Saturday, January 9, 2010

Domestic Espionage Alert: Spy Drone Discovered for Use Against US Citizens

Screen shot 2010-01-08 at 6.42.40 PM

KPRC news in Houston recently filmed a secret experiment by law enforcement agencies including the Dept. of Homeland Security of a drone intended to spy on Americans.

The drone uncovered during this investigation are not like the large, expensive models used by the military for targeted strikes on militants half a world away. These are manufactured by Insitu out of Bingen, Washington (corporate offices located in Australia), only weigh about 40 pounds (18.1 kg) before monitoring equipment is installed. This model has the capacity to stay airborne for up to a day.

The Houston Police Department responded with the following statement,“Potential public safety applications include mobility, evacuations, homeland security, search and rescue, as well as tactical.”

Such benign excuses were also used during the passage of draconian bills such as FISA and the Patriot Act before it was revealed the much more insidious and rampant applications of those tools.

ACLU constitution free zone

Houston is within the coastal and border zone of America, where two-thirds of the population lives and where constitutional rights are routinely disregarded according to the ACLU, yet this poses the question about whether this is pilot program and the usage of unmanned drones might become a regular policy of law enforcement agencies in surveillance operations.




Invasion of The Body Scanners: Now Mobile Devices Will Scan Your Naked Body On The Streets

Airport tyranny comes to your door, as predicted

Now Mobile Devices Will Scan Your Naked Body On The Streets 080110top4

Paul Joseph Watson
Prison Planet.com
Friday, January 8, 2009

Naked body scanners are being readied to go mobile and scan you on the street, at football games and any other event where masses of people are congregated, according to a leaked paper written by Dutch authorities.

As we have been warning all along, the tyranny now being metered out at airports was always intended to be rolled out onto the streets, with mobile metal detectors already being stationed at various transport hubs in the UK in the name of stopping knife crime.

Now Dutch police have announced that they are developing a mobile scanner that will “see through people’s clothing and look for concealed weapons”.

According to a confidential document, “The scanner could first be used as an alternative to random body searches in high risk areas. The mobile detector would enable the search to be carried out more quickly and would only be used on people suspected of carrying concealed weapons,” reports Dutch News.nl.

The device would also be used from a distance on groups of people “and mass scans on crowds at events such as football matches.”

“The biggest challenge is making it portable and ensuring it can carry out a scan in seconds,” Giampiero Gerini, a professor at Eindhoven University, told the paper.

The aim is to develop and deploy the device within three years. With police in major American and British cities already carrying out random searches of innocent people under routinely abused terrorism laws, mobile scanners are likely to be added to their arsenal, especially if people have been trained to accept their use as routine in airports.

Three years ago, leaked documents out of the Home Office revealed that authorities in the UK were working on proposals to fit lamp posts with CCTV cameras that would X-ray scan passers-by and “undress them” in order to “trap terror suspects”.

“The questions are when is this a useful addition to security and when does it become unduly intrusive and worrying to the public?” said Professor Paul Wilkinson, a terrorism expert.

Since everything that we see being installed at the airports is now gradually being introduced on the streets, how long will it be before mind-reading devices that scan individuals for behavioral psychology, now being discussed for use in airports, are stationed on every major street corner?

The technologies now being prepared not just for the airport, but for our everyday lives, are far more frightening and technologically advanced than anything George Orwell wrote about in 1984. Unless we stand up in unison and say enough is enough, our world will become a literal hi-tech prison grid characterized by a caste system of slaves and controllers.

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Army Imprisons Soldier for Singing Against Stop-Loss Policy While US Troops, Kin Face Cuts in Base Services as Banks Receive $14 Trillion from You


Army Imprisons Soldier for Singing Against Stop-Loss Policy

by: Dahr Jamail, t r u t h o u t | Report

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(Photo: Courage to Resist; Edited: Lance Page /t r u t h o u t)

Army Specialist and Iraq war veteran Marc Hall was incarcerated by the US Army on December 11, 2009, in Liberty County Jail, Georgia, for recording a song that expresses his anger over the Army's stop-loss policy.

Stop-loss is a policy that allows the Army to keep soldiers active beyond the end of their signed contracts. According to the Pentagon, more than 120,000 soldiers have been affected by stop-loss since 2001, and currently 13,000 soldiers are serving under stop-loss orders.

Hall, (aka hip hop artist Marc Watercus), who is in the Army's 3rd Infantry Division, was placed in Liberty County Jail for the song (click here to listen to "Stop-Loss," by Marc Watercus), in which he angrily denounces the continuing policy that has barred him from exiting the military.

Military service members do not completely give up their rights to free speech, particularly not when they are doing so artistically while off duty, as was the case with Hall. He is charged under Article 134 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice, which covers "all disorders and neglects to the prejudice of good order and discipline" and "all conduct of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces." The military is claiming that he "communicated a threat" with his song. Hall mailed a copy of the song to the Pentagon after the Army unilaterally extended his contract for a second Iraq deployment.

Hall planned to leave the military at the end of his contract on February 27, before his commander, Captain Cross at Fort Stewart, moved to have him incarcerated for the song. The military currently intends to keep Hall in pre-trial confinement until he is court-martialed, which is expected to be several months from now.

Jim Klimanski, a civilian military lawyer, member of the National Lawyers Guild and the Military Law Task Force, who is closely following Hall's case, told Truthout that he feels the military is overreacting to the case, and that it is simply a matter of free speech and that the Army's actions violate his First Amendment right to free speech.

"It's a political case, and the military should know that," Klimanski explained, "I think they are overreaching and overreacting because of Maj. Hassan (who went on a shooting spree at Fort Hood on November 5), and I can understand that to some degree, but cooler heads should prevail and they should deal with stop-loss, and maybe we'll get the case thrown out. One would hope that common sense would prevail."

Hall is opposed to the occupation of Iraq, and had told his commander he would not deploy if ordered. His unit deployed to Iraq without him in mid-December, but this is not why Hall is in jail, as he was jailed before his unit was sent to Iraq.

"The military never ordered him to go [to Iraq], they put him in jail before that," Klimanski continued, "They can't charge him with missing movement, because he couldn't go because they put him in jail. He told them he wanted out, he wouldn't go, but they didn't put him in jail for not going."

In a statement on January 5, Hall said, ""My first sergeant called me into his office to discuss the song's nature. I explained to him that the hardcore rap song was a free expression of how people feel about the Army and its stop-loss policy. I explained that the song was neither a physical threat nor any threat whatsoever. I told him it was just hip-hop."

Hall added, "My first sergeant said he actually liked the song and that he did not take it as a threat. He and my commander at the time just recommended me for mental counseling and evaluation."

Truthout obtained a redacted copy of the Army's Charge Sheet against Hall, filed by Marcus Seiser, that includes five charges. On the sheet, Hall is accused of telling someone he would "go on a rampage," that "the song makes threats of acts of violence," and that Hall is accused "of planning on shooting the brigade or battalion commanders."

Jason Hurd, an Iraq war veteran who has been assisting Marc Hall, told Truthout that he believes the military is overreacting to Hall's song due to the November 5 shooting at Fort Hood.

"It really frustrates me that they [military] are reacting in such an excessive way," Hurd, a member of Iraq Veteran's Against the War, told Truthout, "When you are talking about communicating a threat, a threat has to be at something or someone. If you listen to Marc's song, he's not saying he wants to kill someone in his chain of command, he makes broad artistic expressions of anger. The military likes to keep a lid on things, and it's now very frustrating they are taking such extensive measures to save face, and they are afraid after the Ft. Hood shooting. So as a result of Ft. Hood, they have persecuted Marc, and now he's incarcerated."

Hurd also feels the case underscores an underlying hypocrisy within the military.

"From a military that has us, while we're jogging, chant in cadence about killing babies, to then come down on someone for writing an angry song, is ludicrous," Hurd added, "Marc is just expressing the anger that 13,000 soldiers are feeling right now, because there are currently that many who are stop-lossed. All he did was make his opinion heard."

According to Hurd, who has been speaking with Hall regularly via telephone, Hall told him that how the military has handled his case "really got me thinking about the whole situation, and how we acted like thugs over there [in Iraq]. In good conscious I could not go back over there and do it again."

Jeff Paterson, the founder and director of the soldier advocacy group Courage to Resist, which is assisting Hall, told Truthout, "Marc's case is unique in that the military hasn't shown a propensity to go after these political speech cases for several years. Here, since he's an angry man who recorded a song, they are making him a target for having expressed his anger in an artistic way. We think this is an important case because it could set precedent for free speech rights for those in the military."

Klimanski, along with underscoring the importance of the case for the First Amendment, thinks the case highlights the military's ongoing use of stop-loss, which also contributes to how they have responded to Hall's song.

"It's a song, and he puts it out to the public," Klimanski told Truthout, "We're not talking about a Major Hassan who is quietly plotting violence ... this is political hyperbole. This is his rant on stop-loss. It's political speech."

Klimanski said that by nature, the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan will not end, and Hall's song expresses concern over the possibility of his never being discharged from the military.

"He's over there saying I have no control over my life. I could be in here forever. We're not talking about a war that is going to be over next year. We're talking about a war that could go on forever. So poor old Marc Hall could possibility be in the military forever. Once enlistment starts dropping, the Army maintains troop levels by keeping the ones they have. If you're not going to go to one place, you're going to another, but you're not going to get out. I see this as an issue of political speech. The military may not like what they're hearing, but that's what it is. There are people in the military saying their being in it is/was wrong, and they want out."


US troops, families face cuts in on-base services as Pentagon tries to hold down spending

KRISTIN M. HALL
AP News Jan 08, 2010 14:58 EST


"Some members of the military are worried money will be pulled from programs that help spouses and children cope with soldiers' repeated tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan."

At a time when this government should be shoring up career military and their family to the best of its ability, and this is how it is supporting them?!?

Welcome to the world of the irrelevancy of the US career soldier to its government!


Soldiers and their families on Army bases around the country could see cutbacks in trash pickup, lawn-mowing and other services as the military tries to hold down non-war spending while escalating the fight in Afghanistan.

Even as total defense spending rises, the portion of the Army budget dedicated to running its bases is down 20 percent this year, according to figures provided to The Associated Press by an Army official who requested anonymity because he was not authorized to speak about them.

The budgets for individual bases are not yet final. But the proposed cuts vary in size and run as deep as 40 percent at some major installations, including Fort Campbell, according to the figures.

Fort Campbell, the home of the 101st Airborne Division, is considering eliminating lawn-mowing and janitorial services and shortening hours at recreation centers, Fort Campbell spokeswoman Kelly Tyler said. But that may not be enough, she said.

Some members of the military are worried money will be pulled from programs that help spouses and children cope with soldiers' repeated tours of duty in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Lt. Gen. Rick Lynch, who as head of the Army's Installation Management Command is in charge of the budget for bases, said in a recent commentary distributed to Army post newspapers that the service has enjoyed unprecedented levels of funding in the past years, but that can't continue.

"As the country faces some stiff economic challenges, we are forced to reduce funding and exact a greater level of stewardship over our resources," Lynch said. Starting this year, "performance levels for some installation services will be notably less than we've had in recent years and will remain at that level for the foreseeable future."

Army posts provide many of the services that soldiers and their families have come to rely on, including child and youth programs, continuing education, dining and recreational facilities and help with overcoming drug and alcohol abuse.

Lynch said that certain services, such as police and fire protection, will be fully funded and that the Army is committed to continuing family-focused programs, such as child care. He did not specify where cuts would be made.

It wasn't clear how the military's other branches might be affected, though the Army is by far the largest. Officials with the Marines, Navy and Air Force did not respond to requests for information.

Some of the Army's biggest posts, where soldiers have completed four and five combat tours since the wars began, are facing significant spending reductions, according to the figures obtained by the AP.

At Fort Campbell, where about 17,000 soldiers are leaving this year for Afghanistan, commanders have been told that the operating budget for the current fiscal year could drop 40 percent, from $177.5 million last year to $106.5 million, Tyler said.

Cuts could be 39 percent at Fort Stewart, Ga., 25 percent at Fort Bragg, N.C., 22 percent at Fort Drum, N.Y., and 21 percent at Bamberg, Germany, the figures show.


What'cha Readin' For, Terrorist? Books and Magazines Banned on Flights


Books and Magazines Banned on Flights

James Adams
Globe and Mail


Canadian publishers are dumbfounded by new airport security measures that seem to forbid passengers from bringing books and magazines purchased pre-flight onto airplanes bound for the U.S.

The measures, announced Dec. 28 by Transport Canada, permit Canadian passengers en route to the U.S. to carry on board “one or more” of 13 specified items. They include canes, cameras, laptop computers, musical instruments and “medical devices.”

However, books and magazines are not included among the permitted items. The situation has left Carolyn Wood, executive director of the Association of Canadian Publishers, “speechless, really. We're used to governments fearing books for their content. But what is it here? Is it their explosive capability?”

Ms. Wood's dismay was echoed by Jacqueline Hushion, executive director, external relations, for the Canadian Publishers' Council. The council represents some of the country's biggest foreign-owned publishers, including Random House and Penguin. (The ACP represents Canadian-owned firms.) “There's no common-sense in this,” Ms. Hushion said. “I can't believe they're not going to retract it. … And if they don't, I know thousands of people they'll be hearing from.”

An earlier news report indicated that while security personnel could exercise “some discretion” in what is permitted to go through security, only books and magazines purchased after the security check would be allowed into the cabin.


Update

James Adams

Globe and Mail Update

Canadian travellers flying into the U.S. can take whatever books and magazines they want through airport security.

A spokesman for the Canadian Air Transport Security Authority said today that “books and magazines were always allowed and still are on U.S.-bound planes.” Books and magazines, however, weren't included in a list of 13 “items” that Transport Canada approved Dec. 28 for carry-on purposes.

The failure to include books and magazines with canes, laptop computers, small purses and cameras on the approved list led many to conclude that reading materials purchased pre-flight were banned as part of a security clamp-down in the wake of a failed terrorist attempt to down a Detroit-bound passenger plane Dec. 25.

The situation was reinforced last week by a Transport Canada official who said, “Technically, if [an item] is not on the list, it is not allowed.” Further complicating matters was a news report out of Edmonton that travellers could purchase books and magazines after they had passed through security.

Transport Canada issued an “update” on its security measures Monday afternoon this week, but the list of approved items remained at 13, with no addition of books and magazines. The Air Transport Security Authority official indicated today that “a revised list that will be more specific” was in the works from Transport Canada but a media officer with Transport Canada would only say “there might be” a revised or new list.

Regardless, “books would never be refused.” she said. “They can be easily scanned.”

Dwain Deets, Former Director of Special Projects at NASA Gets Letter Published in Paper

A letter written by AE911Truth member Dwain Deets was published in the North Country Times this morning. As many of you probably know, Dwain was the former Director of Special Projects at NASA (you really need to see his 9/11 presentation — it is superb)...


2010 Will See 9/11 Questioning

http://www.nctimes.com/news/opinion/letters/article_858a8e8d-812b-5467-8239-6498066d937f.html


Although the politicians still won't touch it, establishment organizations will begin taking seriously those who question the official accounts of 9/11.

A step in this direction is happening now in the aerospace industry. One-hundred-plus aerospace engineers are among 1,000 architects and engineers with Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth who have signed a petition calling for a new investigation. Among the 100-plus are six who are or have been presidents or founders of companies.

Three of the primary reasons the official explanations appear to be in need of a new investigation involve violations of middle-school-level physics: 1. Asymmetric damage to all three buildings resulted in total symmetrical destruction of the buildings, according to official explanations; 2. Massive structural members (10 to 20 tons each) in the Twin Towers were hurled laterally up to 600 feet, and thus had to have resulted from the application of lateral components of force; and 3. Pure freefall of all visible upper floors, extending 100-plus feet of the 47-story WTC Building 7 (reported officially in the National Institute of Standards and Technology Final Report) had to have been the result of abrupt removal of structure from the lower floors.

Dwain Deets

Bend Over, Relax and Fly Those Friendly Skies...

American Air Security Is A Farce

By Karl Schwarz
http://www.rense.com/general89/amer.htm

The kiss: Security cameras catch the unidentified man and woman in an embrace after he ducked under barriers to greet her in the secure area of the airport

The kiss: Security cameras catch the unidentified man and woman in an embrace after he ducked under barriers to greet her in the secure area of the airport


Only in America could 'romance' be confused with 'terrorism' and shut down an entire airport for hours and completely screw up domestic and international air travel.

Yep, only in America do they hire the most ignorant nitwit dumbasses they can find to man the TSA slots and over and over again create havoc, no security whatsoever at America's airports.

This article just appeared in a UK newspaper. These are the pictures and the raw video of the Newark New Jersey TERROR SCARE that recently brought that airport to a grinding halt.

One has to consider the irony and sheer stupidity of this to get it straight in your head. The Obamaites knew the alleged terrorist was on the Amsterdam to Detroit flight but did nothing to stop it. Hmm, that stinks to high heaven unless they already knew it was a false-flag bogus terror threat.

They are not talking at all about the fact that the man's mother LIVES IN YEMEN and he may have been there to see her, not Al Qaeda. Nor are they talking about the fact that his Nigerian father is intimately involved in Nigerian defense matters with Israeli Mossad and defense contractors.

Then in New Jersey the man kisses a woman goodbye and leaves the airport, so shut the entire place down and back up domestic and international jets while TSA plays "Where's Waldo?" Think on that a moment for the day may come that your life, or your freedom and liberty, depends on thinking clearly.

There is a single word that fits this recent Newark fiasco: Absurd.

The underlying question is how is it they have the security set-up so lax that he could have gone around it and kissed her goodbye? Think on that one because it is a MAJOR FLAW in their layout at that airport. The problem was not the man kissing her goodbye. He was not the problem, the problem is the TSA and all of their pretense plans of 'defending air passengers'.

I have seen many of these TSA people up close and personal. If Americans think they are the frontline defense of America to protect and defend air passengers, America needs to get head out of ass before the brain damage is permanent. These morons could not defend a neighborhood lemonade stand from a water balloon assault. Some of the TSA retards cannot spell 'Mom' or 'Dad' frontwards or backwards, but yeah, dey be defenden you.

I was in the Atlanta Hartsfield airport one day headed to Europe and a TSA goon was groping the breasts of a 14 year old Belgian girl that was traveling alone. She was understandably both offended and horrified. She spoke Flemish and French, very little English. I told him to take his filthy hands off the girl's breast before I sent him on an emergency room run to the hospital.

He stepped back and drew his gun on me, at which time I told him to go for it. He glanced around and hundreds of people were glaring at him just like I was. He had to take an "emergency break" he forgot to take earlier in the day.

She waited for me and thanked me. We were both on the same flight and as it happened she was seated next to me for the next 8.5 hours from Atlanta to Paris.

In broken English she asked me how any man could do such a thing to a girl as if she was a terrorist? It was hard to apologize to her for the actions of the TSA and its improper conduct towards her. I would not blame her if she never returned to the US.

I have a friend in the US who is Danish. Her sister will never again travel to the US to visit her sister. She had been in and out of the US many times visiting a family member, but the TSA strip search of her was the last straw. It is not about protection, it is about demeaning, defiling and humiliating people. Complete retards are at the alleged front line and they are idiots.

Give an idiot authority and there is no other possible outcome but idiotic.

On that same business trip and returning to America, one would have to have been there to appreciate the banality of those supposedly 'defending America'. I was in line boarding the return flight and had to hand my passport to the 'TSA Interrogator' at the Charles de Gaulle International Airport in Paris.

TSA: "Why are you traveling to United States, Mr. Schwarz?"
Karl: "I am a US citizen and I live there. Do you not recognize an American passport?"
TSA: "Where do you plan to go in the United States?"
Karl: "Uh, Atlanta. That is a valid US passport of a US citizen. Where I go in the US after that is frankly none of your business, here or there."
TSA: "We have the right to ask that question."
Karl: "No, you have the right to ask a foreigner traveling on a visa that question. Not a US citizen holding a valid US passport." TSA: "Have you had your carry-ons with you at all times prior to boarding?"
Karl: "Except when your people were rummaging through it, yes."
TSA: "Do you harbor any terrorist intent towards the United States?"
Karl: "No. Question, have you caught any terrorists on this gig?"
TSA: [blank stare]
Karl: "I didn't think so. Give me my passport."


This increasingly intrusive, belligerent, asinine system is not about protecting you. It is about controlling you, defiling you, demeaning you, bullying you and herding you like an animal.

And soon with backscatter X-ray scanners to strip-you-virtually-naked (TSA pervert and pedophile paradise) and shred your DNA at the same time (and remember, these machines were ordered many MONTHS ago), you'll be defiled and demeaned on whole new level. Yessir, bend over, relax and fly those friendly skies....


Enlarge The kiss: Security cameras catch the unidentified man and woman in an embrace after he ducked under barriers to greet her in the secure area of the airport

The kiss: Security cameras catch the unidentified man and woman in an embrace after he ducked under barriers to greet her in the secure area of the airport

Enlarge The kiss: The man who snuck past the security checkpoint embraces the woman he had gone to kiss in this still image from the CCTV video

The lovers: The couple turn their faces to the camera as they walk away

Enlarge The security guard: The video also showed the TSA official leaving his post - which gave the nameless Romeo his chance to slip into the secure area

The security guard: In a still from earlier in the video, the TSA official is seeng leaving his post at the security desk - giving the nameless Romeo, still offscreen, his chance to slip into the secure area



Enlarge The consequences: The airport was promptly shut down and thousands of passengers left stranded after the security scare

The consequences: The airport was promptly shut down and thousands of passengers left stranded for hours after the security scare



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