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The Military Government United States News

Top Secret America 502

mahiskali writes "The Washington Post published an immense interactive website today, detailing the companies and government agencies currently doing top secret work in the United States. Everything from counter-IED operations to human intelligence is touched upon. Citing various interviews with 'super users' and through exhaustive analysis of public records for over two years, this interactive site allows users to peer into the guarded world of top secret intelligence. With more than 854,000 people currently holding a TS clearance, has the defense and intelligence world grown too big, too fast? Or has this large growth served us well, exemplified by no successful terrorist acts on US soil since 9/11? How can we judge the success of these programs, when much of it will never be known by the general public?"
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Top Secret America

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  • Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NeoThermic ( 732100 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @08:52AM (#32949580) Homepage Journal

    "Or has this large growth served us well, exemplified by no successful terrorist acts on US soil since 9/11?"

    The day after 9/11 I found a rock. I've kept this rock with me every day since then. Could it be more that this rock prevents terrorism?

    Will people ever learn that correlation does not imply causation?

  • by ergrthjuyt ( 1856764 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @08:53AM (#32949592)

    Evidently, PBS and the WP think the little stuff you know about national security is going to aid you in your decision to determine whether or not your tax dollars are being appropriately spent.

    Brilliant. You've highlighted the paradox. We can't judge the effectiveness of security programs because they rely on secrecy to be effective, and knowing enough to judge their effectiveness destroys their effectiveness.

    A cruel and unusual system for which there is no obvious solution, and which there is really no one to blame.

  • by blackpaw ( 240313 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @08:56AM (#32949620)

    Or has this large growth served us well, exemplified by no successful terrorist acts on US soil since 9/11?

    Is the submitter a complete idiot? remember those little letters full of Anthrax much?

    Why do people keep saying this? its a completely weird oversight, especially as it was never credibly settled.

  • by RJarett ( 114128 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @08:58AM (#32949632)

    The site statistics and information are incredibly misleading. Simply because 1m hold TS clearance, or the right to gain TS clearance for an SCI level job, does not mean 1m people are actively working in the industry.

    With so many contractors such as Lockheed, CSC, OAO, etc... you have thousands which may hold clearance but they are not at the moment on a project. When I was working for CSC, in the span of a few years, I was on a dozen different projects. Some non-classified, some were. Not all were for the Gov't. I still had to hold a clearance.

    Some were for the Gov't but totally benign in terms of what was worked on.

    There is a massive amount of infrastructure to run all Gov't ops, bases, local and state Gov't. Even if you want to be a janitor in many places, you have to qualify for a clearance.

    If you want to run fiber or copper cabling between buildings which house classified projects, you need to have a clearance.

    To be a receptionist at many facilities, you need to have a clearance.

    The information leads the reader to think that all 1m with TS clearance are working at the moment on nefarious projects for an evil government. While the reality is, most are simply support staff doing work that if it were any other customer, would be easily overlooked and thought down on.

    This is just another Washington Post scaremongering article by someone who makes their living off of the people she is claiming are too many in number.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:1, Insightful)

    by nycguy ( 892403 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:02AM (#32949682)
    Let's see: There have been successful terrorist attacks around the world since 9/11. These attacks imply that terrorists are still active. Terrorists groups have re-asserted their ongoing desire to conduct similar attacks with in the US. Moreover, some such attempts have been made in the US but largely prevented. I'd say those might imply causation, douchebag.
  • by Rogerborg ( 306625 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:03AM (#32949686) Homepage

    Oh, and let's also ignore the Fort Hood shootings [wikipedia.org], and accept the "on US soil" qualification. Then you might as well be saying "Fuck the troops. Fuck them in their stupid foreign-posted asses. Better them than me."

    If this is "success", then what would failure look like?

  • Terrorism is rare (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bluefoxlucid ( 723572 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:04AM (#32949706) Homepage Journal

    Huge terrorist plots bringing down buildings are rare. The PETN bomber, for example, needed a steel detonator that could compress a sizable charge of PETN significantly, otherwise PETN just burns; but getting that kind of thing into airport security is hard, even pre-9/11, since they're bulky and steel and complex and obviously bombs. Taking over a plane is hard, too; seriously, box cutters aren't necessary when you can turn a shoe lace into a strangling tool and take a stewardess hostage.

    Really, they were rare before 9/11; remember the Oklahoma thing, ad the 2 prior attempts on the new york trade centers. They're rare now.

  • by EriktheGreen ( 660160 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:05AM (#32949718) Journal

    They're kind of like the TSA... the "war on terrorism" provided an excuse for a grandstanding president with little intelligence to look like a "great statesman" by creating more, bigger government agencies that will have limited usefulness and will never shrink on their own. After all, their creation was an opportunity for elected officials to both appear to be "doing something" about terrorism and to spend a lot of money on their constituents, helping ensure their re-election.

    It's a natural human impulse to think "more is better" or "bigger is better"... I'm starting to think it's biologically rooted. At any rate, combining all the intelligence agencies into one big organization only works if all the people involved are egoless, if they all are willing to work together, and if they all don't care if they have a job tomorrow. Most people can't do this, and the folks in charge at these agencies are the ones least likely to be able to do so, especially since many of them are government appointed or union.

    The worst part is that many of the people involved with these efforts truly believe that they are doing the Right Thing, that they are the best defense against "another 9/11" and that they must be allowed to continue regardless of whether the US has the money or whether our existing laws stand in their way.

    Submitted for your consideration: Which was worse for our country... the 9/11 attack and the aftermath, or the wars, restrictions, loss of freedoms, and problems created by our own government in response to it?

    I never believed that 9/11 was anything but a horrible crime. No less than that, but certainly no more than that...

    PS: Taco, this beta release of the comments editing software needs finishing...

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:05AM (#32949722)

    what makes you think almost 1 million can

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:07AM (#32949754)
    They hand them out like candy too, esp to direct family.
    Mommy or daddy walks home with a bag and family has to be trusted on paper.
    They never get to see anything or do anything but they are cleared.
    The unofficial collaborator list would be huge but well blended over state and federal agencies :)
  • by thijsh ( 910751 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:08AM (#32949766) Journal
    How do you measure effectiveness indeed? An attack that never occurs can never be proven to have been prevented, only attacks that actually occur can be reviewed by civilians. So that might skew the perception, but it's the only way to rate effectiveness.

    The most recent example of a terrorist attack on US soil would be 9/11, and we know some things about the involvements of government agencies there:
    - First of all they (CIA) funded, armed and trained the people responsible (although decades before, it had a measurable influence)
    - After that their 'betrayal' and international covert operations (or more in general US involvement abroad) are mentioned by terrorist organizations as a mayor reason for their war on the US
    - And last but not least these agencies knew of an impending attack prior to 9/11 and failed to protect the civilians

    So according to my score they failed miserably! Given the absence of proof to the contrary it looks like the larger the (counter)intelligence in a country is the more likely that country will become involved in international terrorism and other unwanted unintended consequences. I'm really glad the Netherlands where I live does not have such massive covert operations, if the US is the example to go by it would probably cause more problems for us than it would ever solve...
  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by captainpanic ( 1173915 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:10AM (#32949782)

    Let's see: There have been successful terrorist attacks around the world since 9/11. These attacks imply that terrorists are still active. Terrorists groups have re-asserted their ongoing desire to conduct similar attacks with in the US. Moreover, some such attempts have been made in the US but largely prevented. I'd say those might imply causation, douchebag.

    Funny that in Europe many people think its the redneck militaristic Americans who are the douchebags.

    There haven't been any successful terrorist attacks on Finland, Slovakia or Portugal either... and those countries can even be reached on foot from the terrorist hotspots. And they haven't severely reduced civil rights or increased their military expenses to a level that is unsustainable on the long term (although Portugal seems to have found ways to go bankrupt even without wasting money on an army).

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Grygus ( 1143095 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:11AM (#32949798)
    This was all also true for 10+ years before 9/11, when many of today's "security" measures were not in place. How does your theory account for this? Could it be that we already had successful prevention measures in place and they simply failed one time, with only small tweaks needed instead of a deeply rooted culture of fear and suspicion?
  • by daid303 ( 843777 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:18AM (#32949880)

    If this is "success", then what would failure look like?

    Freedom of the people.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by captainpanic ( 1173915 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:20AM (#32949898)

    Yes, after the fall of the Soviet Union, there were good security measures. The only thing missing at that time was a decent enemy.

    Luckily, we found a good enemy. We take it very serious. And by the looks of it, we cannot even defeat this one. It's the perfect excuse to continue spending tons of money on useless weapons and other security measures.

  • by Grygus ( 1143095 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:24AM (#32949970)
    I think the prevailing attitude is that if you don't have the clearance to know who has that clearance, then you probably don't actually need people with that clearance.
  • Re:Hmm! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by thijsh ( 910751 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:25AM (#32949980) Journal
    Yes, that and we Europeans feel like the increased threat to our countries is also to blame on US foreign policy... Most 'terrorists' are just idiots trying to do battle against the entire western world. Their beef is with the US, but the entire western world now feels the wrath of these terrorists... So top-secret-US-agencies thanks a lot for that, you really helped out! And so did invading Afghanistan and Iraq, and all of the shit the US pulls we don't even have a fucking clue about. You can't try to control the world because there will be (bad) consequences to all your actions... and right now we're feeling a little too much of that too here in Europe...
  • Re:9/11 ? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by hargrand ( 1301911 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:27AM (#32950000)

    exemplified by no successful terrorist acts on US soil since 9/11?

    So we're the anthrax attacks no terrorist acts?

    I think what the OP meant was that there have been no successful terrorist attacks committed by terrorist groups or organizations. Groups imply that communications need to occur and support sought all of which are possible to detect and counter. The anthrax attacks and terrorist attacks like that of Nidal Malik Hasan at Fort Hood were "lone wolf" attacks that are very difficult to detect or counter since they lack those communications or support channels that could be used to detect the planning of such an attack.

  • by rinoid ( 451982 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:28AM (#32950012)

    Listen, USA spends more than how many nations combined on "defense" ?

    It's time to END THE MADNESS now. Call your senators, representatives, neighbors, priests, doctors, whoever you think may have a pulse and explain why we should cut our defense spending today.

    America's infrastructure is crumbling, the top 1% are laughing, the rest of us are in trouble.

  • by crow_t_robot ( 528562 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:29AM (#32950018)
    The shoebomber, pantybomber and times square incident WERE SUCCESSFUL ATTACKS. The goal of terrorism is to incite fear and terror in our populace causing our country to waste money (damaging our economy) and restrict our freedoms more and more. All three achieved the larger goal. Killing people is just one of the methods to get there.
  • by kilfarsnar ( 561956 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:29AM (#32950022)
    Or the DC Snipers? This is another example of people hearing something so much that they internalize it and treat it as fact. It's like when people thought that Sadam Hussein was involved in the 9/11 attacks. The government and media want you to think that so they keep saying it or alluding to it until people think it's true.
  • Re:9/11 ? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by delinear ( 991444 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:29AM (#32950024)
    Not to mention massive spending and inconvenience that is security theatre. Remember, the aim of terrorism isn't necessarily to cause physical harm, it's just to spread terror. If they can do that without lifting a finger, that's a major win. A nation in fear, or being forced to jump through security hoops, is already suffering the effects of terrorist actions, regardless of when the last real attack took place.
  • by poetmatt ( 793785 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:32AM (#32950068) Journal

    okay, so the issue here is that top secret is a requirement for a lot of things that might not be top secret. Say you're doing some kind of database for the gov't? It could be as basic as library of congress but they might require someone with top secret clearance at some level of the company.

    It's the wrong issue to focus on if you simply look at "are top secret jobs productive/worthwhile or not", essentially.

    While I am sure there are some positions that are overpaid and won government contracts for more money than the minimal BS they're doing, the bigger issue should be : why do we need this many programs top secret?

  • by Z00L00K ( 682162 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:33AM (#32950080) Homepage Journal

    Terror attacks will come again from other sources. It doesn't matter how much money you spend. Maybe if you spend enough to create the situation that existed in former East Germany. But do anybody really want to go there?

    And are all these measures able to take care of a terrorist like the Una Bomber [wikipedia.org] anyway?

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by denis-The-menace ( 471988 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:40AM (#32950152)

    In Iran, rocks prevent adultery.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:40AM (#32950160)

    Because our so-called European "allies" won't step up and foot the bill for defending Europe from itself....

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by tophermeyer ( 1573841 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:44AM (#32950222)

    Or the dude who actually managed to smuggle explosive underwear onto an aircraft, but only managed to toast his own bits.

    I think the GP should consider how s/he defines a "successful attack". 9/11 was successful and also happened to be catastrophic in terms of damage and loss of life. The times square bomber was also successful. Less murder and mayhem, but still very rattling to our sense of safety and security in one of our iconic cities. Though most terrorist acts are directed at people and infrastructure, ultimately they target our psyches.

  • by FriendlyLurker ( 50431 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:44AM (#32950228)
    ...and yet other recently [yahoo.com] released Harvard Uni study [harvard.edu] showing up many of the big names in the mainstream press can not be trusted [theatlantic.com] for maintaining any semblance of journalistic integrity. Sigh.

    Is it possible yet to filter out Slashdot stories sourced from certain press channels? That would be a great feature - I'd like to vote my disapproval for these kinds of dismal journalistic practices by filtering _any_ stories based on these rotten apples as a source.

  • Re:Very difficult (Score:4, Insightful)

    by HungryHobo ( 1314109 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:45AM (#32950236)

    "Turn the desert to glass would solve the whole problem in one go. "

    Somehow I think if the US exterminated over a billion people overnight it would only be the start of their problems.
    Think the world hates the US now?

    I've heard people speculating that the most successful campaign the IRA ever pulled off was one with very few casualties.
    They bombed a few train stations after giving warnings (someone was killed though) and then phoned in similar warnings (with no bombs) for months.

    When there's bombs exploding and people dying people rally around their government for protection.
    When there's no bombs exploding but the train stations keep getting closed and people keep getting delayed and being late for work they get angry at their government.

  • by Moraelin ( 679338 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:56AM (#32950342) Journal

    Actually, all this focus on "it must have worked because there were no attacks after" ignores a crucial point: there haven't actually been foreign terror attacks in the USA _before_ 9/11 for a very long time. You know, _before_ all those idiotic constitution violations in the name of security.

    Even looking at it dispassionately, I'd want basically to see someone disprove the null hypothesis if they sell me some miracle solution for anything. What is the situation with and _without_ their miracle cure? The before and after?

    The last major terror attack _before_ 9/11 was the Oklahoma City bombing, in 1995. (It also wasn't done by islamists, arabs, heathens, illegal immigrants, or the other scarecrows, but by two all-American nutters with a crazy right wing agenda. And I don't mean "right wing" as in "nazi", but the kind that goes "OMG, government is evil, gun control is evil, law enforcement is evil, load your guns and run for the hills!!!eleventeen")

    The only things happening in between, and most of the stuff before 1995 too, were attacks abroad, which still haven't been stopped by the USA's giving up civil rights to stop the terrorists.

    The main major terror show before that was the unabomber, who pretty much was the main show for the USA between 1978 and 1995, though not immediately and only managing to cause 3 fatalities. (And again it actually was a lone nutter who had no accomplices, belonged to no organization, and hadn't even told anyone about it. And he was a third-generation American at that. So neither much to infiltrate there, nor any profiling that would have helped.)

    Look, when talking about events that rare, making a big fuss out of a short interval without them is stupid. (Although it's also false that there were none afterwards.)

    I'm given the mental image of a couple of peasants who discover an elephant run away from a circus on their land. So they make up a stupid and inconvenient ritual for keeping elephants away, and unsurprisingly they never see an elephant on their land for 9 years straight. So they conclude that the ritual obviously works, and they must keep doing it every day. But the fact that they had also never seen an elephant on their land _before_ that ritual even existed, is lost on them.

  • by tophermeyer ( 1573841 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @09:59AM (#32950382)
    Both of these were most definitely terrorist acts, but not the sexy kind of foreign terror that gives us excuses to send troops around the world. These incidents were just plain old homegrown domestic terror. The difficult truth is that most anti-terror activity must be done on foreign soil or at points of entry. Once and individual is inside the country, it becomes nearly impossible to stop them.
  • Re:Hmm! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:00AM (#32950386)

    Funny that in Europe many people think its the redneck militaristic Americans who are the douchebags.

    At least we respect freedom of religion in this country

    How is that proposed mosque next to ground zero coming along?

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by ScentCone ( 795499 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:05AM (#32950446)
    the stupid attacks on Iraq and Afghanistan

    You mean, the attack on Saddam's regime, following his invasion of a neighboring country and his unwillingness to ever adhere to the terms of his surrender as his forces were pushed back into his own country? That attack? And are you by any chance referring to the attack on the Taliban, who had murderously overtaken Afghanistan - to the considerable misery of the locals - and who were aggressively harboring the group that planned and executed attacks on embaassies and facilities in places all around the world, including the 9/11 events? That Taliban? Ask most Afghanis if they were really pleased, or not, to have their school teachers dragged into the town square (now peacefully free of heretic activities like kite flying and music playing) and shot in the head by the guys who want to see not just the middle east, but the entire world tuned up to their medieval specs. If the US wanted to "attack Afghanistan," the whole place would be a glass parking lot right now. Instead, our troops get killed because of way-crazy ROEs, in the interests of protecting the very people that the Taliban have no problem slaughtering just to make a point.

    branding Iran as a terrorist state

    So, you have no problem with them being a repressive, terrorist-sponsoring state, you just don't want anyone to call them on it?
  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) * on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:08AM (#32950486) Journal

    ..and yet other recently [yahoo.com] released Harvard Uni study [harvard.edu] showing up many of the big names in the mainstream press can not be trusted [theatlantic.com] for maintaining any semblance of journalistic integrity. Sigh.

    And there are those that would use this information to conclude that the best approach is to just watch Fox News and read right-wing blogs because you can't trust anything in the big liberal newspapers.

    Here's a news flash: Newspapers have never been fully trustworthy. You think the Hearst papers were being honest in the way they dealt with the early part of the 20th century? You believe the Wall Street Journal was being impartial when they reported on the Viet Nam War?

    There has never been a time when you can accept news from any source without taking the source itself into account. Critical thinking has always been necessary.

    Yet, even with their faults and stumbling efforts at transparency through the years, when the Washington Post published the Pentagon Papers despite their being classified, they allowed citizens to make more informed decisions about the behavior of their government. When the NYT revealed the CIA assassinations in South America and elsewhere, should they have held those stories back because there had been scandals where certain reporters had fabricated stories?

    We'll never have a fully independent and reliable press in the US until they are subsidized by the government. Yes, you read that correctly. SUBSIDIZED BY THE GOVERNMENT. The same way newspapers were subsidized by the government in the period immediately following the ratification of the US Constitution. Did you know that the Founding Fathers approved government subsidized for a free press? That's exactly what the early postal subsidies were. At a time when the biggest operating expense of most newspapers was their distribution, the Founding Fathers, Madison, Jefferson, et al, subsidized their delivery via US Post. That's how important they believed the Press was to our existence as a free people.

    Now you would say that the solution is to do away with any standards because the national press can't keep those standards, and get all our news from bloggers. You may not have noticed by some of the most reliable online journalists ARE print journalists. The same guys who write the stories in the papers are writing them online, only online we have absolutely no way of knowing where their funding is coming from. That's not a recipe for a reliable Press.

  • Wha? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by copponex ( 13876 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:08AM (#32950498) Homepage

    I shall point out to you that you wrote your post in English. No need to thank my country or my ancestors for that, you're welcome! Or perhaps you are of the sort that would prefer the world to speak German?

    Russia is probably owed as much for the defeat of the Nazis as the Americans.

    I shall also point out that Islam seeks power and money, and that I am not sure one would find either in any of the "countries" you listed.

    Islam seeks submission to God. That's what the word Islam means. People seek power and money. For instance, Saudi Arabia is a theocracy, but it's a US Ally, because it's leaders seek money and power. (Remember GW Bush holding hands [slate.com] with the Saudi Crown Prince?)

    If you wanted to knock terrorism into last century, you'd have to do two things: leave Iraq and Afghanistan, and form a new Manhattan style project to harvest energy directly to the sun to end our oil addiction. Of course, those things are nearly impossible for the US to do, since it only seeks power and money.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by geminidomino ( 614729 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:09AM (#32950508) Journal

    Yes, that and we Europeans feel like the increased threat to our countries is also to blame on US foreign policy... Most 'terrorists' are just idiots trying to do battle against the entire western world. Their beef is with the US, but the entire western world now feels the wrath of these terrorists... So top-secret-US-agencies thanks a lot for that, you really helped out! And so did invading Afghanistan and Iraq, and all of the shit the US pulls we don't even have a fucking clue about. You can't try to control the world because there will be (bad) consequences to all your actions... and right now we're feeling a little too much of that too here in Europe...

    Then tell your leaders nut up and protest "our" actions by some method other than a slightly-harshly worded letter.

    Just like we over here can't do a goddamn thing about it because the masses keep electing these scumbags, you guys might try getting your bosses to stop pussy-footing around and take a stand instead of just oozing an Apple-like self-righteous smugness on t3h intarwebz whenever the subject comes up while your own officials jerk you off with one hand and Washington with the other.

     

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Shakrai ( 717556 ) * on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:10AM (#32950516) Journal

    stupid attacks on Iraq and Afghanistan

    Stop lumping Afghanistan and Iraq together as if they were the same thing. They weren't. Afghanistan was harboring a terrorist organization that murdered 3,000 people on American soil. No nation-state in the history of humanity with the ability to respond to that action would have declined to do so

    It did not help that we were bullied into joining the Coalition of the Unwilling

    "Bullied"? I thought it had something to do with NATO. My country stood on the brink of nuclear devastation to honor it's commitments to Europe during the Cold War. Now you consider it "bullying" when you are asked to stand up and honor them yourselves?

    We have about 5% Muslims in Western Europe

    And? We more immigrants than that and we aren't passing laws to make it harder for them to exercise their religion.

    Although I admit that the ban on Burqas (face-covering thing for women) seems a ban on religion, the facial expression is a vital part in conversation.

    Irrelevant. You are trampling all over the free exercise of religion. That legislation is indefensible.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by edittard ( 805475 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:15AM (#32950578)

    In Iran, rocks punish half of adulterers.

    FYFFY

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Shakrai ( 717556 ) * on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:21AM (#32950636) Journal

    The last time I checked that Mosque had been approved by the relevant NYC zoning departments. Got any other bad comparisons that you want to make?

  • We already lost (Score:3, Insightful)

    by copponex ( 13876 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:26AM (#32950702) Homepage

    Paranoid terrorism is US foreign policy in a nutshell. The only difference between Osama bin Laden threatening to destroy America and the United States threatening to destroy Iran is that we can actually do it.

    Islamic fundamentalists love the US War on Terror. They get to train against our soldiers, drum up support from places where they had none before, like Iraq, and use our degraded moral standards in their propaganda. The moment we kidnapped and tortured a single human being, we lost the war on terror. We proved that we are no different from any other totalitarian state. We may claim to support human rights and democracy, but if your vote includes someone we don't approve of, we've got no problem with assassinations, economic warfare, or outright war.

    "But, that's the only thing 'these people' understand!" Yeah, right.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Runaway1956 ( 1322357 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:36AM (#32950844) Homepage Journal

    That's almost funny. It looks like a little bit of "What goes around, comes around." I would say "Karma", but no Moslem believes in that, does he? Have you applied for a permit to build a Christian church anywhere in Islam recently? A Jewish synagogue? How about a House of Wicca? I just can't help chuckling at your protest, Shakrai.

  • Re:Wha? (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Shakrai ( 717556 ) * on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:37AM (#32950854) Journal

    Russia is probably owed as much for the defeat of the Nazis as the Americans.

    It was a collaborative effort. The Soviet Union would not have been able to defeat Germany without logistical support from the US and UK. The Western Allies would not have been able to fight a relatively bloodless campaign (compared to the losses of the other Allied powers, both in actual numbers and as a percentage of pre-war population) without Soviet manpower. Both sides contributed.

    and form a new Manhattan style project to harvest energy directly to the sun to end our oil addiction

    That analogy is getting old. The Manhattan project cost $22,000,000,000 when adjusted for inflation. The United States Department of Energy had an annual budget of $24,100,000,000 for the last fiscal year. It's literally getting a Manhattan project sized check every year and we are still dependent on oil. Why is that? Could it have something to do with the fact that petroleum is an energy dense substance that's easy to suck out of the ground? No amount of money is going to change that -- unless all of our knowledge of chemistry and physics is wrong.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Shakrai ( 717556 ) * on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:44AM (#32950944) Journal

    So your defense if European bigotry is to point out that other countries on this planet are worse? Yeah, that's a winning argument you've got there.

  • by Third Position ( 1725934 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:46AM (#32950964)

    We'll never have a fully independent and reliable press in the US until they are subsidized by the government. Yes, you read that correctly. SUBSIDIZED BY THE GOVERNMENT.

    Sure thing. We'll have a government subsidized entity as a watchdog for the government. What could possibly go wrong?

    Did you know that the Founding Fathers approved government subsidized for a free press?

    [Citation needed]

  • by tekrat ( 242117 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:47AM (#32950990) Homepage Journal

    Terrorism doesn't have to have the bomb explode. It's mere presense makes for a successful attack. Was the "Times Square Bomber" successful? The answer is YES, HE WAS -- because it created a sense of "terror" to the population. The "bomb" didn't have to explode. In fact, the bomb couldn't have "exploded" because it was so poorly built, the best it could have done was burn brightly. It would have been a car-fire and nothing more, the kind you see on the Cross-Bronx expressway almost every day and ignore.

    But because it was reported as a "bomb", the populace was scared. Job done. Terror is created. The Media and the Government create more "Terror" than the actual terrorists do.

    Successful attack? It doesn't matter if the 'bomb' explodes or not. Frankly, it doesn't matter if there's even a bomb at all. Just the "act" of terrorism in any way that gets the population to be scared, change their travel plans, worry about their homes, run out and buy duct-tape and plastic sheeting, build bomb shelters, yadda-yadda, is a *successful attack* because it's done the job intended.

    And the job is to CHANGE OUR BEHAVIOR. Spend money on security theater. Waste our time fearing the bogeyman.

    Job done. Successfully. Every time.

  • by FriendlyLurker ( 50431 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:48AM (#32950998)

    I do agree that Newspapers have never been fully trustworthy, however the research links posted above do quantify just how low the so called credible press sources have fallen in just the last decade vs ~a century of history. In any case, there is no reason to excuse this kind of behavior anymore as you appear to be doing, even despite the few and far between shining moments you picked out. Yes critical thinking is always important with everything we read and there is no substitute for it, however if you catch a person lying to you repeatedly - do you keep listening to their stories and take extra effort to discern the lies/manipulation from the truth - or do you simply stop associating with them, at most tell them clearly that this behavior will not be tolerated?

    We live in a global communication age, and the internet allowing us to collectively take our eyeballs elsewhere away from the traditional news cartels. The more we all do so, the quicker our "Free Press" will get the message that these shenanigans are not going to be tolerated anymore - after which they might lose the arrogance and up their game.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by OzPeter ( 195038 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @10:56AM (#32951084)

    Comparing public outrage to institutionalized discrimination is disingenuous. The United States has it's share of people that are intolerant towards other faiths yet our government isn't busy drafting laws to control what kind of Houses of Worship can be built (the Swiss minaret ban) or what kind of clothing can be worn (the French legislation). You've literally got national governments in Europe that are concerning themselves with the clothes that people wear. That's absurd and frightening.

    No .. what is happening is more insidious when you have politicians proposing investigations into financing of the mosque "just in case something might not be right". Sure its not institutionalized, but the anti-religeous sentiment is alive and well at all levels of the government. Witch hunts are not pleasant for the person(s) being investigated yet they can have the air of being perfectly legal and all above board. Dare I mention McCarthyism?

    And as to public tolerance - how about asking all the persecuted muslims who were kicked off planes in recent years because of religion and appearance. Sure it was not institutionalized discrimination, but the authorities felt like they had to remove these people because of unfounded fears by intolerant passengers. If there was no bias the authorities should have simple said that "These paying passengers have a right to be on this plane so suck it it up bitch!"

  • Clearances expire if they aren't being actively used. (although I imagine it'd be easier to reactivate an old clearance than it would be to get a new one)

    Partly wrong on the first, correct on the second.
     
    Clearances expire if you exceed the periodicity requirements for renewal (though I forget the length of the period). This can happen even if you're currently cleared at that level - my submarine got dinged hard because one guy's paperwork slipped through the cracks at the end of a yard period resulting in his clearance expiring without the command realizing it.
     
    Once you have a TS clearance, you always have a TS clearance so long as you keep up the paperwork, even if you don't currently have TS access. Your current access is determined by your current command. For example, when I was attached to a submarine I had a TS clearance *and* TS access as it was required for my duties, and that access expired when I detached from the command. At my next command, a shore facility, I still has a TS clearance - but only S access because S was the highest material used in my job at that command. Had I gone back to sea, regaining a TS would have been a matter of a little paperwork on the boat and nothing more.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by captainpanic ( 1173915 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @11:16AM (#32951336)

    the stupid attacks on Iraq and Afghanistan

    You mean, the attack on Saddam's regime, following his invasion of a neighboring country and his unwillingness to ever adhere to the terms of his surrender as his forces were pushed back into his own country? That attack?

    No, not the 1st attack. I mean the 2nd one. The one that all the Western world protested against. The actual invasion, not the liberation. The unnecessary attack that has caused many, many more dead people in Iraq than Saddam ever could have done himself.
    The attack where we went for the Weapons of Mass Destruction, not the liberation of Kuwait.

    And are you by any chance referring to the attack on the Taliban, who had murderously overtaken Afghanistan - to the considerable misery of the locals - and who were aggressively harboring the group that planned and executed attacks on embaassies and facilities in places all around the world, including the 9/11 events? That Taliban? Ask most Afghanis if they were really pleased, or not, to have their school teachers dragged into the town square (now peacefully free of heretic activities like kite flying and music playing) and shot in the head by the guys who want to see not just the middle east, but the entire world tuned up to their medieval specs.

    Yup, that one as well. The one where other countries got a simple choice: either to be with or against the strongest country in the world. The attack where European countries had to choose between joining a war which wasn't their problem (many other countries have stupid regimes, check out Africa for your next invasions) or face economic sanctions. The attack that has successfully removed a stupid regime from a capital, but not from the country. The attack that uses all the wrong weapons to achieve nothing at all. Bombs against caves. Helicopter gunships against peasants.

    If the US wanted to "attack Afghanistan," the whole place would be a glass parking lot right now. Instead, our troops get killed because of way-crazy ROEs, in the interests of protecting the very people that the Taliban have no problem slaughtering just to make a point.

    Agreed. America aims to help the people of Afghanistan now - although in the beginning I really think it was an emotional attack which came from a feeling of revenge for the 9/11 attack rather than helping the Afghan people.

    branding Iran as a terrorist state

    So, you have no problem with them being a repressive, terrorist-sponsoring state, you just don't want anyone to call them on it?

    I accept that they have a regime that doesn't cooperate with us. A religious regime, put there by US interference. I'd rather see them developing some sense all by themselves. If we keep bullying that country, all we do is assist their regime to stay in power. The Iranian people are, on average, quite educated. They know damn well what's going on in the rest of the world.
    In addition, Iran stops 2/3rd of all the heroine that's transported from Afghanistan into Europe. They don't get any credit for this silent war on drugs. None of the coalition armies on the Afghan side assist them.
    I am not so sure if they actually are the biggest sponsor of terrorism. Never seen any proof for that. But anyway, if coalition troops would just patrol the border, then they could stop both heroine and weapons.

    They (Iran) are said to hate us (the Western world)... but I often wonder whose hatred is bigger: ours or theirs. You see, we always blamed the religious nuts for 'hating the Western world, and all its freedom', but we've changed and we now hate others just as much.

    I've come to realize that there are, unfortunately, a lot of people on earth who lead poor and luckless lives. It's not only a few countries where we went to war. That was just an excuse. Mugabe in Zimbabwe is still in power. Chavez is going a little crazy in Venez

  • by Mister Whirly ( 964219 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @11:20AM (#32951406) Homepage
    Yes, becasue the BBC never puts out any stories critical of the British government.

    Who do you think has more fiscal power in the US - the government, or the businesses? Now say a paper wants to run a story that would make it's biggest advertiser look bad - do you think the story will run? You won't run into that if a paper isn't relying on advertising dollars to keep it running.
  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Shakrai ( 717556 ) * on Monday July 19, 2010 @11:28AM (#32951528) Journal

    Preventing a Shinto temple at Pearl Harbor wouldn't be an infringement on the first Amendment

    Yes it would. Telling a religion that they can't build a house of worship in a specific city is most definitely an infringement on the 1st amendment.

    so long as it doesn't offend the families of the men and women who were murdered at Pearl Harbor

    Please point out the section of the US Constitution that says you have a right not to be offended.

    The freedom of religion does not include freedom to offend other people with your religion.

    Actually, yes, it does. I'm free to do whatever I want as long as it doesn't directly harm you. Offending you != harming you.

    I wish the court system would teach that lesson to the fruitcakes from that Westboro Baptist "church".

    The 1st amendment would protect their activities regardless of whether or not they were religious in nature. It's called free speech. Even jackasses have it.

  • by Fished ( 574624 ) <amphigory@gmail . c om> on Monday July 19, 2010 @12:10PM (#32952066)
    It's a common error to say that correlation does not imply causation. In fact, correlation need not imply causation. There's a subtle difference here, because sometimes correlation does imply causation--that is, when there is a reasonable causal link. A better way to put it is that correlation doesn't prove causation. At best, it gives you a clue that can then be followed up on. But it's the height of foolishness to say that trillions of dollars spent on the suppression of terror has no link whatsoever to ... ahem ... the suppression of terrorist attacks. The two are correlated, and the two might be causally linked. The correlation gives us a clue to look for a causal link. It doesn't prove the causal link, by itself, but it is one piece of evidence that points in that direction. And, more importantly, if there was no correlation, it could disprove it.
  • Re:Hmm! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by DragonWriter ( 970822 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @12:11PM (#32952082)

    There have been successful terrorist attacks around the world since 9/11.

    Yes, one of them in L.A.

    Terrorists groups have re-asserted their ongoing desire to conduct similar attacks with in the US.

    And, you know, terrorists are always honest and straightforward about their intentions, and never say one thing and do another.

    Moreover, some such attempts have been made in the US but largely prevented.

    The ones that have been prevented in the US for which information has been made public each fall into one or more of the following categories:

    1. Ones where the government undercover agent involved had to push very hard to get the "plotters" beyond idle chatter,
    2. Ones which were detected and broken up using tools that were in place prior to 9/11.
    3. Ones which would not have succeeded even if the terrorist were allowed to carry them out as planned because the plan was that broken.

  • by operagost ( 62405 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @12:12PM (#32952096) Homepage Journal

    Same here. I can't find any evidence that this delivery was subsidized; in fact, John Jay, the first Chief Justice, recommended to Washington that the post office not even deliver newspapers at all. At the time, even letter delivery was not subsidized in any way-- if you wanted it delivered to your door, this was done for an extra charge that was split between the post office and an independent contractor.

    Why is there so much clamor about maintaining a "wall of separation" between church and state, but we're so eager to knock down the flimsy one that exists between the state and the media?

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Nadaka ( 224565 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @12:12PM (#32952104)

    The freedom of expression supersedes the freedom to not be offended. You can choose to be offended by any arbitrary expression, that does not allow you to restrict another persons freedom of expression arbitrarily.

    Expression may only be legitimately restricted when it infringes on a greater freedom. Your freedom of religion ends when it means your children are denied the right to life by withholding medical care or being exposed to venomous snakes.

    Your freedom of expression likewise ends only where it may be held to deliberately incite actual harm to others, libel and slander (when properly implemented) are examples of this.

    I find the very existence of religion to be offensive, by your rational, all religion should be banned because of this.

  • by clarkkent09 ( 1104833 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @12:14PM (#32952130)
    We'll never have a fully independent and reliable press in the US until they are subsidized by the government. Yes, you read that correctly. SUBSIDIZED BY THE GOVERNMENT.

    That's all it takes? So Pravda was fully independent and reliable because it was subsidized by the government? What if I decide to publish a newspaper promoting communist/fascist/racist or whatever unpopular views? Will I get the subsidy as well? Who decides, and by what criteria, which newspapers will be the good boys who get the subsidy and a pat on the head by the government and which ones don't? The truth is the exact opposite of what you said. It is impossible to have free and independent press if it receives even one penny from the government.
  • Re:Hmm! (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Shakrai ( 717556 ) * on Monday July 19, 2010 @12:18PM (#32952188) Journal

    No, the so-called "Coalition of the Willing" that the US brought to bear agaisnt Iraq had nothing to do with NATO.

    Stop moving the goalposts, you were talking about [slashdot.org] Afghanistan: It did not help that we were bullied into joining the Coalition of the Unwilling in Afghanistan

  • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) * on Monday July 19, 2010 @12:22PM (#32952242) Journal

    So Pravda was...

    As the American experience has shown in regard to the free press, there's a difference between being subsidized by the government and being operated by the government.

    It is impossible to have free and independent press if it receives even one penny from the government.

    So you disagree with the Founding Fathers and over two centuries of US history? Why do you hate America?

  • by sjames ( 1099 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @12:43PM (#32952550) Homepage Journal

    Much of the anti-terrorist hysteria reminds me of the tiger repelling rock. The fact is that terrorist attacks were few and far between before 9/11 and probably would have remained so after. The tactics used on 9/11 didn't even remain effective for the entire duration of the attack simply due to the civilian response. Evidence suggests that it wouldn't have been effective at all but for the bad advice from our government that the first few plane's worth of passengers followed.

    Locks on cockpit doors make sense, and no longer telling civilians that passivity works make sense. The rest including the war on clean hair and proper hydration as well as the color coded chart telling us how terrified to be need to be scrapped.

    It's too bad all the airport security crap can't be re-purposed as medical scanners so we could address an actual problem (expensive healthcare) that actually causes people to die.

    Most of the stuff is marked top secret so they can severely punish anyone who points out that they're naked.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by thijsh ( 910751 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @12:46PM (#32952602) Journal
    Our previous president was J.P. Balkenende, also known as 'that Harry Potter guy' (I think it was a G.W. Bush quote). He was a puppet for the US and generally sucked as president, but got (re-)elected because of the large Christian backing in the rural parts of the Netherlands. But our country clearly was not content with his actions, and this past election his party lost more seats than ever. The problem is we also have those redneck people who are yelling 'something needs to be done' other than a harsh letter, and a lot of those people vote Geert Wilders (the right extremist). He tries to solve the problem by making people scared of Muslims, and oppressing the Muslim population here... And you can be damn sure that oppressing any people will result in violence in the long run, so I expect nothing good from them. But luckily we can vote more than just 2 parties here, and we do... especially here in Amsterdam are far more to the left (the US would probably even classify us as commies). We do protest the government actions, and we do in fact get an actual effect, for example: we're moving our troops out of Afghanistan as we speak.

    That being said, we can protest all we want and our government may even agree, but they can never get the US to stop treating the whole fucking world as their personal playground to do with as they damn well please... So don't pretend like we can actually have any influence of the policy of the US. And don't even begin about smugness, because Americans are the worst of all... Thinking they are the greatest, and this the United Planet of America. We see those dumbasses on TV all the time saying "USA is the greatest most free-est place on earth. I've never even been abroad because all other countries suck. Whooo USA!". Fuck, you don't even know what freedom is.
  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by thijsh ( 910751 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @01:01PM (#32952844) Journal
    Both Afghanistan and Iraq never attacked the US. You probably watched a little too much Fox News...
  • Re:Hmm! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Runaway1956 ( 1322357 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @01:18PM (#32953050) Homepage Journal

    Yes, I am an asshole.

    Bigoted? Uhhhh - possibly. But, don't try to disguise the bigotry of all the other groups in the world. Much of Islam hates the United States, and many Imams are happy to declare fatwas against the US and her allies for various reasons, such as silly cartoons. It seems to me that many, if not most, Moslems are just as much bigoted assholes as I am.

    Due process? Well, enemies of the United States take full advantage of it, so why shouldn't a patriot? I'm all for due process. Take Major Hassan, for instance. I want him to get his day in court - in a military trial. I want him to be found guilty of dozens of charges. And, most of all, I want his hypocrisy made public. The man swore to serve the United States, then broke that oath. Funny thing is, he sees no hypocrisy. His Imams have taught him that it's alright to lie to the infidels, then to stab them in the back.

    The religion of peace, LOL They are just as peaceful as the crusaders from Europe, centuries ago.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:4, Insightful)

    by thijsh ( 910751 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @01:26PM (#32953130) Journal
    According to your logic they could also have run the CIA out of the country because they are also known to have 'worked together' with those same terrorists... The Taliban was only very loosely associated, but the fact was that Osama Bin Laden was in the country, so they invaded the whole country to catch one criminal unrelated to that country. Oh yeah, and they missed him...

    The first war in Iraq is completely different from the second... I have no idea why the let Saddam in power (no doubt because he promised something that his probable successor would not), but it was a mistake. They may have fixed that mistake yes, but they *told us it was about WMDs*, they lied... simple. You can't go about invading countries for bullshit reasons. And you definitely can't drag other countries along with you like that, lying to your own citizens is still different from lying to your allies... the US lost a lot of goodwill worldwide.

    And you point out Iraq shot at US planes. There was clearly some beef there not worked out since the first war... but it was not an attack on US soil, which was kinda the point since The North Atlantic treaty was bullshit in this situation... but the US played it like 'you are either with us or with the terrorists'.
  • Re:Hmm! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by quax ( 19371 ) on Monday July 19, 2010 @01:40PM (#32953274)

    As a German I take the freedom to drive as fast as I want on the Autobahn over freedom of religion any day. Who needs the latter anyway.

  • Re:Hmm! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Shakrai ( 717556 ) * on Monday July 19, 2010 @03:22PM (#32954624) Journal

    Rule of law and the free practice of religion have little to do with a religion that has set itself up as the enemy of my nation.

    Try telling the 7,000,000 Muslims living here peacefully that their entire religion has "set itself up" as an enemy of our country.

    You've failed to take my challenge, and you can't show me any list of Imams who are tolerant to Western ideals

    I don't have to disprove something that is clearly false. You claim to know the motivations of 1.5 billion people based on the actions of a few hundred people. This is patently absurd.

    Accepted and supported with donations arriving every day, from common people in every city in Islam.

    The Irish Republican Army received donations from every major city in the United States at one point in time. Following your logic, that means every single man, woman and child in the United States supports terrorism.

    I'm finished here.

    Ah, the "screw you guys, I'm going home!" method. Gotta admit, it's a classic.

    You've repeatedly resorted to calling names

    I call them how I see them and I see you as an intolerant bigot. Truth hurts, doesn't it?

    as this most recent "un-American" post.

    You have no respect for the 1st amendment -- that's about as un-American as you can get.

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