Wednesday, May 15, 2013

Get them damn leakers

THE ABSURD TIMES



Illustration: More great work from Kieth Tucker as www.whatnowtoons.com
So far, no body has remembered the promise of a present "from Osama to Obama" in early September or late August.

Lately, we have been rather slow in posting, mainly because we no longer give a damn.  

However, here is a worthwhile interview on the State Assault on Press Freedom.  I mean, even AP is under attack!

It features Chris Hedges who, as he was remarkably accurate and honest in his reporting, had to leave the Staff of THE NEW YORK TIMES.

We know that everything is collected anyway, so why is this a surprise?  Because people still believe we follow the Constitution.  The main reason for reading the Constitution these days is to loop for loopholes.
We still have another such issue.  Bradley Manning and Julian Assange.  Neither told us anything we didn't know, or certainly did not surprise us.  We wonder why Wikileaks isn't given the Medal of Honor.


WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, 2013

Chris Hedges: Monitoring of AP Phones a "Terrifying" Step in State Assault on Press Freedom

The Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges joins us to discuss what could mark the most significant government intrusion on freedom of the press in decades. The Justice Department has acknowledged seizing the work, home and cellphone records used by almost 100 reporters and editors at the Associated Press. The phones targeted included the general AP office numbers in New York City, Washington, D.C., and Hartford, Connecticut, and the main number for the AP in the House of Representatives press gallery. The action likely came as part of a probe into the leaks behind an AP story on the U.S. intelligence operation that stopped a Yemen-based al-Qaeda bombing plot on a U.S.-bound airplane. Hedges, a senior fellow at The Nation Institute and former New York Times reporter, calls the monitoring "one more assault in a long series of assault against freedom of information and freedom of the press." Highlighting the Obama administration’s targeting of government whistleblowers, Hedges adds: "Talk to any investigative journalist who must investigate the government, and they will tell you that there is a deep freeze. People are terrified of speaking, because they’re terrified of going to jail."

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