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Octafish

(55,745 posts)
11. Don't know. If he wasn't holed up in the embassy, we might.
Sun Nov 16, 2014, 07:21 PM
Nov 2014

Wikileaks has revealed criminality on the part of the US Goverment, too.

War is big business. It's an insider's game. It's why we have so much secret government.

The last remaining enormous wads of cash in the Treasury are to be had for purchasing today's modern military industrial intel complex.



There's more than a trillion to be grabbed -- just for the Lockheed-Martin F-35.

Now keeping tabs on us -- people interested in using some of the nation's treasure for more peaceful purposes -- are for-hire spies. How do I know this? Julian Assange and Anonymous:



WikiLeaks' Stratfor Dump Lifts Lid on Intelligence-Industrial Complex

WikiLeaks' latest release, of hacked emails from Stratfor, shines light on the murky world of private intelligence-gathering


by Pratap Chatterjee
Published on Tuesday, February 28, 2012 by The Guardian/UK

What price bad intelligence? Some 5m internal emails from Stratfor, an Austin, Texas-based company that brands itself as a "global intelligence" provider, were recently obtained by Anonymous, the hacker collective, and are being released in batches by WikiLeaks, the whistleblowing website, starting Monday.

The most striking revelation from the latest disclosure is not simply the military-industrial complex that conspires to spy on citizens, activists and trouble-causers, but the extremely low quality of the information available to the highest bidder. Clients of the company include Dow Chemical, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and Raytheon, as well as US government agencies like the Department of Homeland Security, the Defense Intelligence Agency and the Marines.

SNIP...

Assange notes that Stratfor is also seeking to profit directly from this information by partnering in an apparent hedge-fund venture with Shea Morenz, a former Goldman Sachs managing director. He points to an August 2011 document, marked "DO NOT SHARE OR DISCUSS", from Stratfor CEO George Friedman, which says:

"What StratCap will do is use our Stratfor's intelligence and analysis to trade in a range of geopolitical instruments, particularly government bonds, currencies and the like."


CONTINUED...

http://www.commondreams.org/view/2012/02/28-10?print



If it weren't for Anonymous and WikiLeaks, we probably wouldn't know about any of that.

It's no joke. It's no unimportant story. It's no boring history. Run by insiders, the secret government is key to making the system run on behalf of the few -- the 1-percent of 1-percent. Central to that is intelligence -- economically, politically and military useful information.

Which brings up the nation's purported free press, the only business mentioned by name in the entire United States Constitution, and how the organizations therein have miserably failed to feature prominently the sundry and myriad ways the insiders on Wall Street and their toadies in Washington do the work for Them.

The problem is systemic. The corruption is systemic.

Because it involves oversight of secret organizations -- the Pentagon, Homeland Security, CIA, etc -- Congress and the Administration often have no clue, let alone oversight, to what is happening because the corruption is marked "Top Secret."

Secret government also means We the People can't do our job as citizens, which is to hold them accountable and find the ones responsible in order to vote the crooks out and, it is hoped, the honest ones in.

With no citizen oversight, anything goes. And it doesn't stop.

Remember this fine fellow, US Navy fighter ace Randy "Duke" Cunningham?

Later a member of the United States Congress, he used his position to feather his nest, Big Time.



In his political career, Cunningham was a member of the Appropriations and Intelligence committees, and chaired the House Intelligence Subcommittee on Human Intelligence Analysis and Counterintelligence during the 109th Congress. He was considered a leading Republican expert on national security issues.

Currently, he's in USP Tuscon or another fine facility where he gets three squares, medical and dental.
He's due for release in a year or so. He'll be able to pick up his pension.

"The Duke Cunningham Act, also known as the Federal Pension Forfeiture Act, was introduced by U.S. Senator John F. Kerry in 2006. The bill would have denied pension benefits to any members of Congress convicted of bribery, conspiracy or perjury. The bill died in committee. (Source: The Press Enterprise)


Duke wasn't alone. He really was just one snake in a long line of snakes. Remember Dusty Foggo, Number 3 at CIA and close associate of CIA Director and former Congressman Porter Goss? Swells sitting atop the peak of political and military secrecy and power.

Unfortunately, when it comes to modern governance, no oversight means means the insiders are getting away with murder, and warmongering and treason and all the power that they bring. Appointed pretzeldent George W Bush on Valentine's Day 2007 put it in words: "Money trumps peace."



Secret government warmongering and war profiteering are systemic. Secret government is rotten to the core. What's more, in a democracy that once really was land of the free and home of the brave, secret government poses the greatest threat to true national security.

Recommendations

0 members have recommended this reply (displayed in chronological order):

A miracle has happened. dixiegrrrrl Nov 2014 #1
It IS amazing. There is NOTHING noble about destroying the Public's right-to-know... Octafish Nov 2014 #2
... SidDithers Nov 2014 #3
Sid, please don't leave DU RobertEarl Nov 2014 #7
I wouldn't leave. I'd just change my name, and post using 2 accounts for a little while... SidDithers Nov 2014 #8
Because fascism is so funny. Octafish Nov 2014 #13
... SidDithers Nov 2014 #14
Nice smear. Octafish Nov 2014 #23
Just curious Wella Nov 2014 #4
Don't know. If he wasn't holed up in the embassy, we might. Octafish Nov 2014 #11
Speaking of the F-35..I think it was bait dixiegrrrrl Nov 2014 #12
K&R The depth/gravity of the government crimes exposed woo me with science Nov 2014 #5
What keeps us free is the Bill of Rights. So, on the Horizon: 'Super Injunctions' Octafish Nov 2014 #15
^^^^^^^ ^^^^^^^ woo me with science Nov 2014 #16
Breaking bail and being a fugitive from justice is a crime hack89 Nov 2014 #6
Don't confuse 'em with facts... SidDithers Nov 2014 #10
That's right, don't confuse them…. MrMickeysMom Nov 2014 #17
... SidDithers Nov 2014 #18
the basic idea is outrage that the law applies to him treestar Nov 2014 #19
Got a link for any of that? Octafish Nov 2014 #24
Keep repeating over and over treestar Nov 2014 #25
Wikileaks soldier MANNING reveals why he shared secrets Octafish Nov 2014 #26
K&R elias49 Nov 2014 #9
I agree. He could probably work out a time served deal if he just came out now. Recursion Nov 2014 #20
Perhaps with the Brits for violating bail hack89 Nov 2014 #21
There's no evidence they wouldn't use their version of due process treestar Nov 2014 #28
kick woo me with science Nov 2014 #22
Sweden Ranks Second in the World in Per Capita Weapons Exports GreatGazoo Nov 2014 #27
lol complete straw man treestar Nov 2014 #29
I'm sure you'll figure it out....eventually GreatGazoo Nov 2014 #30
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