The Snowden of the '70s

This issue.More than a
decade before Edward Snowden was born, a whistleblower calling
himself Winslow Peck gave the New Left magazine Ramparts
an insider’s
account
 of the National Security Agency, an institution
that at that time was shrouded in even more secrecy than today.
Peck, whose given name was Perry Fellwock, went on to help launch
Counterspy, a magazine devoted to exposing the activities
of America’s intelligence agencies. And then he left activism
behind. Today he is an antiques dealer on Long Island.

Adrian Chen of Gawker tracked Fellwock down, and after
a rather distrustful start (“I believe that you’re honest, but who
knows about the people in your office? Who knows about your boss,
what kind of deals he’s doing?”) the man once known as Winslow Peck

granted Chen an interview
. Their conversation covers everything
from Fellwock’s disappointment with the way that original
Ramparts article came out to his guilt over the treatment
of a Counterspy colleague who got accused of being a
police plant. Here’s an excerpt from Chen’s story:

Celebrate the bicentennial with CounterSpy!It turns out that constant brooding over
the machinations of the surveillance state is not conducive to a
sound state of mind. Counter-Spy staff worked in a haze of
mistrust. “You’d be sitting with people and you knew that somebody
was wondering about somebody else at that table,” said [magazine
staffer] Harvey Kahn, “were they being controlled by somebody else?
Or unconsciously being manipulated?”

It was not a fantasy: The COINTELPRO papers had revealed security
agencies kept close tabs on radical publications. In the late ’60s,
the CIA dedicated a 12-man team to undermining Ramparts,
according to Angus Mackenzie’s book Secrets: The CIA’s War at
Home
.

“It was intense,” said Fellwock. “Clearly it really upset the
security agencies, what we were doing. They were all over us. I
just generally accepted that the next person in the next booth
would be some security person following me.”

“It seems like that is still kind of implanted in your thinking,” I
said.

“Yeah, that’s why I got paranoid when you called me, you really
evoked a lot of old memories and feelings that I haven’t had in 30
years.” He sighed. “But if I could live with it back then, I guess
I could live with it now.”

I could pick a few nits with Chen’s account—he
has Counterspy dissolving in 1976, for example,
but it actually continued publishing into the ’80s—but overall it’s
a strong piece. You should
read it
.

Bonus 1970s anti-intelligence-agency activism links:
What
It Would Take To Stop the Spying
” and “Agee’s
Revenge
.”

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/the-snowden-of-the-70s
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Nick Gillespie and Matt Welch on George Will’s Libertarian Evolution

Nick Gillespie and Matt Welch
interview George Will, the nation’s most widely syndicated
columnist. Will talks about political philosophy, drugs,
isolationism, optimism, and his political development over four
decades in Washington. Recently Will has become a frequent champion
of libertarianism, both in print and on the air, praising the likes
of Liberty Movement stalwart Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) while
puncturing the balloons of big-government conservatives like Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.).

View this article.

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Nick Gillespie and Matt Welch on George Will's Libertarian Evolution

Nick Gillespie and Matt Welch
interview George Will, the nation’s most widely syndicated
columnist. Will talks about political philosophy, drugs,
isolationism, optimism, and his political development over four
decades in Washington. Recently Will has become a frequent champion
of libertarianism, both in print and on the air, praising the likes
of Liberty Movement stalwart Rep. Justin Amash (R-Mich.) while
puncturing the balloons of big-government conservatives like Sen.
John McCain (R-Ariz.).

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/nick-gillespie-and-matt-welch-on-george
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Exclusive Web-Only Preview of John Stossel’s “The Rise of The Libertarians” with Matt Welch and Nick Gillespie!

Tomorrow’s weekly episode of John Stossel’s eponymous Fox
Business show is all about “The Rise of the Libertarians.”

Matt Welch and I appear on the program to discuss the themes we
outlined in our book
The Declaration of Independents
and to talk about all the
recent developments that argue for what we’ve called “the
Libertarian Moment
” and even “the
Libertarian Era
.”

Other guests include Penn Jillette, members of Students for
Liberty, and former Rep. Ron Paul. Follow the show on Twitter at
the hashtag #TheRise.

Stossel airs on Thursday at 9pm ET. Go here
for more information on the show.

Click above to watch a web-only exclusive preview of the
episode, in which Matt and I discuss whether a libertarian world
would be like Somalia, why libertarians are constantly forced to
answer such questions, and more.

Stossel’s syndicated column appears every Wednesday at
Reason.com.
Read the latest here
 and check out his archive
here
.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/tomorrow-watch-john-stossels-the-rise-of
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Exclusive Web-Only Preview of John Stossel's "The Rise of The Libertarians" with Matt Welch and Nick Gillespie!

Tomorrow’s weekly episode of John Stossel’s eponymous Fox
Business show is all about “The Rise of the Libertarians.”

Matt Welch and I appear on the program to discuss the themes we
outlined in our book
The Declaration of Independents
and to talk about all the
recent developments that argue for what we’ve called “the
Libertarian Moment
” and even “the
Libertarian Era
.”

Other guests include Penn Jillette, members of Students for
Liberty, and former Rep. Ron Paul. Follow the show on Twitter at
the hashtag #TheRise.

Stossel airs on Thursday at 9pm ET. Go here
for more information on the show.

Click above to watch a web-only exclusive preview of the
episode, in which Matt and I discuss whether a libertarian world
would be like Somalia, why libertarians are constantly forced to
answer such questions, and more.

Stossel’s syndicated column appears every Wednesday at
Reason.com.
Read the latest here
 and check out his archive
here
.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/tomorrow-watch-john-stossels-the-rise-of
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Barack Obama on a Record-Breaking Fundraising Spree Ahead of 2014 Elections

they should donate to reason insteadPresident Obama may be approaching lame-duck
status, but he doesn’t want to go quietly into the night, focusing
on the upcoming midterm elections far more than previous
second-term presidents did, in spite of his approval ratings

hitting
new lows.


From the Guardian:

A record-breaking fundraising spree by Barack
Obama has seen him make 30 separate visits to wealthy donors
since April, according to a Guardian investigation into campaign
finance trips that are running at more than twice the rate of the
president’s two-term predecessors.

Although unable to run again for election himself, Obama is
estimated to have raised up to $40m for
other Democrats since his last inauguration in January as
he devotes a growing portion of the second term to financing
efforts aimed at winning back control of Congress in next year’s
midterm elections.

It’s the campaign that never ends.

Follow these stories and more at Reason 24/7 and don’t forget you
can e-mail stories to us at 24_7@reason.com and tweet us
at @reason247

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/barack-obama-on-a-record-breaking-fundra
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Mental Health Parity is a Nice Obamacare Gesture, With a Big Price Tag

Sigmund FreudAs Jacob Sullum
points out
, one of the Affordable Care Act’s great failings is
President Obama and company’s refusal to admit that health coverage
involves tradeoffs. Sure, it’s upsetting when your copay is higher
than you wish, or your policy doesn’t cover everything under the
sun, but the more you jam into a plan, the higher costs will be,
and somebody has to pay for them. So when the government waves its
hand and does away with what the president insists are “substandard
plans by mandating a generous wish list of coverage, it makes
relatively affordable plans rather less so. The federal government
did that in spades last Friday when the Department of Health and
Human Services finalized
rules
enforcing mental health parity—a very expensive
mandate—for most private health plans.

The mandate was expected, since it implements the Mental Health
Parity and Addiction Act, which has been on the books since 2008,
but which dwelt in statutory purgatory for five years because the
Obama administration
never issued guidance
that would allow the law to be enforced.
Secretary of Health and Human Services Kathleen Sebelius says her
Friday announcement is “building on these rules” when it’s actually
overcoming a half-decade of bureaucratic inertia to put the law
into effect. Because the law has been sitting there for so long,
many of its costs may already be represented in the new heath plans
available under Obamacare, though those plans might have to be
tweaked, since the final rule was issued six weeks after
individual plans went on sale on the exchanges. Not that anybody
has been able to buy them, yet.

The costs that mandates add to health coverage are no mystery.
the Council for Affordable Health Insurance estimates that, while
each individual mandate might elevate costs by only a small amount,
in aggregate “mandated benefits currently increase the cost of
basic health coverage from slightly less than 10 percent to more
than 50 percent, depending on the state, specific legislative
language, and type of health insurance policy.”

Mental health parity—which “ensures that health plans features
like co-pays, deductibles and visit limits are generally not more
restrictive for mental health/substance abuse disorders benefits
than they are for medical/surgical benefits” in HHS terms—is among
the more expensive mandates,
raising costs by five to 10 percent
(PDF), all by itself.

Looking at expenditures, the Health Care Cost Institute found
that
mental health and substance abuse treatment costs jumped
after
the passage of the Mental Health Parity and Addiction Act, even in
the absence of final federal rules. The study looked at the time
period after passage, rather than for a direct causative effect of
the law.

That’s not to say that people don’t need mental health treatment
or help with substance abuse problems. But there’s no such thing as
a free lunch—or free health care. Shedding a tear and promising
people that all of their needs will be covered is cheap. Following
through, not so much.

(H/T Sevo)

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/mental-health-parity-is-a-nice-obamacare
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John Stossel on the New Libertarian Era

Libertarian protestI
didn’t know what a libertarian was when I started reporting, writes
John Stossel. I was just another liberal. I knew the Republicans
were icky, and Democrats were more like me—except they didn’t care
about debt. I had no idea there was an actual movement of thinking
people who want to honor the principles of the Founders—liberty and
limited government. It took me a long time to wake up. Old
politicians—and old voters collecting Social Security—may never
change their minds. But libertarianism is growing fast among young
Americans.

View this article.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/john-stossel-on-the-new-libertarian-era
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Rand Paul’s Latest Speech Did Contain Footnotes, But That Doesn’t Mean it Was Accurate

Yesterday Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) gave his first
major speech
since the recent plagiarism scandal. Speaking at
The Citadel, Paul outlined his views on the military and foreign
policy in a speech that included 33 footnotes. Unfortunately, Paul
did not outline much new in this speech, and it is already being
criticized for its lack of accuracy.

Anyone who has been following Paul’s beliefs on foreign policy
would not have been surprised to hear him highlight his disapproval
of foreign aid to Egypt, his constitutionalism, his opposition to
intervention in Syria, as well as his anger over the
administration’s response to the attack on the American consulate
in Benghazi last year. Although Paul did not voice any new
complaints, he did say that he will soon be announcing the
formation of a task force “to bring together great minds from the
world of national defense, and put forward a plan to modernize our
military, and strengthen our defenses,” which will include an audit
of the Pentagon.

While Paul may have included 33 footnotes in his speech, The
Daily Beast’s Josh Rogin points out that although more information
was cited, the speech included factual errors relating to claims
about the situations in Egypt and Syria as well the attack on the
American consulate in Benghazi:

From
The Daily Beast
:

For example, in the following two sentences about Egypt, Paul
makes at least four factual errors.

“In Egypt recently, we saw a military coup that this
Administration tells us is not a military coup. In a highly
unstable situation, our government continued to send F-16s, Abrams
tanks and American-made tear gas,” Paul said.

In fact, the State Department has repeatedly said it would not
weigh in on whether the July overthrow of Egyptian President
Mohamed Morsi was a “coup,” deciding that the administration was
not required to make a determination one way or the other.

Following the military takeover of the Egyptian government, the
administration quietly halted all shipments of heavy weapons to
Egypt, mostly adhering to a law requiring a cutoff of military aid
to any country that has experienced a coup, while maintaining a
position of ambiguity over whether a coup had taken place.

Rogin also points out that Paul’s claims relating to the
situation in Syria also contain factual errors:

“As we continue to aid and arm despotic regimes in Egypt, we are
also now sending weapons to the rebels in Syria,” Paul said.
“According to a recent poll from Pew Research, over 70 percent of
Americans are against arming the Islamic rebels in Syria, yet the
Senate continues to arm these Islamic radicals. [15] [16] This is
unacceptable!”

The Obama administration has sent little, if any, weapons to the
Syrian rebels, something that has angered several Republican
colleagues of Paul, most notably Sen. John McCain (R-AZ). The Free
Syrian Army, the armed wing of the Syrian opposition has received
only Meals Ready to Eat, first aid kits, and 10 pickup trucks. The
CIA is reported to be vetting some arms shipments to the rebels
coming from third countries such as Saudi Arabia, but the White
House has repeatedly shot downState Department proposals to arm the
Syrian rebels.

Paul also incorrectly quotes the Pew poll that he footnotes. The
Pew Research Center wrote “overall, 70% oppose the U.S. and its
allies sending arms and military supplies to anti-government groups
in Syria.” Paul instead used the phrase “Islamic rebels” to
substitute for “anti-government groups.”

Finally, Rogin points out that Paul managed to contradict
himself when he talked about Benghazi:

Perhaps the most confusing part of Paul’s speech is a passage
about Benghazi where the Kentucky senator contradicts himself in
back-to-back sentences.

“When Hillary Clinton was asked for more security, she turned
the Ambassador down. [27] Under cross-examination, she admitted
that she never read the cables asking for more security. [28],”
Paul said.

The article Paul footnotes as proof for his first sentence
explains that witnesses were “expected” to testify that Clinton was
personally involved in the refusals to place more security in
Benghazi in the attack; not that this was a fact. The second
sentence confirms that Clinton was not personally involved in the
Benghazi security request, refuting what Paul said one sentence
earlier.

James Rosen at
McClatchyDC
has also written on the factual inaccuracies in
Paul’s speech at The Citadel.

Paul is widely expected to run for president. If he wants to
have a shot at securing the GOP nomination he will have to make
further steps to ensure that his public statements are not only
free of possible plagiarism, but that they are also accurate. As
Reason’s Editor-in-Chief
Matt Welch
wrote earlier this month, “…these sloppy,
undergraduate-level infractions suggest strongly that Sen. Paul is
running a loose ship, one not currently ready for the prime time of
winning a national election.”

The lack of accuracy and the accusations of plagiarism are
frustrating for those, like myself, who agree with many of Paul’s
positions on foreign policy (even if I might wish he would change

some of the rhetoric
and
more fully explain
the policies that would be implemented in a
Paul administration). Paul is one of the United States’ most
prominent non-interventionists, and it would be a shame if his
positions foreign policy continue to be overshadowed by the sort of
errors that have been highlighted recently.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/rand-pauls-latest-speech-did-contain-foo
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Rand Paul's Latest Speech Did Contain Footnotes, But That Doesn't Mean it Was Accurate

Yesterday Sen. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) gave his first
major speech
since the recent plagiarism scandal. Speaking at
The Citadel, Paul outlined his views on the military and foreign
policy in a speech that included 33 footnotes. Unfortunately, Paul
did not outline much new in this speech, and it is already being
criticized for its lack of accuracy.

Anyone who has been following Paul’s beliefs on foreign policy
would not have been surprised to hear him highlight his disapproval
of foreign aid to Egypt, his constitutionalism, his opposition to
intervention in Syria, as well as his anger over the
administration’s response to the attack on the American consulate
in Benghazi last year. Although Paul did not voice any new
complaints, he did say that he will soon be announcing the
formation of a task force “to bring together great minds from the
world of national defense, and put forward a plan to modernize our
military, and strengthen our defenses,” which will include an audit
of the Pentagon.

While Paul may have included 33 footnotes in his speech, The
Daily Beast’s Josh Rogin points out that although more information
was cited, the speech included factual errors relating to claims
about the situations in Egypt and Syria as well the attack on the
American consulate in Benghazi:

From
The Daily Beast
:

For example, in the following two sentences about Egypt, Paul
makes at least four factual errors.

“In Egypt recently, we saw a military coup that this
Administration tells us is not a military coup. In a highly
unstable situation, our government continued to send F-16s, Abrams
tanks and American-made tear gas,” Paul said.

In fact, the State Department has repeatedly said it would not
weigh in on whether the July overthrow of Egyptian President
Mohamed Morsi was a “coup,” deciding that the administration was
not required to make a determination one way or the other.

Following the military takeover of the Egyptian government, the
administration quietly halted all shipments of heavy weapons to
Egypt, mostly adhering to a law requiring a cutoff of military aid
to any country that has experienced a coup, while maintaining a
position of ambiguity over whether a coup had taken place.

Rogin also points out that Paul’s claims relating to the
situation in Syria also contain factual errors:

“As we continue to aid and arm despotic regimes in Egypt, we are
also now sending weapons to the rebels in Syria,” Paul said.
“According to a recent poll from Pew Research, over 70 percent of
Americans are against arming the Islamic rebels in Syria, yet the
Senate continues to arm these Islamic radicals. [15] [16] This is
unacceptable!”

The Obama administration has sent little, if any, weapons to the
Syrian rebels, something that has angered several Republican
colleagues of Paul, most notably Sen. John McCain (R-AZ). The Free
Syrian Army, the armed wing of the Syrian opposition has received
only Meals Ready to Eat, first aid kits, and 10 pickup trucks. The
CIA is reported to be vetting some arms shipments to the rebels
coming from third countries such as Saudi Arabia, but the White
House has repeatedly shot downState Department proposals to arm the
Syrian rebels.

Paul also incorrectly quotes the Pew poll that he footnotes. The
Pew Research Center wrote “overall, 70% oppose the U.S. and its
allies sending arms and military supplies to anti-government groups
in Syria.” Paul instead used the phrase “Islamic rebels” to
substitute for “anti-government groups.”

Finally, Rogin points out that Paul managed to contradict
himself when he talked about Benghazi:

Perhaps the most confusing part of Paul’s speech is a passage
about Benghazi where the Kentucky senator contradicts himself in
back-to-back sentences.

“When Hillary Clinton was asked for more security, she turned
the Ambassador down. [27] Under cross-examination, she admitted
that she never read the cables asking for more security. [28],”
Paul said.

The article Paul footnotes as proof for his first sentence
explains that witnesses were “expected” to testify that Clinton was
personally involved in the refusals to place more security in
Benghazi in the attack; not that this was a fact. The second
sentence confirms that Clinton was not personally involved in the
Benghazi security request, refuting what Paul said one sentence
earlier.

James Rosen at
McClatchyDC
has also written on the factual inaccuracies in
Paul’s speech at The Citadel.

Paul is widely expected to run for president. If he wants to
have a shot at securing the GOP nomination he will have to make
further steps to ensure that his public statements are not only
free of possible plagiarism, but that they are also accurate. As
Reason’s Editor-in-Chief
Matt Welch
wrote earlier this month, “…these sloppy,
undergraduate-level infractions suggest strongly that Sen. Paul is
running a loose ship, one not currently ready for the prime time of
winning a national election.”

The lack of accuracy and the accusations of plagiarism are
frustrating for those, like myself, who agree with many of Paul’s
positions on foreign policy (even if I might wish he would change

some of the rhetoric
and
more fully explain
the policies that would be implemented in a
Paul administration). Paul is one of the United States’ most
prominent non-interventionists, and it would be a shame if his
positions foreign policy continue to be overshadowed by the sort of
errors that have been highlighted recently.

from Hit & Run http://reason.com/blog/2013/11/13/rand-pauls-latest-speech-did-contain-foo
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