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Intelligence

February 2, 2007The U.S. director of national intelligence released a declassified version of a new National Intelligence Estimate on Iraq; the report found that “the term 'civil war' accurately describes key elements of the Iraqi conflict” and that “widespread fighting could produce de facto partition.”
Source:

Office of the Director of National Intelligence

April 21, 2006National Intelligence Director John Negroponte said that almost 100,000 people were working for the U.S. intelligence services.
Source:

Capitol Hill Blue

March 7, 2006The House voted to renew the Patriot Act.
Source:

CNN.com

March 2, 2006The Senate renewed the Patriot Act and sent it to the House; the House is expected to pass the legislation soon.
Source:

MSNBC

February 8, 2006 Karl Rove was threatening to cut off White House support for Republican Senate Judiciary members who criticize the Bush Administration's warrantless-wiretapping program. "It's hardball," said a Republican aide, "all the way."
Source:

Democracy Now!

February 7, 2006U.S. Attorney General Alberto Gonzales said that the wiretapping was legal and necessary. "The short answer," he said when asked why the Administration did not seek Congressional approval for the program, "is that we didn't think we needed to. Quite frankly."
Source:

Democracy Now!

February 7, 2006 Jimmy Carter said that warrantless wiretapping was "disgraceful and illegal."
Source:

Democracy Now!

February 3, 2006Professor Philippe Sands of University College, London, said he had seen a secret memo that details a January 2003 meeting between British Prime Minister Tony Blair and U.S. President George W. Bush. According to Sands' account of the memo, Blair offered Bush full British support for an invasion of Iraq regardless of whether U.N. inspectors found evidence of weapons of mass destruction. Bush also told Blair that he was thinking of having U-2 reconnaissance planes painted with U.N. colors and then flown over Iraq in order to provoke Saddam Hussein into firing upon the planes.
Source:

The Guardian

February 3, 2006In Detroit the Pittsburgh Steelers beat the Seattle Seahawks in the Super Bowl. The Department of Homeland Security monitored the event using holograms.
Source:

CNET News.com

February 3, 2006 New York City police officers were suing the New York Police Department for videotaping them during a rally. "That's Big Brother watching you," said an officer.
Source:

The New York Times

February 3, 2006 Donald Rumsfeld gave a speech to the National Press Club and said that "counter-surveillance" of U.S. civilians is a "perfectly understandable thing." "In short," he explained, "it's no big deal." During the speech, Rumsfeld was heckled by activist Heather Hurwitz. "You are torturing people," yelled Hurwitz. "You are a war criminal." "Well," said Rumsfeld, "we'll count her as undecided."
Source 1:

News.com.au

Source 2:

Democracy Now

January 28, 2006 Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez vowed to jail anyone who spies for the United States.
Source:

BBC News

January 3, 2006A former NSA agent named Russell Tice claimed that the NSA had repeatedly spied on American citizens. “I believe I have seen some things that are illegal,” he said.
Source:

Democracy Now!

December 15, 2005Leaked Pentagon documents showed that the U.S. military was routinely collecting intelligence on antiwar groups and putting it into a database. The Pentagon also launched 1-800-CALL-SPY, a hotline that allows U.S. citizens to report suspicious activity directly to the military.
Source:

Democracy Now!

October 14, 2005A CIA manager known only as “Jose” was named to oversee the entire U.S. spy community.
Source:

AP

November 19, 2004A new poll showed that nearly one half of the U.S. population believes that human beings did not evolve, but instead were created by God within the last 10,000 years, while only one third believe that the theory of evolution is accurate.
Source:

Gallup

December 31, 2003Large shipments of frozen french fries, which were pre-fried in beef tallow, were in limbo because Japan and other Asian countries were refusing to accept them.
Source:

Tri-City Herald

October 28, 2003Neuroscientists determined that motherhood makes female rats smarter, calmer, and more courageous.
Source:

Reuters

July 11, 2003A giant flyborg, an artificially intelligent robot balloon, escaped from the Magna Science Adventure Centre in Britain.
Source:

BBC

June 12, 2003British scientists were developing "smart" airline seats that will detect potential terrorists by measuring airline passengers' anxiety levels.
Source:

New Scientist

November 19, 2002 American television producers were reportedly increasing the rate at which actors deliver their lines on the theory that viewers will find the characters more intelligent.
September 11, 2001Physicist Stephen Hawking recommended that humans modify their genome to speed up evolution and prevent intelligent computers from taking over the world.
June 19, 2001Women are more caring than men, scientists discovered, and old women are smarter than old men.
August 0, 2000A draft U.S. National Intelligence Estimate reported that the government of Afghanistan, plagued by corruption and at war with a resurgent Taliban, is in a “downward spiral.”
Source:

The New York Times


December 2009

THE GENERAL ELECTRIC SUPERFRAUD
Why the Hudson River Will Never Run Clean
By David Gargill

THE MASTER OF SPIN BOLDAK
Undercover with Afghanistan’s Drug-Trafficking Border Police
By Matthieu Aikins

MERMAID FEVER
A story by Steven Millhauser

UNDERSTANDING OBAMACARE
By Luke Mitchell

Also: Dave Hickey and Wendell Berry