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Last post 10 years ago by DrafterX. 43 replies replies.
Anyone still want to call this POS a "HERO"
Taps86 Offline
#1 Posted:
Joined: 03-03-2013
Posts: 4,691
This guy is no patriot or hero......He should be HUNG or STONED to death.



American spying snitch Edward Snowden ingratiated himself to Chinese hosts, singing like a canary about US hacking efforts aimed at Hong Kong and mainland institutions, according to published reports today.

Snowden spilled his guts to the South Morning China Post and said the National Security Agency has been regularly targeting Hong Kong and the People’s Republic of China since at least 2009.

He showed the English-language daily documents that allegedly chronicled his hacking claims.

“Last week the American government happily operated in the shadows with no respect for the consent of the governed, but no longer,” Snowden said in editions of today’s paper. “Every level of society is demanding accountability and oversight.”

The Chinese University of Hong Kong, public-office holders, businesses and students were among NSA targets in the semi-autonomous city, according to the American turncoat.

None of the documents shown to the SCMP showed information of military systems.

“We hack network backbones – like huge Internet routers, basically – that give us access to the communications of hundreds of thousands of computers without having to hack every single one,” he said.

Edward Snowden in 2002 putting a clothespin on his chest for fellow employees when he worked as a Web master and editor for a Japanese anime company run by friends in Maryland.

“The hypocrisy of the US government when it claims that it does not target civilian infrastructure, unlike its adversaries”.

Snowden added: “Not only does it do so, but it is so afraid of this being known that it is willing to use any means, such as diplomatic intimidation, to prevent this information from becoming public.”

The former NSA contractor said US authorities are pressuring China and Hong Kong to kick him out.

“Unfortunately, the US government is now bullying the Hong Kong government to prevent me from continuing my work,” Snowden said.

The former British colony is under the ultimate rule of the People’s Republic of China. But Hong Kong is run as a special administrative region, maintaining Western-style courts and freedom of speech, left behind by the British.

“I do not currently feel safe due to the pressure the US government is applying to Hong Kong, but I feel that Hong Kong itself has a strong civil tradition that whistleblowers should not fear,” Snowden said.

He’s not reached out to his family or dancer girlfriend since going public with NSA secrets, according to the high-school dropout and computer whiz.








http://www.nypost.com/p/news/international/republic_snitch_tells_china_since_4bBTHIhKNkhHM4iBuaQtTN?utm_source=SFnewyorkpost&utm_medium=SFnewyorkpost
tailgater Offline
#2 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,185
So what you're saying is that the cat is out of the bag.
DrafterX Offline
#3 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,588
tailgater wrote:
So what you're saying is that the cat is out of the bag.



call this guy...

http://americablog.com/2013/06/ohio-cops-shoots-five-kittens-euthanize.html

Mellow
bloody spaniard Offline
#4 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
I think cub reporter TW already broke these earthbreaking news.
The guy's no American hero.
DrafterX Offline
#5 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,588
bloody spaniard wrote:
I think cub reporter TW already broke these earthbreaking news.
The guy's no American hero.



ya... he shoulda put the kittens in a bag and shot them later...... Mellow
tailgater Offline
#6 Posted:
Joined: 06-01-2000
Posts: 26,185
Well if the NY Post reports it, it must be true...
DrafterX Offline
#7 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,588
I heard Rodman was gonna smuggle him into N. Korea..... Mellow
ZRX1200 Offline
#8 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,673
You think China didn't know this?

Really?

C'mon man.....spose you buy everything Mclame and Lindsey Grahamnisty sell you.
dpnewell Offline
#9 Posted:
Joined: 03-16-2009
Posts: 7,491
Wait a minute. The Chinese have computers?
ZRX1200 Offline
#10 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,673
Yup.


They have dogs on treadmills and a guy with a knife waves it in the air. The treadmill runs a generator hooked to a powerstrip. Plugged into the powerstrip to a abacus with an led screen.
Gene363 Offline
#11 Posted:
Joined: 01-24-2003
Posts: 30,876
tailgater wrote:
Well if the NY Post reports it, it must be true...


Hold it!!!

TG that there is funny!


OK, back to the usual shenanigans.
sd72 Offline
#12 Posted:
Joined: 03-09-2011
Posts: 9,600
So were good now with the gov spying on millions, with a secret warrant?(sounds legit) and were moving on to crucifying the guy who ratted. Good stuff.
ZRX1200 Offline
#13 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,673
Steve who do ya think keeps voting for the pigs?!

8trackdisco Offline
#14 Posted:
Joined: 11-06-2004
Posts: 60,106
So the NY Post (weren't they the same guys that had BAG MEN on the cover and had the wrong two people), and one of the biggest Obama asskissing media outlets this side of of the LA Times is against Snowden.

I'm uber surprised.

Not a fan of him spilling his guts- if that is really what he is doing. Nor is he a hero.

His slowing the eventual tide of the gubmit being in every aspect of our life is a nice little break.

8trackdisco Offline
#15 Posted:
Joined: 11-06-2004
Posts: 60,106
What I meant was, the government should be all powerful, have access to everyone's everything, all of the time, and we should pray facing the East, as the sun rises out DC each day.
engletl Offline
#16 Posted:
Joined: 12-26-2000
Posts: 26,493
8trackdisco wrote:
What I meant was, the government should be all powerful, have access to everyone's everything, all of the time, and we should pray facing the East, as the sun rises out DC each day.

but if I pray facing east i am praying to freakville (aka Jacksonville FL) Applause
8trackdisco Offline
#17 Posted:
Joined: 11-06-2004
Posts: 60,106
engletl wrote:
but if I pray facing east i am praying to freakville (aka Jacksonville FL) Applause


Geeze... I forgot about that.

Pray to the West (New Orleans)
porschesales225 Offline
#18 Posted:
Joined: 01-23-2006
Posts: 1,637
I don't see the issue. We interfere with so many nations and then act surprised when their people are against us. Plus if we di this to our allies what are they doing internally. Our government has gone too far
Taps86 Offline
#19 Posted:
Joined: 03-03-2013
Posts: 4,691
I feel the guy was a loaner and looking for attention. I am glad he came forward, but he's no "HERO". I think what has me baffled the most is how anyone would be so clueless to the Government eaves dropping on American people.


How is this any different than in 2005/2006 when it was first brought to our attention. The same exact processes are still going on. Is it happening more? yes. Am I ok with it. No.


This just adds to the long list of failures by the elected officials the BABY BOOMERS put into office.
HockeyDad Offline
#20 Posted:
Joined: 09-20-2000
Posts: 46,199
sd72 wrote:
So were good now with the gov spying on millions, with a secret warrant?(sounds legit) and were moving on to crucifying the guy who ratted. Good stuff.



Yes, this is correct. My faith in Americans voluntarily surrendering their rights is restored.
Gene363 Offline
#21 Posted:
Joined: 01-24-2003
Posts: 30,876
HockeyDad wrote:
Yes, this is correct. My faith in Americans voluntarily surrendering their rights is restored.



HD or Honest Sarcastic Man?

This is funny except for the "Americans" part, but then no one ever went broke betting on the stupidity of the American voters.
teedubbya Offline
#22 Posted:
Joined: 08-14-2003
Posts: 95,637
I was thinking Rosenberg but this works too

(CNN) -- Sitting alone in a hotel room, unable to contact friends or family or even walk the teeming streets of Hong Kong without looking over his shoulder, there can be few who can claim to know the fear and isolation that NSA leaker Edward Snowden is living through.

One man, however, is better qualified than most.

Former spy, fugitive and convicted traitor, Christopher Boyce sold U.S. secrets to the former Soviet Union and dodged U.S. authorities for almost two years until his arrest in 1977 at the age of just 22.

Young, idealistic and driven by a mixture of political conviction and outlaw excitement, Boyce eventually received a 40-year sentence for espionage. In 1980, he escaped from the federal penitentiary in Lompoc, California and, while on the run, carried out a string of bank robberies in Idaho and Washington state -- crimes for which he says he carries a greater weight of remorse than for those of espionage.

Released on parole in 2003 after serving 25 years, Boyce now lives on America's West Coast and is working on his memoirs -- "The Falcon and The Snowman: American Sons" -- scheduled for release this year.

NSA defends surveillance

While Edward Snowden's leaks allege that U.S. intelligence has been hacking networks around the world for years, the NSA's stated position is that the administration, Congress and the courts are all aware of and have oversight of the NSA programs exposed by Snowden. NSA has also rejected his claims they can tap into the phone or computer of any U.S. citizen, saying that legally obtained phone records have helped to thwart "dozens" of terrorist events. In it he outlines how, in 1974, a clean-cut college kid -- the son of a respected former FBI agent -- lands a job at aerospace and defense firm TRW in Southern California where he sees misrouted Central Intelligence Agency cables that allegedly discuss destabilizing the Australian government -- then led by the center-left government of Gough Whitlam.

Whitlam's government was famously and controversially deposed in 1975 in what some argue amounted to a constitutional coup d'etat. The then governor-general, the British queen's representative in Australia, Sir John Kerr -- who occupied a largely ceremonial office -- invoked the rarely-used queen's reserve powers to fire a democratically elected government to resolve a long-standing political deadlock in the country.

According to accounts by Boyce, the governor-general was casually referred to in CIA circles as "our man, Kerr."

Only a few years earlier, Australia had been a key U.S. ally in the Vietnam War and Whitlam's government had already raised ire in Washington by withdrawing Australian troops within hours of taking office in 1972.

By 1975, the Whitlam government was asking uncomfortable questions about key U.S. military installations based in Australia and Boyce claims that the CIA had the Whitlam government firmly in its sights.

Appalled that the U.S. secret services would use its powers of surveillance and secret influence to depose the government of a U.S. ally, Boyce teamed up with a childhood friend -- Andrew Daulton Lee -- and embarked on a journey that made them one of the Cold War's most infamous spy teams.

The slow descent of the two former altar boys into a world of mistrust, madness and cold isolation was turned into a Hollywood hit for Sean Penn and Timothy Hutton, who starred in the 1985 movie "The Falcon and The Snowman."


Inside the mind of Edward Snowden
Trump: Snowden is bad news
Snowden: U.S. hacked targets in China While 35 years separate his ill-starred foray into espionage and Snowden's decision to reveal the secret surveillance plans of the National Security Agency (NSA), Boyce told CNN he has a good idea what Snowden might be going through.

"I feel for the guy, and for what his life is going to become. I pity him," Boyce said.

"He's in for a world of hurt, for the rest of his life. I feel sorry for him. He's going to go through life not being able to trust anybody. And I think that in the end, it'll end badly for him -- one way or another, they'll get their hands on him. He's going to pay for it. He's doomed."

In one of only a handful of interviews Boyce has given since his arrest in 1977, he told CNN this week about his own motivations three decades ago and what Snowden is likely to face psychologically now he is pitted against the world's most powerful secret service.

CNN: When you see Snowden on the television, do you immediately recognize your situation in it?

Christopher Boyce: The major difference between Snowden and myself is that I didn't come out publicly with my information. Also, my motives were different. I was sworn to revenge. It certainly was a far different time and place. Up to that point in my life, my view of the (U.S.) Federal Government was that it had only gotten worse.

I grew up in a different time -- watching the Kennedy assassination, watching the race riots on television, and watching the U.S. government slide into the Vietnam War -- which was, to me, just about the most idiotic, stupid, evil exercise of power my country had ever pulled off.

I went to work as a contractor for the NSA, like Snowden, and what I discovered on the "twixes" (telex messages that were sent back and forth from U.S.-based CIA locations and CIA outposts in Australia) showed that we were undermining the government of Australia, an ally nation.

I don't know if Snowden views the U.S. government in the same way that I did -- maybe he does. He's uncovered things and made things public that sound, to me, as if they're illegal. Things that show the NSA and the CIA are lying to Congress. Perhaps in a way it is similar. But what Snowden has done is much different. My aim was to hurt the United States government. I suppose he's doing that too, but in a public way. Yet he's not as underhanded about it as I was.

CNN: In the light of his situation, what do you think he could be going through?

One way or another, they'll get their hands on him. He's going to pay for it. He's doomed

Christopher BoyceBoyce: I think he's scared to death. I think that every single person he sees, he's wondering if that's the person that's coming for him. He's probably worried that there is a large group of people in Washington, D.C., trying to come up with some way of getting back at him, to get control of him, to lock him up for the rest of his life.

I don't know if he has an arrangement with the Chinese government. If he doesn't, I would be worried that the Chinese may deport him to the United States to gain some concession in return. I'd be terrified of that, if I were him. Who would trust the Chinese government? He is utterly vulnerable and knows that there are a lot of people who really want to hurt him now. If I were him, I would at this point probably be having second thoughts. Asking myself "What did I do? What have I brought down upon my head? Did I really do this?"

The fact is, he can never come back home.

He's totally separated from everything he has ever known, from his family. He is always going to be a fugitive, until they get him. And eventually, they will. He will never see his family again unless they go to him. And if they do go to him, he'll no longer be in hiding. The only way that he can truly hide is to abandon his whole past, his entire life.

When he realizes that, he's going to be racked with depression. I would imagine that his stress levels are at a point where they could actually make him physically sick. I'm sure everything is gnawing at him. And he's isolated. If I were him, I'd latch onto a couple of reporters that I trusted. He has a lot of enemies now. He has the whole intelligence community of the United States after him, including all of its allies. I sure as hell wouldn't trust the Chinese government, if I were him.

CNN: At what point, in your case, did you realize there was no going back? Were you fully aware, at the time, of the scope and depth of the trouble you would be in?

Boyce: I realized immediately that there was no stepping back, that I was doomed, and that my life would never go back to the way it was before. I was surrounded by an impending sense of doom, knowing this was something that could not end well. I imagine he will probably start drinking heavily. That's what I did. Think of it: How much bigger trouble can you possibly get into? How could you make more enemies, more people who would like to kill you, than by doing what he has done? He's got to be having second thoughts about it. He has to go someplace where he's safe, and I don't know if China is it.

CNN: To what extent were you motivated ideologically and to what extent were you motivated by the excitement of being an outlaw? In your opinion, how much ego is involved in the whistleblower's mindset?

I imagine he will probably start drinking heavily. That's what I did. Think of it: How much bigger trouble can you possibly get into?

Christopher BoyceBoyce: Edward Snowden is 29. I was 21. At that age, I felt indestructible. Nothing bad could ever happen to me, or so I thought. You just don't think about these things when you're young. You believe that bad things happen to other people. But you learn, after a while, that that's not true.

My view of the government at the time was that it was just a monstrosity that was getting worse and worse. I didn't like it. I was motivated to hurt the government. I was nuts. I thought I was going to wage a one-man war against the Federal Government and that I was going to make them pay for all the rotten things they had done and were still doing.

Ego played a great part in that -- having my own secrets, being in the know of something, getting (one) over on the bastards. It's an all-empowering feeling, in a somewhat demented way. But what you're really doing is just walking into a buzz-saw. It certainly was exciting. I'm sure Snowden feels a similar excitement. But that excitement, after a while, is not a good excitement -- it becomes terror.

CNN: Considering the minimal amount of damage the information that you sold to the Soviet Union caused, do you think your sentence was out of all proportion with the crime you committed? There is a sense with these whistleblower cases that the leaker has stepped into a zone where normal laws no longer apply. Do you think the secret services are more interested in exacting revenge in the cases of Assange and Manning than in protecting the interests of the state they serve?

Boyce: Regarding my sentence for espionage, I don't know if the punishment was disproportionate. That's for someone else to decide. Of course, I'm a bit prejudiced on that. I certainly think they decided to make an example out of me. There were very few espionage arrests before I was arrested. People never went to court -- the government didn't want these things brought out. In my situation, however, they decided to make an example. And then I escaped from Lompoc federal penitentiary for 19 months. And then I decided to rob some banks. I can say that the sentence I was given for bank robbery was certainly just.

Do I think the government wants revenge against Snowden? Absolutely, they want revenge. They want to ensure anyone who even thinks about doing what he did does so with fear in their hearts.

With respect to these agencies wanting to protect the interests of the states they serve, I ask this question: Is it in the interest of the United States and the American people to have billions of their communications secretly monitored by a government? And to have Congress lied to about it? I don't think that's in the interest of the American people. Is the interest of the United States government the same as the interest of the American people? Not always. Not in this situation, anyway.

Of course, there's still a lot that has to be played out. But I think that revenge is the key driving force by those individuals who stand to get into a heap of trouble as a result of these secrets being made public -- the big shot bureaucrats in the national intelligence community. Not that it's in the interest of the American people to be kept in the dark about it, but simply because of the repercussions those individuals behind the scenes could face. They could be retired early, or lose their pensions, or be disgraced, or be hauled in front of Senate subcommittees, or all manner of bad things. I'm sure there are many things the NSA and CIA don't want the public to know about, principally because the players behind the scenes could get into serious trouble if it became known.

RICKAMAVEN Offline
#23 Posted:
Joined: 10-01-2000
Posts: 33,248
ZRX1200

they are on sale at wallmat on the 4th of july
Gene363 Offline
#24 Posted:
Joined: 01-24-2003
Posts: 30,876
Before you make up your mind read this from the Atlantic Magazine:

What We Don't Know About Spying on Citizens: Scarier Than What We Know

The NSA's surveillance of cell-phone calls show how badly we need to protect the whistle-blowers who provide transparency and accountability.

Read More:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2013/06/what-we-dont-know-about-spying-on-citizens-scarier-than-what-we-know/276607/

Yesterday, we learned that the NSA received all calling records from Verizon customers for a three-month period starting in April. That's everything except the voice content: who called who, where they were, how long the call lasted -- for millions of people, both Americans and foreigners. This "metadata" allows the government to track the movements of everyone during that period, and a build a detailed picture of who talks to whom. It's exactly the same data the Justice Department collected about AP journalists.

The Guardian delivered this revelation after receiving a copy of a secret memo about this -- presumably from a whistle-blower. We don't know if the other phone companies handed data to the NSA too. We don't know if this was a one-off demand or a continuously renewed demand; the order started a few days after the Boston bombers were captured by police.

We don't know a lot about how the government spies on us, but we know some things. We know the FBI has issued tens of thousands of ultra-secret National Security Letters to collect all sorts of data on people -- we believe on millions of people -- and has been abusing them to spy on cloud-computer users. We know it can collect a wide array of personal data from the Internet without a warrant. We also know that the FBI has been intercepting cell-phone data, all but voice content, for the past 20 years without a warrant, and can use the microphone on some powered-off cell phones as a room bug -- presumably only with a warrant.
Related Story

Massive Leaks Are a Natural Response to Government Classification Run Amok


We know that the NSA has many domestic-surveillance and data-mining programs with codenames like Trailblazer, Stellar Wind, and Ragtime -- deliberately using different codenames for similar programs to stymie oversight and conceal what's really going on. We know that the NSA is building an enormous computer facility in Utah to store all this data, as well as faster computer networks to process it all. We know the U.S. Cyber Command employs 4,000 people.

We know that the DHS is also collecting a massive amount of data on people, and that local police departments are running "fusion centers" to collect and analyze this data, and covering up its failures. This is all part of the militarization of the police.

Remember in 2003, when Congress defunded the decidedly creepy Total Information Awareness program? It didn't die; it just changed names and split into many smaller programs. We know that corporations are doing an enormous amount of spying on behalf of the government: all parts.

We know all of this not because the government is honest and forthcoming, but mostly through three backchannels -- inadvertent hints or outright admissions by government officials in hearings and court cases, information gleaned from government documents received under FOIA, and government whistle-blowers.

There's much more we don't know, and often what we know is obsolete. We know quite a bit about the NSA's ECHELON program from a 2000 European investigation, and about the DHS's plans for Total Information Awareness from 2002, but much less about how these programs have evolved. We can make inferences about the NSA's Utah facility based on the theoretical amount of data from various sources, the cost of computation, and the power requirements from the facility, but those are rough guesses at best. For a lot of this, we're completely in the dark.

And that's wrong.

The U.S. government is on a secrecy binge. It overclassifies more information than ever. And we learn, again and again, that our government regularly classifies things not because they need to be secret, but because their release would be embarrassing.

Knowing how the government spies on us is important. Not only because so much of it is illegal -- or, to be as charitable as possible, based on novel interpretations of the law -- but because we have a right to know. Democracy requires an informed citizenry in order to function properly, and transparency and accountability are essential parts of that. That means knowing what our government is doing to us, in our name. That means knowing that the government is operating within the constraints of the law. Otherwise, we're living in a police state.

We need whistle-blowers.

Leaking information without getting caught is difficult. It's almost impossible to maintain privacy in the Internet Age. The WikiLeaks platform seems to have been secure -- Bradley Manning was caught not because of a technological flaw, but because someone he trusted betrayed him -- but the U.S. government seems to have successfully destroyed it as a platform. None of the spin-offs have risen to become viable yet. The New Yorker recently unveiled its Strongbox platform for leaking material, which is still new but looks good. This link contains the best advice on how to leak information to the press via phone, email, or the post office. The National Whistleblowers Center has a page on national-security whistle-blowers and their rights.

Leaking information is also very dangerous. The Obama Administration has embarked on a war on whistle-blowers, pursuing them -- both legally and through intimidation -- further than any previous administration has done. Mark Klein, Thomas Drake, and William Binney have all been persecuted for exposing technical details of our surveillance state. Bradley Manning has been treated cruelly and inhumanly -- and possibly tortured -- for his more-indiscriminate leaking of State Department secrets.

The Obama Administration's actions against the Associated Press, its persecution of Julian Assange, and its unprecedented prosecution of Manning on charges of "aiding the enemy" demonstrate how far it's willing to go to intimidate whistle-blowers -- as well as the journalists who talk to them.

But whistle-blowing is vital, even more broadly than in government spying. It's necessary for good government, and to protect us from abuse of power.

We need details on the full extent of the FBI's spying capabilities. We don't know what information it routinely collects on American citizens, what extra information it collects on those on various watch lists, and what legal justifications it invokes for its actions. We don't know its plans for future data collection. We don't know what scandals and illegal actions -- either past or present -- are currently being covered up.

We also need information about what data the NSA gathers, either domestically or internationally. We don't know how much it collects surreptitiously, and how much it relies on arrangements with various companies. We don't know how much it uses password cracking to get at encrypted data, and how much it exploits existing system vulnerabilities. We don't know whether it deliberately inserts backdoors into systems it wants to monitor, either with or without the permission of the communications-system vendors.

And we need details about the sorts of analysis the organizations perform. We don't know what they quickly cull at the point of collection, and what they store for later analysis -- and how long they store it. We don't know what sort of database profiling they do, how extensive their CCTV and surveillance-drone analysis is, how much they perform behavioral analysis, or how extensively they trace friends of people on their watch lists.

We don't know how big the U.S. surveillance apparatus is today, either in terms of money and people or in terms of how many people are monitored or how much data is collected. Modern technology makes it possible to monitor vastly more people -- yesterday's NSA revelations demonstrate that they could easily surveil everyone -- than could ever be done manually.

Whistle-blowing is the moral response to immoral activity by those in power. What's important here are government programs and methods, not data about individuals. I understand I am asking for people to engage in illegal and dangerous behavior. Do it carefully and do it safely, but -- and I am talking directly to you, person working on one of these secret and probably illegal programs -- do it.

If you see something, say something. There are many people in the U.S. that will appreciate and admire you.

For the rest of us, we can help by protesting this war on whistle-blowers. We need to force our politicians not to punish them -- to investigate the abuses and not the messengers -- and to ensure that those unjustly persecuted can obtain redress.

Our government is putting its own self-interest ahead of the interests of the country. That needs to change.
borndead1 Offline
#25 Posted:
Joined: 11-07-2006
Posts: 5,216
So China can now tell us to STFU about them hacking us because we're hacking them too?

My opinion of the dude still hasn't changed. I applaud him.
Gene363 Offline
#26 Posted:
Joined: 01-24-2003
Posts: 30,876
borndead1 wrote:
So China can now tell us to STFU about them hacking us because we're hacking them too?

My opinion of the dude still hasn't changed. I applaud him.


No, they 'earned' that right back a few billions of debt in the past.
d'oh! d'oh! d'oh!
bloody spaniard Offline
#27 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
The one good thing this snitch has done is keep our Government's feet to the fire.
The one bad thing he's done is distract our Government from the sequestration problem... but then again, they probably have no solution.

What I'd like to see is a full scale army of whistleblowers come forth in matters that affect my pocketbook & personal freedoms and bring about mass political/corporate resignations, impeachments, and mandatory prison terms especially for arms peddlers.
borndead1 Offline
#28 Posted:
Joined: 11-07-2006
Posts: 5,216
bloody spaniard wrote:
The one good thing this snitch has done is keep our Government's feet to the fire.
The one bad thing he's done is distract our Government from the sequestration problem... but then again, they probably have no solution.

What I'd like to see is a full scale army of whistleblowers come forth in matters that affect my pocketbook & personal freedoms and bring about mass political/corporate resignations, impeachments, and mandatory prison terms especially for arms peddlers.



Give that man a cigar!

Bloody, I think this is the first time you've ever said something on the Politics forum that I completely agree with. I hope the whistleblowing of the last few years starts a trend.
bloody spaniard Offline
#29 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
borndead1 wrote:
Give that man a cigar!

Bloody, I think this is the first time you've ever said something on the Politics forum that I completely agree with. I hope the whistleblowing of the last few years starts a trend.



LOL! Bast ard, I agree with you more than you think.
What we need is HIGH rates of unemployment among the Government (and many corporate) hierarchy.
Some of these deluded fossils think that entitlements and little accountability are their privileges.
ZRX1200 Offline
#30 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,673
ALL AMERICAN!!!!

https://orders.bradleymanning.org/shop
Gene363 Offline
#31 Posted:
Joined: 01-24-2003
Posts: 30,876
ZRX1200 wrote:
ALL AMERICAN!!!!

https://orders.bradleymanning.org/shop


OTOH, manning is a total POS, he got people killed.
ZRX1200 Offline
#32 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,673
Who?
Gene363 Offline
#33 Posted:
Joined: 01-24-2003
Posts: 30,876
ZRX1200 wrote:
Who?



ZRX1200 wrote:
ALL AMERICAN!!!!

https://orders.bradleymanning.org/shop

ZRX1200 Offline
#34 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,673
Himself?

Possibly.


You stated "he got AmerikanS killed"

Guess my version of plural is different.
ZRX1200 Offline
#35 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,673
On thr bright side, ****** Cheney is defending Obama now.

Hope the lefty party hacks appreciate his "gravitas" !
bloody spaniard Offline
#36 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
Snowden's daddy was pleading for his "honorable" son to shut up and come home NOW! LOL
ZRX1200 Offline
#37 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,673
Taps were you upset when the Clinton regime let nuclear sub secrets out to China?

bloody spaniard Offline
#38 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
ZRX1200 wrote:
Taps were you upset when the Clinton regime let nuclear sub secrets out to China?


Sandy Berger still has the paper cut scars from stuffing secret documents down his pants!
DrafterX Offline
#39 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,588
Bloody gets around..... Mellow
bloody spaniard Offline
#40 Posted:
Joined: 03-14-2003
Posts: 43,802
^ You don't read much, do ya?Mellow
DrafterX Offline
#41 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,588
bloody spaniard wrote:
^ You don't read much, do ya?Mellow



I'm illegitimate... Sad
ZRX1200 Offline
#42 Posted:
Joined: 07-08-2007
Posts: 60,673
You potty trained on your papers didn't you.
DrafterX Offline
#43 Posted:
Joined: 10-18-2005
Posts: 98,588
I dunno... that was a long time ago..... Mellow
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