Glenn Greenwald Drops A Bombshell On Colbert

I’m about a week behind on my Colbert these days. Shame on me! Last week, Glenn Greenwald was on plugging his new book, No Place To Hide, about Edward Snowden’s adventure and Glenn Greenwald’s (and others) involvement in helping him get his story out.

During the interview, Colbert asks him for a new shocking piece of dirt to give us that is revealed for the first time in his book. Greenwald says that the NSA was working with internet router companies to intercept the end of the manufacturing process (or the beginning of the shipping process), in order to insert physical tracking devices within the hardware before it is shipped to consumers. The implications of this are enormous. What other devices that are all over our business, homes, and mobile lives have been tampered with before sent to us in the mail or sold to us a store?

It’s right here, one minute in to Part Two of the Interview (Part 1 below, for your convenience):

 

 

This Wednesday Night: NSA Comedy Night at the Internet Archive

HeaderShot

While looking forward to this Wednesday night’s NSA Comedy Night, I noticed a few more interesting developments that have hit the news last week on this subject.

Brian Knappenger, Director of the the upcoming documentary about Aaron Swartz, “The Internet’s Own Boy,” published a video op-ed video for the New York Times.  The five minute film addresses the popular question “Why Care About the N.S.A.?” in a short film exploring whether ordinary Americans should be concerned about online surveillance.

Also, it came out that our cell phone records were part of the N.S.A.’s larger plan.

All this makes it even more pertinent to have anonymous whistleblowing software, such as Secure Drop, which Forbes and the New Yorker are already using. The Freedom of the Press Foundation’s SecureDrop team, headed up by James Dolan and Garrett
Smith, both recently spoke at the Aaron Swartz Day celebration, and Aaron Swartz Hackathon kick-off, at the Internet Archive on November 8th. (Video of their talk here.)  Code from the hackathon has already been rolled into the latest download of SecureDrop.

SecureDrop was originally started by Wired’s Kevin Poulsen and the late Aaron Swartz. Poulsen is the plaintiff in the FOIA court case against the government over the release of Swartz’s Secret Service and FBI files, and has just released another 148 documents  as a result of his case. (Direct link to documents.)

So I hope to see you this Wednesday night at NSA Comedy Night, where we can all learn more about protecting our constitutional rights, and then proceed to let Will Durst shine a little laughter on the situation.

Pepper Spray Creator/Police Certifier Says Pepper Spraying Peaceful Protesters “Improper and Inappropriate”

Video of peaceful protesters being pepper sprayed at U.C. Davis:

 


Pepper-Spray Creator Decries Use of Chemical Agent on Peaceful Occupy Wall Street Protesters

From the Democracy Now introduction of the interview with pepper spray creator/certifier Kamran Loghman:

It’s not unprecedented for an inventor to voice regrets when a creation turns out to have harmful uses. It is widely believed the Swedish industrialist, Alfred Nobel, created the Peace Prize bearing his name in response to feelings of guilt around his invention of dynamite and ballistite, both of which were used in violent acts during his lifetime. The famed physicist, Albert Einstein, was said to be greatly distressed for unintentionally advancing the development of the atomic bomb through his work. Today in the aftermath of the crackdown on Occupy Wall Street protesters nationwide, there is a new name to add to the list, Kamran Loghman.

In the 80’s Loghman was the expert responsible with the FBI in developing weapons grade pepper spray. He also collaborated with police departments to develop guidelines for pepper spray’s use. But now after seeing footage of police using pepper spray on non-violent Occupy Wall Street protesters nationwide, including students at UC Davis, protesters with the Occupy movement in New York and 84 year old protester Dora Lee Rainey in Seattle, Kamran Loghman is speaking out against what he calls the most inappropriate and improper use of chemical agents he has ever seen.

Quotes from the interview with Kamran Loghman:

“What occurred here is that in UC Davis you see a complete improper and inappropriate use. Normally pepper spray is used when there is a physical threat to the police officers or bystanders or there is a possibility of property damage and you see that things are going haywire. In that situation, police officers are justified to bring things under control by using a force that is not deadly, such as pepper spray. In the case of UC Davis, individuals are totally quiet. They are not saying anything and they are not harming anybody and they are not being aggressive to police officers. So the use was just absolutely out of ordinary and was not in accordance with any training or policy of any department that I know of. I personally certified 4000 police officers in the early 80’s and 90’s and I have never seen this before and that’s why I was shocked. That’s why I have come up and I feel it is my civic duty to explain to the public that this is not what pepper spray was developed for.

“It is becoming more and more fashionable this day and age to use chemical on people who have an opinion and that, to me, is a complete lack of leadership both in the police department and other people who cannot really deal with the root of the problem and they want to spray people to quiet them down and it is really not supposed to be that. It is not a thing that solves any problem, nor is it something that quiets people down.”

Specifically about U.C. Davis in general:

“But in regards to the way the officer handled the situation, well it is obvious that many things went wrong. They did not use pepper spray justifiably according the use of force policy that they are trained for. They used a canister that was too large and was not meant for that kind of environment at such a close range. They did not properly decontaminate students where students were screaming and yelling for water, but what is really important is that we keep focusing on what happened at that moment. I really want to take that back because I go around the country and talk about leadership and I just finished one at US Naval Academy. I think the lack of leadership was very important because that is one of the things I train police officers. One of the most important things here was for someone to go back, bring the professor who has some affinity and wisdom to talk to the students and say listen, you made your point. Why don’t we create a group? Why don’t we go to an amphitheater? Let’s do all of us help. Let the whole college help you guys so the world can all hear your voice. I don’t think anybody was interacting with these people in the right way and they would just let them sit there and then treat them like insects. Let’s go ahead and spray them as if you are watering plants.”

Stop SOPA Before It Kills The Internet – Join the Blackout January 18, 2012

Anonymous has put together an excellent collection of materials to help learn about SOPA and participate in the blackout January 18th.

STOP SOPA – THE ESSENTIALS

There’s also an EFF ACTIVIST TOOLKIT.  Call your Representative now. Or send congress a note.

SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) is another far-reaching piece of legislation from congress (Dems as well as Repubs!) that would enable the “good faith beliefs” of copyright holders (read: no ACTUAL EVIDENCE NEEDED) to require websites to pull content first and ask questions later.

It would look something like this:

Final Version of “Expect Us” – My Theme for The Occupy Movement and Anonymous

EXPECT US

This is over two months in the making.

Anonymous is what/who inspired me to become involved in the Occupy Movement. This song was written just after September 17th.

Thanks to the awesome Steve Onanis for production, drums, keyboards, getting Tim Sanchez to play Hofner Bass, and additional guitar. (And Thanks Tim! 🙂

Main guitar and all vocals: Lisa Rein

Thanks to George Kelly for helping me develop the original version of this song into its final version 🙂 And for helping me record a version early on when it was fresh in my head, before I could get to a studio.

Music and Lyrics by Lisa Rein.

Lyrics

Time for a Reoccupation

Across the Nation

Reactivation of Peaceful Demonstration

Reoccupation Across the Nation

And Around the World

Around the World

You can Expect Us

Expect Us

Expect Us

It’s time to see what’s really going on.

We’re trying to tell you something; YOU ARE STRONG

And if we work together we can get things done

And make it fair for everyone

Time for a Reoccupation

Across the Nation

Reallocation of the financial situation

Reoccupation

Across the Nation

And Around the World

Around the World

You can Expect Us

Expect Us

Expect Us

Expect Us



This work (Expect Us – OWS/Anonymous’ Theme, by Lisa Rein), identified by Lisa Rein, is free of known copyright restrictions.

New Version of “Re-occupation/Expect Us” – Perfect for Occupation 2.0 Today

Updated Jan 22 – FINAL VERSION OF THIS SONG

Here’s a shorter link to the song: http://tinyurl.com/owsreoccupation (for tweeting and the like 🙂

HERE’S THE ACTUAL LINK TO THE SONG

Time for a Re-occupation/Expect Us

Words and Music by Lisa Rein

Lyrics

Time for a Reoccupation

Across the Nation

Reactivation of Peaceful Demonstration

Reoccupation Across the Nation

And Around the World

Around the World

You can Expect Us

Expect Us

 

Expect Us

It’s time to see what’s really going on.

We’re trying to tell you something; YOU ARE STRONG

And if we work together we can get things done

And make it fair for everyone

 

Time for a Reoccupation

Across the Nation

Reallocation of the financial situation

Reoccupation

Across the Nation

And Around the World

Around the World

You can Expect Us

Expect Us

Expect Us

Expect Us

 

 



This work (Expect Us – OWS/Anonymous’ Theme, by Lisa Rein), identified by Lisa Rein, is free of known copyright restrictions.

Family Guy Writer Documents His Arrest and Mistreatment by LAPD at Occupy LA

Another upsetting first hand account of the police’s (LAPD) treatment of peaceful protestors in LA:

My Occupy LA Arrest, by Patrick Meighan

From the post:

When the LAPD finally began arresting those of us interlocked around the symbolic tent, we were all ordered by the LAPD to unlink from each other (in order to facilitate the arrests). Each seated, nonviolent protester beside me who refused to cooperate by unlinking his arms had the following done to him: an LAPD officer would forcibly extend the protestor’s legs, grab his left foot, twist it all the way around and then stomp his boot on the insole, pinning the protestor’s left foot to the pavement, twisted backwards. Then the LAPD officer would grab the protestor’s right foot and twist it all the way the other direction until the non-violent protestor, in incredible agony, would shriek in pain and unlink from his neighbor.

It was horrible to watch, and apparently designed to terrorize the rest of us. At least I was sufficiently terrorized. I unlinked my arms voluntarily and informed the LAPD officers that I would go peacefully and cooperatively. I stood as instructed, and then I had my arms wrenched behind my back, and an officer hyperextended my wrists into my inner arms. It was super violent, it hurt really really bad, and he was doing it on purpose. When I involuntarily recoiled from the pain, the LAPD officer threw me face-first to the pavement. He had my hands behind my back, so I landed right on my face. The officer dropped with his knee on my back and ground my face into the pavement. It really, really hurt and my face started bleeding and I was very scared. I begged for mercy and I promised that I was honestly not resisting and would not resist.

My hands were then zipcuffed very tightly behind my back, where they turned blue. I am now suffering nerve damage in my right thumb and palm.

I was put on a paddywagon with other nonviolent protestors and taken to a parking garage in Parker Center. They forced us to kneel on the hard pavement of that parking garage for seven straight hours with our hands still tightly zipcuffed behind our backs. Some began to pass out. One man rolled to the ground and vomited for a long, long time before falling unconscious. The LAPD officers watched and did nothing.

Daily Show On The Fed’s 7.7 Trillion Dollar Below Market Loans to Banks

Here’s the clip.

Stewart explains it all. The Fed secretly loaned the Banks money at 97 cents on the dollar (or an interest rate of 0.01%). The banks then loaned it back to the Fed at a higher interest rate – Making 10 billion in profit.  Here are the details from Bloomberg.

The people at the Fed that did all this are still there. The title of this clip is appropriately named “How The Fuck Is It That Martha Stewart Went To Jail?”

New Third Version of my “Expect Us” Theme for Occupy Wall St. & Anonymous (In Progress)

Updated Jan 22 – FINAL VERSION OF THIS SONG

Here’s the latest version.

This version has a bass line and keyboards. Still needs a final mix but all the parts are there 🙂

I’m putting a video together too, so I wanted to get this out for those of you with video footage, in case you want to sent it to me for inclusion. I would love some footage of dancing at the protests with anonymous masks, for instance! Thanks! 🙂



This work (Expect Us – OWS/Anonymous’ Theme, by Lisa Rein), identified by Lisa Rein, is free of known copyright restrictions.