 6,500 page Senate Intelligence Committee study on the torture practices of that agency. The CIA was already caught tapping into the computers of Senate investigators last year, looking to see what information might be contained in the report. Those who have seen the report have commented that it details far more brutal CIA practices than have been revealed to this point.
 
Revelations of US secret torture sites overseas and a new Senate investigation revealing widespread horrific CIA torture practices should finally lead to the abolishment of this agency. Far from keeping us safer, CIA covert actions across the globe have led to destruction of countries and societies and unprecedented resentment toward the United States. For our own safety, end the CIA!




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1lTab1E Tyler Durden

Jim Grant: "Gold Is The Ultimate Inoculation Against Harebrained Central Bankers"

“The central bank imposed interest rates are the source of global financial instability now and in the future,” warns Grant’s Interest Rate Observer’s Jim Grant, adding that “The Fed… has manipulated us into a period of quite eerie stability and measured volatility.” Grant believes, given the values (and aware of the risks) that Russian “stocks stand to do very well,” and also likes mining stocks as he warns credit markets are overvalued (especially sovereign debt). His conclusion, own gold as “it stands to benefit from the demonstrated, as opposed the theoretically likely, crack up of the [current] monetary arrangements.”

 

Gold, he explains, “is the ultimate inoculation against the harebrained doctrine of modern central bankers.”




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1oHQKhk Tyler Durden

Jim Grant: “Gold Is The Ultimate Inoculation Against Harebrained Central Bankers”

“The central bank imposed interest rates are the source of global financial instability now and in the future,” warns Grant’s Interest Rate Observer’s Jim Grant, adding that “The Fed… has manipulated us into a period of quite eerie stability and measured volatility.” Grant believes, given the values (and aware of the risks) that Russian “stocks stand to do very well,” and also likes mining stocks as he warns credit markets are overvalued (especially sovereign debt). His conclusion, own gold as “it stands to benefit from the demonstrated, as opposed the theoretically likely, crack up of the [current] monetary arrangements.”

 

Gold, he explains, “is the ultimate inoculation against the harebrained doctrine of modern central bankers.”




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1oHQKhk Tyler Durden

American Intelligence Officers Who Battled the Soviet Union for Decades Slam the Flimsy "Intelligence" Against Russia

Preface: With the shoot-down of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over Ukraine turning a local civil war into a U.S. confrontation with Russia, former high-level U.S. intelligence veterans released a statement today urging President Obama to release what evidence he has about the tragedy and silence the exaggeration and rush to judgment. (The whole post is a must-read; but we at Washington's Blog have added bolding for emphasis.)

Signatory Bill Binney – the former senior technical director at the NSA, and a man who battled the Soviet Union for decades – tells Washington’s Blog:

In my analytic efforts to predict intentions and capabilities down through the years,  I always made sure that I had multi-factors verifying what I was asserting.  So far,  I don’t see that discipline here in this administration or the IC  [i.e. the United States intelligence community].

Posted with permission.

MEMORANDUM FOR: The President

FROM: Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS)

SUBJECT: Intelligence on Shoot-Down of Malaysian Plane

Executive Summary

U.S.–Russian intensions are building in a precarious way over Ukraine, and we are far from certain that your advisers fully appreciate the danger of escalation. The New York Times and other media outlets are treating sensitive issues in dispute as flat-fact, taking their cue from U.S. government sources.

Twelve days after the shoot-down of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17, your administration still has issued no coordinated intelligence assessment summarizing what evidence exists to determine who was responsible – much less to convincingly support repeated claims that the plane was downed by a Russian-supplied missile in the hands of Ukrainian separatists.

Your administration has not provided any satellite imagery showing that the separatists had such weaponry, and there are several other “dogs that have not barked.” Washington’s credibility, and your own, will continue to erode, should you be unwilling – or unable – to present more tangible evidence behind administration claims. In what follows, we put this in the perspective of former intelligence professionals with a cumulative total of 260 years in various parts of U.S. intelligence:

We, the undersigned former intelligence officers want to share with you our concern about the evidence adduced so far to blame Russia for the July 17 downing of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17. We are retired from government service and none of us is on the payroll of CNN, Fox News, or any other outlet. We intend this memorandum to provide a fresh, different perspective.

As veteran intelligence analysts accustomed to waiting, except in emergency circumstances, for conclusive information before rushing to judgment, we believe that the charges against Russia should be rooted in solid, far more convincing evidence. And that goes in spades with respect to inflammatory incidents like the shoot-down of an airliner. We are also troubled by the amateurish manner in which fuzzy and flimsy evidence has been served up – some it via “social media.”

As intelligence professionals we are embarrassed by the unprofessional use of partial intelligence information. As Americans, we find ourselves hoping that, if you indeed have more conclusive evidence, you will find a way to make it public without further delay. In charging Russia with being directly or indirectly responsible, Secretary of State John Kerry has been particularly definitive. Not so the evidence. His statements seem premature and bear earmarks of an attempt to “poison the jury pool.”

Painting Russia Black

We see an eerie resemblance to an earlier exercise in U.S. “public diplomacy” from which valuable lessons can be learned by those more interested in the truth than in exploiting tragic incidents for propaganda advantage. We refer to the behavior of the Reagan administration in the immediate aftermath of the shoot-down of Korean Airlines Flight 007 over Siberia on August 30, 1983. We sketch out below a short summary of that tragic affair, since we suspect you have not been adequately briefed on it. The parallels will be obvious to you.

An advantage of our long tenure as intelligence officers is that we remember what we have witnessed first hand; seldom do we forget key events in which we played an analyst or other role. To put it another way, most of us “know exactly where we were” when a Soviet fighter aircraft shot down Korean Airlines passenger flight 007 over Siberia on August 30, 1983, over 30 years ago. At the time, we were intelligence officers on “active duty.” You were 21; many of those around you today were still younger.

Thus, it seems possible that you may be learning how the KAL007 affair went down, so to speak, for the first time; that you may now become more aware of the serious implications for U.S.-Russian relations regarding how the downing of Flight 17 goes down; and that you will come to see merit in preventing ties with Moscow from falling into a state of complete disrepair. In our view, the strategic danger here dwarfs all other considerations.

Hours after the tragic shoot-down on Aug. 30, 1983, the Reagan administration used its very accomplished propaganda machine to twist the available intelligence on Soviet culpability for the killing of all 269 people aboard KAL007. The airliner was shot down after it strayed hundreds of miles off course and penetrated Russia’s airspace over sensitive military facilities in Kamchatka and Sakhalin Island. The Soviet pilot tried to signal the plane to land, but the KAL pilots did not respond to the repeated warnings. Amid confusion about the plane’s identity – a U.S. spy plane had been in the vicinity hours earlier – Soviet ground control ordered the pilot to fire.

The Soviets soon realized they had made a horrendous mistake. U.S. intelligence also knew from sensitive intercepts that the tragedy had resulted from a blunder, not from a willful act of murder (much as on July 3, 1988, the USS Vincennes shot down an Iranian civilian airliner over the Persian Gulf, killing 290 people, an act which President Ronald Reagan dismissively explained as an “understandable accident”).

To make the very blackest case against Moscow for shooting down the KAL airliner, the Reagan administration suppressed exculpatory evidence from U.S. electronic intercepts. Washington’s mantra became “Moscow’s deliberate downing of a civilian passenger plane.” Newsweek ran a cover emblazoned with the headline “Murder in the Sky.” (Apparently, not much has changed; Time’s cover this week features “Cold War II” and “Putin’s dangerous game.” The cover story by Simon Shuster, “In Russia, Crime Without Punishment,” would merit an A-plus in William Randolph Hearst’s course “Yellow Journalism 101.”)

When KAL007 was shot down, Alvin A. Snyder, director of the U.S. Information Agency’s television and film division, was enlisted in a concerted effort to “heap as much abuse on the Soviet Union as possible,” as Snyder writes in his 1995 book, “Warriors of Disinformation.”

He and his colleagues also earned an A-plus for bringing the “mainstream media” along. For example, ABC’s Ted Koppel noted with patriotic pride, “This has been one of those occasions when there is very little difference between what
is churned out by the U.S. government propaganda organs and by the commercial broadcasting networks.”

“Fixing” the Intelligence Around the Policy

“The perception we wanted to convey was that the Soviet Union had cold-bloodedly carried out a barbaric act,” wrote Snyder, adding that the Reagan administration went so far as to present a doctored transcript of the intercepts to the United Nations Security Council on September 6, 1983.

Only a decade later, when Snyder saw the complete transcripts — including the portions that the Reagan administration had hidden — would he fully realize how many of the central elements of the U.S. presentation were false.

The intercepts showed that the Soviet fighter pilot believed he was pursuing a U.S. spy aircraft and that he was having trouble in the dark identifying the plane. Per instructions from ground control, the pilot had circled the KAL airliner and tilted his wings to order the aircraft to land. The pilot said he fired warning shots, as well. This information “was not on the tape we were provided,” Snyder wrote.

It became abundantly clear to Snyder that, in smearing the Soviets, the Reagan administration had presented false accusations to the United Nations, as well as to the people of the United States and the world. In his book, Snyder acknowledged his own role in the deception, but drew a cynical conclusion. He wrote, “The moral of the story is that all governments, including our own, lie when it suits their purposes. The key is to lie first.”

The tortured attempts by your administration and stenographers in the media to blame Russia for the downing of Flight 17, together with John Kerry’s unenviable record for credibility, lead us to the reluctant conclusion that the syndrome Snyder describes may also be at work in your own administration; that is, that an ethos of “getting your own lie out first” has replaced “ye shall know the truth.” At a minimum, we believe Secretary Kerry displayed unseemly haste in his determination to be first out of the starting gate.

Both Sides Cannot Be Telling the Truth

We have always taken pride in not shooting from the hip, but rather in doing intelligence analysis that is evidence-based. The evidence released to date does not bear close scrutiny; it does not permit a judgment as to which side is lying about the shoot-down of Flight 17. Our entire professional experience would incline us to suspect the Russians – almost instinctively. Our more recent experience, particularly observing Secretary Kerry injudiciousness in latching onto one spurious report after another as “evidence,” has gone a long way toward balancing our earlier predispositions.

It seems that whenever Kerry does cite supposed “evidence” that can be checked – like the forged anti-Semitic fliers distributed in eastern Ukraine or the photos of alleged Russian special forces soldiers who allegedly slipped into Ukraine – the “proof” goes “poof” as Kerry once said in a different context. Still, these misrepresentations seem small peccadillos compared with bigger whoppers like the claim Kerry made on Aug. 30, 2013, no fewer than 35 times, that “we know” the government of Bashar al-Assad was responsible for the chemical incidents near Damascus nine days before.

On September 3, 2013 – following your decision to call off the attack on Syria in order to await Congressional authorization – Kerry was still pushing for an attack in testimony before a thoroughly sympathetic Senate Foreign Affairs Committee. On the following day Kerry drew highly unusual personal criticism from President Putin, who said: “He is lying, and he knows he is lying. It is sad.”

Equally serious, during the first week of September 2013, as you and President Vladimir Putin were putting the final touches to the deal whereby Syrian chemical weapons would be given up for destruction, John Kerry said something that puzzles us to this day. On September 9, 2013, Kerry was in London, still promoting a U.S. attack on Syria for having crossed the “Red Line” you had set against Syria’s using chemical weapons.

At a formal press conference, Kerry abruptly dismissed the possibility that Bashar al-Assad would ever give up his chemical weapons, saying, “He isn’t about to do that; it can’t be done.” Just a few hours later, the Russians and Syrians announced Syria’s agreement to do precisely what Kerry had ruled out as impossible. You sent him back to Geneva to sign the agreement, and it was formally concluded on September 14.

Regarding the Malaysia Airlines shoot-down of July 17, we believe Kerry has typically rushed to judgment and that his incredible record for credibility poses a huge disadvantage in the diplomatic and propaganda maneuvering vis-a-vis Russia. We suggest you call a halt to this misbegotten “public diplomacy” offensive. If, however, you decide to press on anyway, we suggest you try to find a less tarnished statesman or woman.

A Choice Between Two

If the intelligence on the shoot-down is as weak as it appears judging from the fuzzy scraps that have been released, we strongly suggest you call off the propaganda war and await the findings of those charged with investigating the shoot-down. If, on the other hand, your administration has more concrete, probative intelligence, we strongly suggest that you consider approving it for release, even if there may be some risk of damage to “sources and methods.” Too often this consideration is used to prevent information from entering the public domain where, as in this case, it belongs.

There have been critical junctures in the past in which presidents have recognized the need to waive secrecy in order to show what one might call “a decent respect for the opinions of mankind” or even to justify military action.

As senior CIA veteran Milton Bearden has put it, there are occasions when more damage is done to U.S. national security by “protecting” sources and methods than by revealing them. For instance, Bearden noted that Ronald Reagan exposed a sensitive intelligence source in showing a skeptical world the reason for the U.S. attack on Libya in retaliation for the April 5, 1986 bombing at the La Belle Disco in West Berlin. That bombing killed two U.S. servicemen and a Turkish woman, and injured over 200 people, including 79 U.S. servicemen.

Intercepted messages between Tripoli and agents in Europe made it clear that Libya was behind the attack. Here’s an excerpt: “At 1:30 in the morning one of the acts was carried out with success, without leaving a trace behind.”

Ten days after the bombing the U.S. retaliated, sending over 60 Air Force fighters to strike the Libyan capital of Tripoli and the city of Benghazi. The operation was widely seen as an attempt to kill Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, who survived, but his adopted 15-month-old daughter was killed in the bombing, along with at least 15 other civilians.

Three decades ago, there was more shame attached to the killing of children. As world abhorrence grew after the U.S. bombing strikes, the Reagan administration produced the intercepted, decoded message sent by the Libyan Peoples Bureau in East Berlin acknowledging the “success” of the attack on the disco, and adding the ironically inaccurate boast “without leaving a trace behind.”

The Reagan administration made the decision to give up a highly sensitive intelligence source, its ability to intercept and decipher Libyan communications. But once the rest of the world absorbed this evidence, international grumb
ling subsided and many considered the retaliation against Tripoli justified.

If You’ve Got the Goods…

If the U.S. has more convincing evidence than what has so far been adduced concerning responsibility for shooting down Flight 17, we believe it would be best to find a way to make that intelligence public – even at the risk of compromising “sources and methods.” Moreover, we suggest you instruct your subordinates not to cheapen U.S. credibility by releasing key information via social media like Twitter and Facebook.

The reputation of the messenger for credibility is also key in this area of “public diplomacy.” As is by now clear to you, in our view Secretary Kerry is more liability than asset in this regard. Similarly, with regard to Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, his March 12, 2013 Congressional testimony under oath to what he later admitted were “clearly erroneous” things regarding NSA collection should disqualify him. Clapper should be kept at far remove from the Flight 17 affair.

What is needed, if you’ve got the goods, is an Interagency Intelligence Assessment – the genre used in the past to lay out the intelligence. We are hearing indirectly from some of our former colleagues that what Secretary Kerry is peddling does not square with the real intelligence. Such was the case late last August, when Kerry created a unique vehicle he called a “Government (not Intelligence) Assessment” blaming, with no verifiable evidence, Bashar al-Assad for the chemical attacks near Damascus, as honest intelligence analysts refused to go along and, instead, held their noses.

We believe you need to seek out honest intelligence analysts now and hear them out. Then, you may be persuaded to take steps to curb the risk that relations with Russia might escalate from “Cold War II” into an armed confrontation. In all candor, we see little reason to believe that Secretary Kerry and your other advisers appreciate the enormity of that danger.

In our most recent (May 4) memorandum to you, Mr. President, we cautioned that if the U.S. wished “to stop a bloody civil war between east and west Ukraine and avert Russian military intervention in eastern Ukraine, you may be able to do so before the violence hurtles completely out of control.” On July 17, you joined the top leaders of Germany, France, and Russia in calling for a ceasefire. Most informed observers believe you have it in your power to get Ukrainian leaders to agree. The longer Kiev continues its offensive against separatists in eastern Ukraine, the more such U.S. statements appear hypocritical.

We reiterate our recommendations of May 4, that you remove the seeds of this confrontation by publicly disavowing any wish to incorporate Ukraine into NATO and that you make it clear that you are prepared to meet personally with Russian President Putin without delay to discuss ways to defuse the crisis and recognize the legitimate interests of the various parties. The suggestion of an early summit got extraordinary resonance in controlled and independent Russian media. Not so in “mainstream” media in the U.S. Nor did we hear back from you.

The courtesy of a reply is requested.

Prepared by VIPS Steering Group

William Binney, former Technical Director, World Geopolitical & Military Analysis, NSA; co-founder, SIGINT Automation Research Center (ret.)

Larry Johnson, CIA & State Department (ret.)

Edward Loomis, NSA, Cryptologic Computer Scientist (ret.)

David MacMichael, National Intelligence Council (ret.)

Ray McGovern, former US Army infantry/intelligence officer & CIA analyst (ret.)

Elizabeth Murray, Deputy National Intelligence Officer for Middle East (ret.)

Coleen Rowley, Division Counsel & Special Agent, FBI (ret.)

Peter Van Buren, U.S. Department of State, Foreign Service Officer (ret)

Ann Wright, Col., US Army (ret); Foreign Service Officer (ret.)

H/t: Consortium News




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1lTabyO George Washington

American Intelligence Officers Who Battled the Soviet Union for Decades Slam the Flimsy “Intelligence” Against Russia

Preface: With the shoot-down of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17 over Ukraine turning a local civil war into a U.S. confrontation with Russia, former high-level U.S. intelligence veterans released a statement today urging President Obama to release what evidence he has about the tragedy and silence the exaggeration and rush to judgment. (The whole post is a must-read; but we at Washington's Blog have added bolding for emphasis.)

Signatory Bill Binney – the former senior technical director at the NSA, and a man who battled the Soviet Union for decades – tells Washington’s Blog:

In my analytic efforts to predict intentions and capabilities down through the years,  I always made sure that I had multi-factors verifying what I was asserting.  So far,  I don’t see that discipline here in this administration or the IC  [i.e. the United States intelligence community].

Posted with permission.

MEMORANDUM FOR: The President

FROM: Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity (VIPS)

SUBJECT: Intelligence on Shoot-Down of Malaysian Plane

Executive Summary

U.S.–Russian intensions are building in a precarious way over Ukraine, and we are far from certain that your advisers fully appreciate the danger of escalation. The New York Times and other media outlets are treating sensitive issues in dispute as flat-fact, taking their cue from U.S. government sources.

Twelve days after the shoot-down of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17, your administration still has issued no coordinated intelligence assessment summarizing what evidence exists to determine who was responsible – much less to convincingly support repeated claims that the plane was downed by a Russian-supplied missile in the hands of Ukrainian separatists.

Your administration has not provided any satellite imagery showing that the separatists had such weaponry, and there are several other “dogs that have not barked.” Washington’s credibility, and your own, will continue to erode, should you be unwilling – or unable – to present more tangible evidence behind administration claims. In what follows, we put this in the perspective of former intelligence professionals with a cumulative total of 260 years in various parts of U.S. intelligence:

We, the undersigned former intelligence officers want to share with you our concern about the evidence adduced so far to blame Russia for the July 17 downing of Malaysian Airlines Flight 17. We are retired from government service and none of us is on the payroll of CNN, Fox News, or any other outlet. We intend this memorandum to provide a fresh, different perspective.

As veteran intelligence analysts accustomed to waiting, except in emergency circumstances, for conclusive information before rushing to judgment, we believe that the charges against Russia should be rooted in solid, far more convincing evidence. And that goes in spades with respect to inflammatory incidents like the shoot-down of an airliner. We are also troubled by the amateurish manner in which fuzzy and flimsy evidence has been served up – some it via “social media.”

As intelligence professionals we are embarrassed by the unprofessional use of partial intelligence information. As Americans, we find ourselves hoping that, if you indeed have more conclusive evidence, you will find a way to make it public without further delay. In charging Russia with being directly or indirectly responsible, Secretary of State John Kerry has been particularly definitive. Not so the evidence. His statements seem premature and bear earmarks of an attempt to “poison the jury pool.”

Painting Russia Black

We see an eerie resemblance to an earlier exercise in U.S. “public diplomacy” from which valuable lessons can be learned by those more interested in the truth than in exploiting tragic incidents for propaganda advantage. We refer to the behavior of the Reagan administration in the immediate aftermath of the shoot-down of Korean Airlines Flight 007 over Siberia on August 30, 1983. We sketch out below a short summary of that tragic affair, since we suspect you have not been adequately briefed on it. The parallels will be obvious to you.

An advantage of our long tenure as intelligence officers is that we remember what we have witnessed first hand; seldom do we forget key events in which we played an analyst or other role. To put it another way, most of us “know exactly where we were” when a Soviet fighter aircraft shot down Korean Airlines passenger flight 007 over Siberia on August 30, 1983, over 30 years ago. At the time, we were intelligence officers on “active duty.” You were 21; many of those around you today were still younger.

Thus, it seems possible that you may be learning how the KAL007 affair went down, so to speak, for the first time; that you may now become more aware of the serious implications for U.S.-Russian relations regarding how the downing of Flight 17 goes down; and that you will come to see merit in preventing ties with Moscow from falling into a state of complete disrepair. In our view, the strategic danger here dwarfs all other considerations.

Hours after the tragic shoot-down on Aug. 30, 1983, the Reagan administration used its very accomplished propaganda machine to twist the available intelligence on Soviet culpability for the killing of all 269 people aboard KAL007. The airliner was shot down after it strayed hundreds of miles off course and penetrated Russia’s airspace over sensitive military facilities in Kamchatka and Sakhalin Island. The Soviet pilot tried to signal the plane to land, but the KAL pilots did not respond to the repeated warnings. Amid confusion about the plane’s identity – a U.S. spy plane had been in the vicinity hours earlier – Soviet ground control ordered the pilot to fire.

The Soviets soon realized they had made a horrendous mistake. U.S. intelligence also knew from sensitive intercepts that the tragedy had resulted from a blunder, not from a willful act of murder (much as on July 3, 1988, the USS Vincennes shot down an Iranian civilian airliner over the Persian Gulf, killing 290 people, an act which President Ronald Reagan dismissively explained as an “understandable accident”).

To make the very blackest case against Moscow for shooting down the KAL airliner, the Reagan administration suppressed exculpatory evidence from U.S. electronic intercepts. Washington’s mantra became “Moscow’s deliberate downing of a civilian passenger plane.” Newsweek ran a cover emblazoned with the headline “Murder in the Sky.” (Apparently, not much has changed; Time’s cover this week features “Cold War II” and “Putin’s dangerous game.” The cover story by Simon Shuster, “In Russia, Crime Without Punishment,” would merit an A-plus in William Randolph Hearst’s course “Yellow Journalism 101.”)

When KAL007 was shot down, Alvin A. Snyder, director of the U.S. Information Agency’s television and film division, was enlisted in a concerted effort to “heap as much abuse on the Soviet Union as possible,” as Snyder writes in his 1995 book, “Warriors of Disinformation.”

He and his colleagues also earned an A-plus for bringing the “mainstream media” along. For example, ABC’s Ted Koppel noted with patriotic pride, “This has been one of those occasions when there is very little difference between what is churned out by the U.S. government propaganda organs and by the commercial broadcasting networks.”

“Fixing” the Intelligence Around the Policy

“The perception we wanted to convey was that the Soviet Union had cold-bloodedly carried out a barbaric act,” wrote Snyder, adding that the Reagan administration went so far as to present a doctored transcript of the intercepts to the United Nations Security Council on September 6, 1983.

Only a decade later, when Snyder saw the complete transcripts — including the portions that the Reagan administration had hidden — would he fully realize how many of the central elements of the U.S. presentation were false.

The intercepts showed that the Soviet fighter pilot believed he was pursuing a U.S. spy aircraft and that he was having trouble in the dark identifying the plane. Per instructions from ground control, the pilot had circled the KAL airliner and tilted his wings to order the aircraft to land. The pilot said he fired warning shots, as well. This information “was not on the tape we were provided,” Snyder wrote.

It became abundantly clear to Snyder that, in smearing the Soviets, the Reagan administration had presented false accusations to the United Nations, as well as to the people of the United States and the world. In his book, Snyder acknowledged his own role in the deception, but drew a cynical conclusion. He wrote, “The moral of the story is that all governments, including our own, lie when it suits their purposes. The key is to lie first.”

The tortured attempts by your administration and stenographers in the media to blame Russia for the downing of Flight 17, together with John Kerry’s unenviable record for credibility, lead us to the reluctant conclusion that the syndrome Snyder describes may also be at work in your own administration; that is, that an ethos of “getting your own lie out first” has replaced “ye shall know the truth.” At a minimum, we believe Secretary Kerry displayed unseemly haste in his determination to be first out of the starting gate.

Both Sides Cannot Be Telling the Truth

We have always taken pride in not shooting from the hip, but rather in doing intelligence analysis that is evidence-based. The evidence released to date does not bear close scrutiny; it does not permit a judgment as to which side is lying about the shoot-down of Flight 17. Our entire professional experience would incline us to suspect the Russians – almost instinctively. Our more recent experience, particularly observing Secretary Kerry injudiciousness in latching onto one spurious report after another as “evidence,” has gone a long way toward balancing our earlier predispositions.

It seems that whenever Kerry does cite supposed “evidence” that can be checked – like the forged anti-Semitic fliers distributed in eastern Ukraine or the photos of alleged Russian special forces soldiers who allegedly slipped into Ukraine – the “proof” goes “poof” as Kerry once said in a different context. Still, these misrepresentations seem small peccadillos compared with bigger whoppers like the claim Kerry made on Aug. 30, 2013, no fewer than 35 times, that “we know” the government of Bashar al-Assad was responsible for the chemical incidents near Damascus nine days before.

On September 3, 2013 – following your decision to call off the attack on Syria in order to await Congressional authorization – Kerry was still pushing for an attack in testimony before a thoroughly sympathetic Senate Foreign Affairs Committee. On the following day Kerry drew highly unusual personal criticism from President Putin, who said: “He is lying, and he knows he is lying. It is sad.”

Equally serious, during the first week of September 2013, as you and President Vladimir Putin were putting the final touches to the deal whereby Syrian chemical weapons would be given up for destruction, John Kerry said something that puzzles us to this day. On September 9, 2013, Kerry was in London, still promoting a U.S. attack on Syria for having crossed the “Red Line” you had set against Syria’s using chemical weapons.

At a formal press conference, Kerry abruptly dismissed the possibility that Bashar al-Assad would ever give up his chemical weapons, saying, “He isn’t about to do that; it can’t be done.” Just a few hours later, the Russians and Syrians announced Syria’s agreement to do precisely what Kerry had ruled out as impossible. You sent him back to Geneva to sign the agreement, and it was formally concluded on September 14.

Regarding the Malaysia Airlines shoot-down of July 17, we believe Kerry has typically rushed to judgment and that his incredible record for credibility poses a huge disadvantage in the diplomatic and propaganda maneuvering vis-a-vis Russia. We suggest you call a halt to this misbegotten “public diplomacy” offensive. If, however, you decide to press on anyway, we suggest you try to find a less tarnished statesman or woman.

A Choice Between Two

If the intelligence on the shoot-down is as weak as it appears judging from the fuzzy scraps that have been released, we strongly suggest you call off the propaganda war and await the findings of those charged with investigating the shoot-down. If, on the other hand, your administration has more concrete, probative intelligence, we strongly suggest that you consider approving it for release, even if there may be some risk of damage to “sources and methods.” Too often this consideration is used to prevent information from entering the public domain where, as in this case, it belongs.

There have been critical junctures in the past in which presidents have recognized the need to waive secrecy in order to show what one might call “a decent respect for the opinions of mankind” or even to justify military action.

As senior CIA veteran Milton Bearden has put it, there are occasions when more damage is done to U.S. national security by “protecting” sources and methods than by revealing them. For instance, Bearden noted that Ronald Reagan exposed a sensitive intelligence source in showing a skeptical world the reason for the U.S. attack on Libya in retaliation for the April 5, 1986 bombing at the La Belle Disco in West Berlin. That bombing killed two U.S. servicemen and a Turkish woman, and injured over 200 people, including 79 U.S. servicemen.

Intercepted messages between Tripoli and agents in Europe made it clear that Libya was behind the attack. Here’s an excerpt: “At 1:30 in the morning one of the acts was carried out with success, without leaving a trace behind.”

Ten days after the bombing the U.S. retaliated, sending over 60 Air Force fighters to strike the Libyan capital of Tripoli and the city of Benghazi. The operation was widely seen as an attempt to kill Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, who survived, but his adopted 15-month-old daughter was killed in the bombing, along with at least 15 other civilians.

Three decades ago, there was more shame attached to the killing of children. As world abhorrence grew after the U.S. bombing strikes, the Reagan administration produced the intercepted, decoded message sent by the Libyan Peoples Bureau in East Berlin acknowledging the “success” of the attack on the disco, and adding the ironically inaccurate boast “without leaving a trace behind.”

The Reagan administration made the decision to give up a highly sensitive intelligence source, its ability to intercept and decipher Libyan communications. But once the rest of the world absorbed this evidence, international grumbling subsided and many considered the retaliation against Tripoli justified.

If You’ve Got the Goods…

If the U.S. has more convincing evidence than what has so far been adduced concerning responsibility for shooting down Flight 17, we believe it would be best to find a way to make that intelligence public – even at the risk of compromising “sources and methods.” Moreover, we suggest you instruct your subordinates not to cheapen U.S. credibility by releasing key information via social media like Twitter and Facebook.

The reputation of the messenger for credibility is also key in this area of “public diplomacy.” As is by now clear to you, in our view Secretary Kerry is more liability than asset in this regard. Similarly, with regard to Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, his March 12, 2013 Congressional testimony under oath to what he later admitted were “clearly erroneous” things regarding NSA collection should disqualify him. Clapper should be kept at far remove from the Flight 17 affair.

What is needed, if you’ve got the goods, is an Interagency Intelligence Assessment – the genre used in the past to lay out the intelligence. We are hearing indirectly from some of our former colleagues that what Secretary Kerry is peddling does not square with the real intelligence. Such was the case late last August, when Kerry created a unique vehicle he called a “Government (not Intelligence) Assessment” blaming, with no verifiable evidence, Bashar al-Assad for the chemical attacks near Damascus, as honest intelligence analysts refused to go along and, instead, held their noses.

We believe you need to seek out honest intelligence analysts now and hear them out. Then, you may be persuaded to take steps to curb the risk that relations with Russia might escalate from “Cold War II” into an armed confrontation. In all candor, we see little reason to believe that Secretary Kerry and your other advisers appreciate the enormity of that danger.

In our most recent (May 4) memorandum to you, Mr. President, we cautioned that if the U.S. wished “to stop a bloody civil war between east and west Ukraine and avert Russian military intervention in eastern Ukraine, you may be able to do so before the violence hurtles completely out of control.” On July 17, you joined the top leaders of Germany, France, and Russia in calling for a ceasefire. Most informed observers believe you have it in your power to get Ukrainian leaders to agree. The longer Kiev continues its offensive against separatists in eastern Ukraine, the more such U.S. statements appear hypocritical.

We reiterate our recommendations of May 4, that you remove the seeds of this confrontation by publicly disavowing any wish to incorporate Ukraine into NATO and that you make it clear that you are prepared to meet personally with Russian President Putin without delay to discuss ways to defuse the crisis and recognize the legitimate interests of the various parties. The suggestion of an early summit got extraordinary resonance in controlled and independent Russian media. Not so in “mainstream” media in the U.S. Nor did we hear back from you.

The courtesy of a reply is requested.

Prepared by VIPS Steering Group

William Binney, former Technical Director, World Geopolitical & Military Analysis, NSA; co-founder, SIGINT Automation Research Center (ret.)

Larry Johnson, CIA & State Department (ret.)

Edward Loomis, NSA, Cryptologic Computer Scientist (ret.)

David MacMichael, National Intelligence Council (ret.)

Ray McGovern, former US Army infantry/intelligence officer & CIA analyst (ret.)

Elizabeth Murray, Deputy National Intelligence Officer for Middle East (ret.)

Coleen Rowley, Division Counsel & Special Agent, FBI (ret.)

Peter Van Buren, U.S. Department of State, Foreign Service Officer (ret)

Ann Wright, Col., US Army (ret); Foreign Service Officer (ret.)

H/t: Consortium News




via Zero Hedge http://ift.tt/1lTabyO George Washington

No Justice at Harvard: Accused Students Don't Get Attorneys, Cross-Examination

Harvard UniversityHarvard
University has followed other Ivy League colleges in releasing—at
the behest of the federal government—updated guidelines for how
administrators should adjudicate campus sexual assault accusations.
The new procedures are as vexing for civil libertarians as the old
ones: They do not permit the accused to consult an attorney or to
cross-examine witnesses.

In fact, accused students may not even be told who their
accusers are or what testimony they have given. According to

KC Johnson of Minding the Campus
:

At no point does the accused student—or even his “advisor”—have
a right to cross-examine his accuser, or to receive a full
transcript of the accuser’s interview. The accused student doesn’t
have the right to cross-examine any witness.
(Indeed, the accused student doesn’t even have a right to know the
identities of all witnesses who gave the investigator/designee duo
evidence against him, much less a full transcript of what they
said.) Neither the policy nor Harvard’s statement announcing the
policy explains why the university has eliminated
cross-examination—although, as
seen with Michele Dauber’s efforts at Stanford
, it’s reasonable
to speculate that the university concluded that cross-examination
makes exonerations more likely.

Moreover, since Harvard provides only a “redacted version” of
the documentary evidence to the accused student, it’s possible that
the student can be branded a rapist based on information that he
never had a chance to see, much less rebut. Reflecting their
overall vagueness, the guidelines do not list the criteria under
which the investigator/designee duo can redact evidence, nor do
they spell out the grounds for appealing such a decision.

It seems like accused Harvard students are even forbidden from
disputing and publicizing the cases against them.
According to the policy
, “Sharing such information
might compromise the investigation or may be construed as
retaliatory. Retaliation of any kind is a separate violation
of the Policy and may lead to an additional complaint and
consequences.”

Johnson explains that an accused student who believes his civil
rights have been violated could be deemed guilty of “retaliation”
if he alerts the media or files a lawsuit.

And unlike policies at many other universities, Harvard’s policy
includes no statute of limitations. Alumni could be called to
participate in due-process-free trials for years to come.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1qiKFpp
via IFTTT

No Justice at Harvard: Accused Students Don’t Get Attorneys, Cross-Examination

Harvard UniversityHarvard
University has followed other Ivy League colleges in releasing—at
the behest of the federal government—updated guidelines for how
administrators should adjudicate campus sexual assault accusations.
The new procedures are as vexing for civil libertarians as the old
ones: They do not permit the accused to consult an attorney or to
cross-examine witnesses.

In fact, accused students may not even be told who their
accusers are or what testimony they have given. According to

KC Johnson of Minding the Campus
:

At no point does the accused student—or even his “advisor”—have
a right to cross-examine his accuser, or to receive a full
transcript of the accuser’s interview. The accused student doesn’t
have the right to cross-examine any witness.
(Indeed, the accused student doesn’t even have a right to know the
identities of all witnesses who gave the investigator/designee duo
evidence against him, much less a full transcript of what they
said.) Neither the policy nor Harvard’s statement announcing the
policy explains why the university has eliminated
cross-examination—although, as
seen with Michele Dauber’s efforts at Stanford
, it’s reasonable
to speculate that the university concluded that cross-examination
makes exonerations more likely.

Moreover, since Harvard provides only a “redacted version” of
the documentary evidence to the accused student, it’s possible that
the student can be branded a rapist based on information that he
never had a chance to see, much less rebut. Reflecting their
overall vagueness, the guidelines do not list the criteria under
which the investigator/designee duo can redact evidence, nor do
they spell out the grounds for appealing such a decision.

It seems like accused Harvard students are even forbidden from
disputing and publicizing the cases against them.
According to the policy
, “Sharing such information
might compromise the investigation or may be construed as
retaliatory. Retaliation of any kind is a separate violation
of the Policy and may lead to an additional complaint and
consequences.”

Johnson explains that an accused student who believes his civil
rights have been violated could be deemed guilty of “retaliation”
if he alerts the media or files a lawsuit.

And unlike policies at many other universities, Harvard’s policy
includes no statute of limitations. Alumni could be called to
participate in due-process-free trials for years to come.

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via IFTTT

Lyft and NYC Reach an Agreement…Sorta

picture of the Lyft appThe first time that Lyft attempted to launch
their ridesharing service in New York City three weeks ago, it were
met with a restraining order in New York state Supreme Court. After
weeks of negotiations, Lyft was finally able to implement an
overhauled business model in NYC last Friday, but the excessive
regulations have rendered the peer-to-peer service essentially
useless. 

Lyft, in a statement
released the afternoon before it opened up shop, said:

“Lyft will serve all corners of the city from Manhattan to
Staten Island, starting with a limited beta launch and then a full
rollout in coming weeks. Now, residents and visitors looking to
travel between boroughs, get to the closest subway station, or head
out for a night on the town can easily request a safe and reliable
ride.”

The agreement comes after a
petition
to the New York City Council titled, “Please welcome
ridesharing services to New York City and remove barriers to
transportation innovation” gathered over 11,000 signatures.

Despite the company’s initial optimism, New York reporters for
DNAInfo
said that
 at no point during the weekend were there more
than two Lyft drivers doing business. More often than not, your
screen would come up looking like the picture in the top right,
showing no available drivers in the area. The lack of service was
probably due to the fact that as of now, only Taxi and Limousine
Commission–licensed drivers and cars are allowed to operate through
Lyft. 

Even if someone was able to hail a Lyft driver in NYC, the
customer would have to pay anywhere from 25-75 percent more than
normal, because the high demand causes “Prime Time” pricing, which
is supposed to get more drivers on the road. 

To make matters worse, Lyft was promoting its “Pioneer Program,”
which offers certain users in the NYC area up to 50 free rides over
a 15-day period. A quick search of #lyftnyc
on Twitter makes it clear that these pioneers weren’t really
getting any bang for their buck. One user, @ashishsingal1,
tweeted:

@lyft it’s awesome that you’re giving away free #lyftnyc rides,
but you have no drivers …

Lyft is referring to this as a beta stage, so hopefully some
tweaks will be made that will allow the sharing economy to flourish
in NYC, even under the city’s borderline draconian
regulations. 

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via IFTTT

Grover Norquist at Burning Man: The Pointless Controversy (Or: Oh No! Someone I Might Disagree with Will be My Festival Dedicated to "Radical Inclusion"!)

Somewhat libertarianoid conservative movement leader and fixer
Grover Norquist—from Americans for Tax Reform, dedicated mostly to
the low-tax, shrink government part of the larger coalition, not
the
war
and
religious right anti-gay marriage
and
drug war crap
—made news this weekend by tweeting that he and
his wife were finally going to Burning Man, the annual festival of
art and free expression held in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert.

This wasn’t news to me. Norquist
publicly complained back in 2012
about how the Tampa GOP
convention conflicted with Burning Man. (I had the same problem–my

coverage of Ron Paul
caused me to have to miss the first half
of Burning Man.) That was the first year he seriously contemplated
going, after meeting Burning Man founder Larry Harvey through
mutual friends when Harvey was
in D.C. doing lobbying work
on his event’s relationship with
the federal Bureau of Land Management, essentially Burning Man’s
landlord as the event is held on permit-required federal land. They
liked each other—Norquist even invited Harvey to one of his
notorious Wednesday morning meetings of various representatives of
the small-government coalition, and Harvey attended. Harvey and I
discussed Norquist’s interest in the event back in 2012.

The reaction to Norquist’s announcement has been, well,
peculiar. Lots and lots of inexplicable shock and hostility. I
should think after all these years, “anyone goes to Burning Man”
stories shouldn’t be that interesting. That it is the “bonfire of
the techies,” a magnet for high-end superrich tech industry folk
from Bezos to Page, has been
discussed since 1997
and is now a cliche. The festival is very
officially dedicated to the
principle of “radical inclusion.”

Hell, I traded stories about wounds with former NATO commander
and Democratic presidential candidate
Wesley Clark
while stuck in line because the gate was
inexplicable closed for a few hours just last year at Burning Man.
My tracheotomy scar from Guillain-Barre, Clark’s bullet wound in
the hand—it was part of a game this lady made both of us play.
Clark admitted, in a candid moment inspired by the game, to feeling
the desire for vengeance on the man who shot him. No one called him
out publicly on being who he was, though at least a few people
involved in the extended conversation did know.

Any and everyone who can afford a ticket is very officially
welcome. That’s the very definition of the “spirit of Burning Man.”
Lest you wonder what a small-government warrior like Norquist might
see in it, note that “radical self-reliance” is another of the
principles meant to animate the event.

Norquist told me today that he is tickled by the idea of Burning
Man because of the radical inclusiveness and the “radical
individualism” and that “anyone who thinks people should run their
own lives should be into” the idea of Burning Man. He expects it to
be like “sitting on the Left Bank of the Seine watching
the world pass by on hyperspeed”—that he hopes to encounter a
variety of human lifeways, art, and fun of an unparalled variety,
in essence. If he wanders around enough, he certainly will. He adds
that it took a while to convince his wife to agree, and hopes he
can sell her on the motorcycle rally in Sturgis next.

What does he make of the shock about this eventful news,
Grover goes to Burning Man? “The right has a good idea of what guys
on the left are like. We live in a world and a culture they
dominate, we know what they think. They tend not to have a clue
what conservatives do and think, all they have is a caricature.”
Norquist notes that its pure ignorant prejudice to assume someone
who wants to lower taxes can’t possible appreciate, understand, or
enjoy a culture filled with those who don’t. 

I have in the past mocked the notion of the event having
ideological principles at all. But if you are supposedly standing
up for what “Burning Man is all about, man,” making ignorant and
unwitty “gee I guess Burning man is officially over now!” comments
(see
Slate
 and
Vanity Fair
) or even making subtle or not-subtle
threats on Norquist if he shows up, as I’ve regretfully seen twice
in social networks in the past day, you just have not the slightest
idea of what you are talking about. A strong libertarian tendency
ran through many of the early shapers of Burning Man through the
Cacophony Society, though not through Larry Harvey himself. Harvey,
at the very least, tolerates and appreciates interaction with those
who disagree with his own politics.

Or it could be those upset about this news are so dedicated, in
their open liberal tolerance, to refusing to have anything to do
with people who disagree with them about capital gains taxes that
their thought processes are short-circuited. 

Way back in 2000 I wrote this
Reason cover story
on the complicated evolution of the
festival’s relationship with government, internal and external.

Then I spun that off into a book, the Burning Man’s first
biography,
This is Burning Man
. Fans and those who missed it first
time ’round, expect to see in time for this year’s event a special
e-book only 10th anniversary edition with a new introduction.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1uEIdjN
via IFTTT

Grover Norquist at Burning Man: The Pointless Controversy (Or: Oh No! Someone I Might Disagree with Will be My Festival Dedicated to “Radical Inclusion”!)

Somewhat libertarianoid conservative movement leader and fixer
Grover Norquist—from Americans for Tax Reform, dedicated mostly to
the low-tax, shrink government part of the larger coalition, not
the
war
and
religious right anti-gay marriage
and
drug war crap
—made news this weekend by tweeting that he and
his wife were finally going to Burning Man, the annual festival of
art and free expression held in Nevada’s Black Rock Desert.

This wasn’t news to me. Norquist
publicly complained back in 2012
about how the Tampa GOP
convention conflicted with Burning Man. (I had the same problem–my

coverage of Ron Paul
caused me to have to miss the first half
of Burning Man.) That was the first year he seriously contemplated
going, after meeting Burning Man founder Larry Harvey through
mutual friends when Harvey was
in D.C. doing lobbying work
on his event’s relationship with
the federal Bureau of Land Management, essentially Burning Man’s
landlord as the event is held on permit-required federal land. They
liked each other—Norquist even invited Harvey to one of his
notorious Wednesday morning meetings of various representatives of
the small-government coalition, and Harvey attended. Harvey and I
discussed Norquist’s interest in the event back in 2012.

The reaction to Norquist’s announcement has been, well,
peculiar. Lots and lots of inexplicable shock and hostility. I
should think after all these years, “anyone goes to Burning Man”
stories shouldn’t be that interesting. That it is the “bonfire of
the techies,” a magnet for high-end superrich tech industry folk
from Bezos to Page, has been
discussed since 1997
and is now a cliche. The festival is very
officially dedicated to the
principle of “radical inclusion.”

Hell, I traded stories about wounds with former NATO commander
and Democratic presidential candidate
Wesley Clark
while stuck in line because the gate was
inexplicable closed for a few hours just last year at Burning Man.
My tracheotomy scar from Guillain-Barre, Clark’s bullet wound in
the hand—it was part of a game this lady made both of us play.
Clark admitted, in a candid moment inspired by the game, to feeling
the desire for vengeance on the man who shot him. No one called him
out publicly on being who he was, though at least a few people
involved in the extended conversation did know.

Any and everyone who can afford a ticket is very officially
welcome. That’s the very definition of the “spirit of Burning Man.”
Lest you wonder what a small-government warrior like Norquist might
see in it, note that “radical self-reliance” is another of the
principles meant to animate the event.

Norquist told me today that he is tickled by the idea of Burning
Man because of the radical inclusiveness and the “radical
individualism” and that “anyone who thinks people should run their
own lives should be into” the idea of Burning Man. He expects it to
be like “sitting on the Left Bank of the Seine watching
the world pass by on hyperspeed”—that he hopes to encounter a
variety of human lifeways, art, and fun of an unparalled variety,
in essence. If he wanders around enough, he certainly will. He adds
that it took a while to convince his wife to agree, and hopes he
can sell her on the motorcycle rally in Sturgis next.

What does he make of the shock about this eventful news,
Grover goes to Burning Man? “The right has a good idea of what guys
on the left are like. We live in a world and a culture they
dominate, we know what they think. They tend not to have a clue
what conservatives do and think, all they have is a caricature.”
Norquist notes that its pure ignorant prejudice to assume someone
who wants to lower taxes can’t possible appreciate, understand, or
enjoy a culture filled with those who don’t. 

I have in the past mocked the notion of the event having
ideological principles at all. But if you are supposedly standing
up for what “Burning Man is all about, man,” making ignorant and
unwitty “gee I guess Burning man is officially over now!” comments
(see
Slate
 and
Vanity Fair
) or even making subtle or not-subtle
threats on Norquist if he shows up, as I’ve regretfully seen twice
in social networks in the past day, you just have not the slightest
idea of what you are talking about. A strong libertarian tendency
ran through many of the early shapers of Burning Man through the
Cacophony Society, though not through Larry Harvey himself. Harvey,
at the very least, tolerates and appreciates interaction with those
who disagree with his own politics.

Or it could be those upset about this news are so dedicated, in
their open liberal tolerance, to refusing to have anything to do
with people who disagree with them about capital gains taxes that
their thought processes are short-circuited. 

Way back in 2000 I wrote this
Reason cover story
on the complicated evolution of the
festival’s relationship with government, internal and external.

Then I spun that off into a book, the Burning Man’s first
biography,
This is Burning Man
. Fans and those who missed it first
time ’round, expect to see in time for this year’s event a special
e-book only 10th anniversary edition with a new introduction.

from Hit & Run http://ift.tt/1uEIdjN
via IFTTT