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Crude Awakening: How the Keystone Veto Dashes Canada's 'Superpower' Dreams Print
Thursday, 26 February 2015 15:29

Dickinson writes: "Since ultraconservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper - famously described by one Canadian columnist as 'our version of George W. Bush, minus the warmth and intellect' - took power in 2006, he's quietly set his country on a course that seems to be straight from the Koch brothers' road map."

Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada. (photo: Patrick Doyle/Canadian Press)
Prime Minister Stephen Harper of Canada. (photo: Patrick Doyle/Canadian Press)


Crude Awakening: How the Keystone Veto Dashes Canada's 'Superpower' Dreams

By Tim Dickinson, Rolling Stone

26 February 15

 

arack Obama's veto of Keystone XL has placed the export pipeline for Canadian tar-sands crude on its deathbed. Earlier in February, the Environmental Protection Agency revealed that Keystone could spur 1.37 billion tons of excess carbon emissions — providing the State Department with all the scientific evidence required to spike the project, permanently. If the news has cheered climate activists across the globe, it also underscored the folly of Canada's catastrophic quest, in recent years, to transform itself into a dirty-energy "superpower."

In the minds of many American right-wingers, Canada may be a socialist hell-scape of universal health care and quasi-European welfare policies. But it is also home to 168 billion barrels of proven oil reserves, the third-largest in the world. Since ultraconservative Prime Minister Stephen Harper — famously described by one Canadian columnist as "our version of George W. Bush, minus the warmth and intellect" — took power in 2006, he's quietly set his country on a course that seems to be straight from the Koch brothers' road map. Harper, 55, has gutted environmental regulation and fast-tracked colossal projects to bring new oil to market. Under his leadership, Canada has also slashed corporate taxes and is eliminating 30,000 public-sector jobs.

Riding record-high oil prices — $107 a barrel as recently as last June — Harper's big bet on Canadian crude appeared savvy. The oil boom had driven a seven percent surge in national income, helping Canada ride out the Great Recession with less anguish than most developed nations. And with fossil fuels swelling to nearly 40 percent of net exports, Harper's Conservative government was on track to deliver a Tea Party twofer in advance of federal elections this fall: a budget surplus and a deep tax cut for the country's richest earners.

But today, with the price of oil cut in half, the Canadian economy is staggering. Tar-sands producers have clawed back billions in planned investments and begun axing jobs by the thousands. The Canadian dollar, recently at parity with the U.S. dollar, has dipped to about 80 cents. Instead of a federal budget surplus, economists are now projecting a C$2.3 billion deficit. "The drop in oil prices," said Stephen Poloz, the nation's central banker, in January, "is unambiguously negative for the Canadian economy."

If low oil prices hold, the pain will get worse. Most of Canada's reserves are locked up in tar sands. The industrial operations required to get the oil from the ground to your gas tank are not only filthy and energy-intensive — generating up to double the greenhouse emissions of conventional oil — they also take years of construction to bring online. Because of investment decisions made during the boom years, tar-sands production is projected to expand by seven percent this year, exacerbating the glut. The collapse of crude is threatening to take Harper's nearly dec-ade-long rule down with it. Canada's Liberal party, headed by 43-year-old Justin Trudeau (son of legendary Canadian PM Pierre), is running neck and neck in the polls, and bashing Harper where he used to be strongest — his management of the economy. "It's not fiscally responsible," said Trudeau in January, "to pin all your hopes on oil prices remaining high, and when they fall, being forced to make it up as they go along."

As we, in the United States, consider the fate of our own massive oil reserves and confront the specter of yet another Bush presidency, Stephen Harper's Canada offers a cautionary tale — about the economic and political havoc that can be unleashed when a first-world nation yokes itself to Tea Party economics and to the boom and bust of Big Oil.

Stephen Harper came of age in Alberta, a land of cowboys and oil rigs sometimes referred to as "Texas of the North." He began his career in the mailroom of Imperial Oil (today an offshoot of Exxon). He rose through Parliament promising a revolution in federal affairs under the battle cry "The West wants in!" Following his election to prime minister in 2006, he wasted little time unveiling his plan to open up his nation's vast oil reserves. Before an audience of British businessmen in 2006, he spoke of "the emerging energy superpower our government intends to build," and rhapsodized about the "ocean of oil-soaked sand [that] lies under the muskeg of northern Alberta." He framed the challenge of bringing that crude to market as though it were a Wonder of the World. "It requires vast amounts of capital?.?.?.?and an army of skilled workers," he said. "It is an enterprise of epic proportions, akin to the building of the pyramids or China's Great Wall. Only bigger."

Championing dirty oil meant that Harper had to undermine traditional Canadian values — including environmental stewardship and international collaboration. In 2011, Canada unceremoniously abandoned its climate obligations under the Kyoto Accord, which Harper had once blasted as "a socialist scheme to suck money out of wealth-producing nations." 

Under Harper, investment in the tar sands has surged more than 140 percent to C$59 billion. And the value of Canadian crude exports has more than doubled, to C$82 billion. In the process, northern Alberta has become an environmental sacrifice zone: Tar-sands strip mining has created an apocalyptic landscape of oil-scarred tundra and toxic wastewater ponds.

Today, the tar sands produce nearly 2 million barrels a day. And the United States consumes virtually every drop: Canadian crude makes up 42 percent of American net oil imports. Until the current crash, it looked like the party was just getting started. In June, the Canadian Association of Petroleum Producers projected tar-sands output would double by 2025.

Canada has benefited from Harper's oil boom — though less than you might imagine. In a quirk of Canadian law, the federal government collects no oil royalties. Its fortunes rise, indirectly, from oil, benefiting only from GDP growth and the surge in corporate and payroll taxes. The province of Alberta does collect oil royalties: C$5.2 billion last year alone. But far from socking that money away in a sovereign wealth fund — as Norway has done, amassing a portfolio worth more than $800 billion — the province has pissed it away on tax cuts. In 2001, Alberta instituted a flat tax of just 10 percent. To keep the working class on board, Alberta's government eliminated health care premiums for the province's version of Canada's national health care. Ever since — notwithstanding years of inflated oil prices — the province has bled red ink, and it now faces a projected C$7 billion budget shortfall all on its own.

Alberta created nearly 50 percent of Canadian jobs in the past decade, but the province's good fortune actually hurt the rest of the country. Canada now effectively has two economies, and they work at cross purposes. When oil is booming, the Canadian dollar is strong. That undermines the traditional manufacturing economy by inflating the cost of export goods like Canadian car parts. "As the dollar was rising because of higher oil prices," Poloz said, it drove "destruction of the capacity to export."

Until now, the Harper government has been happy to sacrifice industry for oil. Speaking last June, near the peak in crude prices, Harper's dour finance minister, Joe Oliver, underscored the government's conviction that Canada's economic future hinges on massive oil reserves, not its Rust Belt manufacturing base. "The choice is stark," Oliver told a summit of the International Economic Forum of the Americas in Montreal. "Head down the path of economic decline, higher unemployment?.?.?.?and growing debt, or achieve prosperity and security now and for future generations through the responsible development of our resources."

If you think Keystone XL plays an outsize role in our national political debate, you haven't visited Canada lately. For years, the Harper government had pinned its hopes on this export pipeline to ensure the continued, explosive growth in tar-sands production.

Even under the best of circumstances, the economics of Canadian crude extraction are tough. It requires huge upfront capital expenditures in heavy machinery to strip-mine raw tar sands, separate the tarry bitumen with heat and steam, and then upgrade the sludge into a synthetic crude, liquid enough to transport. If capital requirements are higher, revenues from tar-sands crude sales are historically lower than for conventional oil. Alberta is remote and landlocked, and the primary refining capacity for the crude sits in the U.S. Midwest. This gives the refiners the upper hand. Even when oil prices were peaking last summer, Canadian oil traded at roughly $20 a barrel less than the benchmark price for West Texas Intermediate — costing the country billions.

Desperate to reduce, if not eliminate, that disparity, the Harper government has sought access to the global export market — where oil prices are set by supply and demand, not quirks of geography. Shipping oil at that scale requires pipelines. Thus, one of Harper's earliest priorities was clearing the way for infrastructure giant TransCanada to build an 830,000-barrel-a-day pipeline connecting Alberta's oil patch to American Gulf Coast refineries.

When plans for Keystone XL were announced, in 2008, it seemed like a slam-dunk. On his first international trip, in 2009, President Obama traveled to Ottawa, where he and Harper began negotiations over tar-sands crude. In 2011, Hillary Clinton's State Department released a report finding the pipeline would create "limited adverse environmental impacts."

Then, almost overnight, under the leadership of climate activists like Bill McKibben and 350.org, Keystone XL became an emblem of the fight against climate change. Harper was shocked when Obama called in November 2011 to tell him the project — a "no-brainer" in Harper's mind — was now on hold.

Attempting to break the logjam, Harper began pitching tar-sands oil abroad. In February 2012, he took his pitch to America's chief economic rival, China. "Ninety-nine percent of Canada's energy exports go to one country — the United States," he told a crowd of executives in Guangzhou. "It is increasingly clear that Canada's commercial interests are best served through diversification of our energy markets."

No longer able to bank on Keystone, the Harper government embarked on a mad rush to approve pipelines to ports on both of Canada's coasts — only to discover that anti-pipeline fervor had migrated north. In 2012, Joe Oliver, then the natural-resources minister, lashed out at "radical" environmental groups for attempting to "hijack" Canada's economy. Their crime? Seeking mandated reviews of pipeline projects, spills from which would endanger fisheries, drinking water and fragile ecosystems.

To avoid a crimp in production, the tar-sands producers said they needed at least one export pipeline to come online by 2018. So the Harper regime proceeded to rewrite bedrock environmental law, jamming through 150 pages of deregulation on the back of the federal budget in 2012. Heavily influenced by the oil industry, according to documents leaked to environmental groups, the legislation slashed protections for waterways and replaced mandatory environmental impact reviews with assessments performed only at the discretion of political appointees. Ecologists decried the budget as the worst setback in environmental law in more than five decades. Worse: Harper's government now insists it has no authority to weigh climate impacts when permitting pipeline projects.

But far from speeding pipeline construction, the Harper government's overreach has led provincial and First Nations stakeholders to fight back — stalling two pipeline projects that would carry Alberta crude across the Canadian Rockies to the Pacific Coast. Last May, the Harper government gave its approval to Northern Gateway, a 525,000-barrel-a-day pipeline terminating in a small port town near the Alaska border. But the project has bogged down, facing hundreds of provincial regulatory hurdles and now nearly a dozen lawsuits from First Nations that would bear the environmental impacts of construction and supertanker traffic. Similar opposition has stymied a proposal to triple the capacity of the existing 300,000-barrel-a-day Trans Mountain pipeline — which stretches from the oil patch to climate-conscious Vancouver.

Blocked to the south and the west, the Harper regime has thrown its weight behind the $10 billion Energy East project — TransCanada's "plan B" to Keystone XL. The pipeline would carry a third more oil, 1.1 million barrels a day, and stretch across four time zones to the Atlantic Ocean deepwater port of St. John — before being loaded onto tankers and shipped to refineries as far away as India.

As elections approach this fall, Harper is vulnerable on all fronts. The collapse in crude has thrown his economic agenda into disarray. The Conservative government won't even reveal its budget – originally expected in February — praying that a quick rebound in crude prices might fix the hole in federal finances.

In December, Harper angered climate-conscious voters by abandoning a pledge to put a price on carbon. "Under the current circumstances," he said, "it would be crazy.?.?.?.?We're not going to kill jobs, and we're not going to impose the carbon tax."

And Harper's failure to broker a deal with Obama on Keystone XL has stirred resentment with voters in the western provinces. When Trudeau spoke before the Calgary Petroleum Club in February, the crowd broke into spontaneous applause after he slammed Harper over the "broken" relationship with the United States: "[The] prime minister has demonstrated?.?.?.?that he just doesn't play well with others."

Far from speaking truth to power to Calgary's oilmen, Trudeau is pitching himself as a liberal who can at once rebuild international trust in Canada's environmental ethics and bring the tar sands to market. He says it's unfair that Canada's oil sands have been made the poster child for climate change. And he dismissed environmentalists and the belief that "if you block the pipelines, you can shut down the oil sands and save the planet." That thinking, he added, is as "simplistic as it is wrong."

Unfortunately, the science tells us that this "simplistic" thinking is entirely accurate. A January paper in the journal Nature, modeling the unburnable fossil-fuel reserves across the globe, concludes that 99 percent of Canada's tar sands must stay in the ground to keep global temperature rise under catastrophic levels. As a policy matter, that means winding down production in the next five years — with mining of Canadian bitumen dropping to "negligible levels after 2020."

None of Canada's major political parties are providing the leadership to put the country on that path. But the free market and depressed oil prices could force such changes all the same. A study of the national oil and gas industries published in January by investment research firm CanOils warned that fewer than 20 percent of Canada's oil firms "will be able to sustain their business long-term."

Existing tar-sands operations will yet be able to cover their cash costs at $50 a barrel, CanOils writes. But because of the massive startup costs required, most new investments in oil-sands production simply won't pencil out. If the markets become convinced that cheap oil is here to stay, producers won't be able to borrow against future reserves and financing will dry up. "Canadian oil production, on the whole, appears unsustainable in the long run at $50," the report concludes. Adding to the grim forecast, Goldman Sachs analysts said in January that they think the oil slide won't stabilize until prices hit $30 a barrel. Citibank was even more bearish, forecasting the price of a barrel falling to $20.

Canada, indeed, stands at a crossroads. It can continue down Harper's chosen path, unearthing billions of barrels of filthy fossil fuels and shackling its economy to the volatile trade in a single commodity — becoming rich or going broke at the whim of the oil markets.

Or it can take advantage of the collapse of crude prices to return to a more sustainable economy — as a currency-advantaged exporter of goods and services to its southern neighbor, the most voracious consumer economy on Earth. But even if Canadians oust Harper in October, a transformational change away from the nation's new petro-economy appears remote. "?'The West got in,'?" Trudeau conceded to the audience at the Calgary Petroleum Club. "And it will remain in."

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FOCUS | Bernie Sanders: "I'm Prepared to Take On the Billionaire Class" Print
Thursday, 26 February 2015 13:41

Galindez writes: "One thing that frustrates Bernie is how many good people have given up on politics. We see it on these pages all the time. People who know what’s wrong in our country but have lost faith in the political process. Too often we lump everyone together and judge them based on their affiliations."

Senator Bernie Sanders (photo: AP)
Senator Bernie Sanders (photo: AP)


Bernie Sanders: "I'm Prepared to Take On the Billionaire Class"

By Scott Galindez, Reader Supported News

26 February 15

 

t was the 2nd day of a three-day trip to Iowa for Senator Bernie Sanders. A student at Drake University asked Bernie, during a Town Hall meeting, “Are you going to run for President?” Bernie started out with his usual response. “I love Iowa, but not enough to just visit and give a bunch of speeches in the middle of winter. I’m considering running for president …” Then came one of those moments that might be the turning point in the senator’s possible campaign.

“Let me throw that back to you, do you think there is the support in this country?” Person after person rose and said the support was there. Bernie said he needed an unprecedented grass-roots movement to do it right. Bernie continued to ask the crowd if the American people were ready to take on the billionaire class.

It was the theme of the three-day tour, and I am convinced that Bernie Sanders wants to run for president. He wants to take on the Koch brothers, wants to reverse the trend of wealth accumulating at the top. However, he knows he can’t do it alone. He knows he needs millions of people to run with him.

Bernie has been fighting for decades. One thing is for sure, he is very persistent. There have been many campaigns where he got one or two percent of the vote before he started winning. In the fight before us, we need someone with the backbone to fight on, even through tough times. The Koch Brothers and their allies will stop at nothing to protect their investments. They are spending one hundred billion dollars to protect what they have and to keep the wealth concentrated at the top. It will take a fighter like Bernie Sanders to stand up to the billionaire class.

One thing that frustrates Bernie is how many good people have given up on politics. We see it on these pages all the time. People who know what’s wrong in our country but have lost faith in the political process. Too often we lump everyone together and judge them based on their affiliations. I am frustrated with Democrats as a whole, but there are good Democrats along with bad apples. Democrats like Barbara Lee and Elizabeth Warren need our support. Instead of giving up, we need to recommit ourselves and take back the Democratic Party. There is not a better vehicle that can be used to take our country back.

David Koch tried as a Libertarian and found that, even with billions of dollars, he couldn’t succeed in a third party. So he bought the Republicans. We don’t have billions of dollars, but we do have grass-roots strength if we stand and fight.

Senator Sanders understands that the struggle won’t end on election day. I agree with him on one of the biggest mistakes the president made in 2008: instead of putting a grass-roots organizer in charge of Obama for America, he turned the organization over to the DNC, and made it nothing more than a group that they could call on to phone-bank. In contrast, look at Democracy for America: it remained a grass-roots organization and recently voted to join with MoveOn to try to draft Elizabeth Warren. They voted to participate in “Run Warren Run” despite Howard Dean’s support of Hillary Clinton.

I went to meetings for Obama’s group in Miami in 2009. There was frustration that the agenda was being passed down from the DNC, and OFA couldn’t use its grass-roots strength to keep the movement going. The DNC strangled OFA.

At this point Senator Sanders has not decided if he will run as a Democrat or as an Independent. He sees the advantages to running as a Democrat, including ballot access and access to debates. Running as an Independent, while having its advantages, also creates many obstacles that will be hard to overcome. Ballot access laws are different in every state. Even with a political party behind him, Ralph Nader has never been able to get on the ballot in all 50 states. Nader always complained about the money and time that was wasted on ballot access that he could have spent campaigning. Instead of compiling signatures to get him on the ballot, his volunteers could have been making phone calls, organizing rallies, going door-to-door. I think Bernie understands this and wants to run as a Democrat.

The event in Ames with over 300 Democrats showed that there is support within the party for Bernie and his message. The party treasurer said it was the most money they had ever raised at an event. Obama’s campaign showed that the country was ready for the kind of change that Bernie Sanders is proposing. Thepresident didn’t deliver, but that is not a reason to give up. We need to keep fighting until we win.

Bernie also pointed out that we have been winning on issue after issue. We need to give ourselves more credit. We elected and re-elected a black man, and there are now more and more women in Congress. Conservative states are allowing gay marriage. It’s on the economic front that we are losing. Bernie believes that if we can stand together, we can defeat the billionaire class. He acknowledges it won’t be easy: change never is.

I think that Obama’s election shows the country is ready for bold leadership. Now we need someone who will follow through.

Everyone I spoke to who heard had Bernie speak over the three days was impressed and said they agreed with everything he said. The found him refreshing and authentic. They said he gave them hope that the problems they were beginning to think were unsolvable can be solved.

He is clearly a champion for working people and not afraid to take on the rich and powerful. I hope America is ready to stand and fight with him. I had a chance to ask Bernie what his supporters at RSN could do to help. He wants people who are ready to stand with him to call his campaign and let him knowwhat they can do to help. “Friends of Bernie Sanders” is the campaign arm for Bernie. The website is www.bernie.org. Here is Bernie talking to RSN:



Scott Galindez attended Syracuse University, where he first became politically active. The writings of El Salvador’s slain archbishop Oscar Romero and the on-campus South Africa divestment movement converted him from a Reagan supporter to an activist for Peace and Justice. Over the years he has been influenced by the likes of Philip Berrigan, William Thomas, Mitch Snyder, Don White, Lisa Fithian, and Paul Wellstone. Scott met Marc Ash while organizing counterinaugural events after George W. Bush’s first stolen election. Scott will be spending a year covering the presidential election from Iowa.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

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Why Does the FBI Have to Manufacture Its Own Plots if Terrorism and ISIS Are Such Grave Threats? Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=29455"><span class="small">Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept</span></a>   
Thursday, 26 February 2015 09:47

Greenwald writes: "The FBI and major media outlets yesterday trumpeted the agency's latest counter-terrorism triumph: the arrest of three Brooklyn men, ages 19 to 30, on charges of conspiring to travel to Syria to fight for ISIS."

Pulitzer Prize winner Glenn Greenwald. (photo: AP)
Pulitzer Prize winner Glenn Greenwald. (photo: AP)


Why Does the FBI Have to Manufacture Its Own Plots if Terrorism and ISIS Are Such Grave Threats?

By Glenn Greenwald, The Intercept

26 February 15

 

he FBI and major media outlets yesterday trumpeted the agency’s latest counter-terrorism triumph: the arrest of three Brooklyn men, ages 19 to 30, on charges of conspiring to travel to Syria to fight for ISIS (photo of joint FBI/NYPD press conference, above). As my colleague Murtaza Hussain ably documents, “it appears that none of the three men was in any condition to travel or support the Islamic State, without help from the FBI informant.” One of the frightening terrorist villains told the FBI informant that, beyond having no money, he had encountered a significant problem in following through on the FBI’s plot: his mom had taken away his passport. Noting the bizarre and unhinged ranting of one of the suspects, Hussain noted on Twitter that this case “sounds like another victory for the FBI over the mentally ill.”

In this regard, this latest arrest appears to be quite similar to the overwhelming majority of terrorism arrests the FBI has proudly touted over the last decade. As my colleague Andrew Fishman and I wrote last month – after the FBI manipulated a 20-year-old loner who lived with his parents into allegedly agreeing to join an FBI-created plot to attack the Capitol – these cases follow a very clear pattern:

The known facts from this latest case seem to fit well within a now-familiar FBI pattern whereby the agency does not disrupt planned domestic terror attacks but rather creates them, then publicly praises itself for stopping its own plots.

First, they target a Muslim: not due to any evidence of intent or capability to engage in terrorism, but rather for the “radical” political views he expresses. In most cases, the Muslim targeted by the FBI is a very young (late teens, early 20s), adrift, unemployed loner who has shown no signs of mastering basic life functions, let alone carrying out a serious terror attack, and has no known involvement with actual terrorist groups.

They then find another Muslim who is highly motivated to help disrupt a “terror plot”: either because they’re being paid substantial sums of money by the FBI or because (as appears to be the case here) they are charged with some unrelated crime and are desperate to please the FBI in exchange for leniency (or both). The FBI then gives the informant a detailed attack plan, and sometimes even the money and other instruments to carry it out, and the informant then shares all of that with the target. Typically, the informant also induces, lures, cajoles, and persuades the target to agree to carry out the FBI-designed plot. In some instances where the target refuses to go along, they have their informant offer huge cash inducements to the impoverished target.

Once they finally get the target to agree, the FBI swoops in at the last minute, arrests the target, issues a press release praising themselves for disrupting a dangerous attack (which it conceived of, funded, and recruited the operatives for), and the DOJ and federal judges send their target to prison for years or even decades (where they are kept in special GITMO-like units). Subservient U.S. courts uphold the charges by applying such a broad and permissive interpretation of “entrapment” that it could almost never be successfully invoked.

Once again, we should all pause for a moment to thank the brave men and women of the FBI for saving us from their own terror plots.

FBI website data on domestic terrorism. (photo: The Intercept)
FBI website data on domestic terrorism. (photo: The Intercept)

One can, if one really wishes, debate whether the FBI should be engaging in such behavior. For reasons I and many others have repeatedly argued, these cases are unjust in the extreme: a form of pre-emptory prosecution where vulnerable individuals are targeted and manipulated not for any criminal acts they have committed but rather for the bad political views they have expressed. They end up sending young people to prison for decades for “crimes” which even their sentencing judges acknowledge they never would have seriously considered, let alone committed, in the absence of FBI trickery. It’s hard to imagine anyone thinking this is a justifiable tactic, but I’m certain there are people who believe that. Let’s leave that question to the side for the moment in favor of a different issue.

We’re constantly bombarded with dire warnings about the grave threat of home-grown terrorists, “lone wolf” extremists, and ISIS. So intensified are these official warnings that The New York Times earlier this month cited anonymous U.S. intelligence officials to warn of the growing ISIS threat and announce “the prospect of a new global war on terror.”

But how serious of a threat can all of this be, at least domestically, if the FBI continually has to resort to manufacturing its own plots by trolling the internet in search of young drifters and/or the mentally ill whom they target, recruit and then manipulate into joining? Does that not, by itself, demonstrate how over-hyped and insubstantial this “threat” actually is? Shouldn’t there be actual plots, ones that are created and fueled without the help of the FBI, that the agency should devote its massive resources to stopping?

This FBI tactic would be akin to having the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) constantly warn of the severe threat posed by drug addiction while it simultaneously uses pushers on its payroll to deliberately get people hooked on drugs so that they can arrest the addicts they’ve created and thus justify their own warnings and budgets (and that kind of threat-creation, just by the way, is not all that far off from what the other federal law enforcement agencies, like the FBI, are actually doing). As we noted the last time we wrote about this, the Justice Department is aggressively pressuring U.S. allies to employ these same entrapment tactics in order to create their own terrorists, who can then be paraded around as proof of the grave threat.

Threats that are real, and substantial, do not need to be manufactured and concocted. Indeed, as the blogger Digby, citing Juan Cole, recently showed, run-of-the-mill “lone wolf” gun violence is so much of a greater threat to Americans than “domestic terror” by every statistical metric that it’s almost impossible to overstate the disparity:

Tom Price, Chairman of the House Budget Committee (photo: Rolling Stone)
Graph indicating murders caused by guns in comparison to terrorism. (photo: Mary Altaffer/AP)

In that regard, it is not difficult to understand why “domestic terror” and “homegrown extremism” are things the FBI is desperately determined to create. But this FBI terror-plot-concoction should, by itself, suffice to demonstrate how wildly exaggerated this threat actually is.

UPDATE: The ACLU of Massachusetts Kade Crockford notes this extraordinarily revealing quote from former FBI assistant director Thomas Fuentes, as he defends one of the worst FBI terror “sting” operations of all (the Cromitie prosecution we describe at length here):

If you’re submitting budget proposals for a law enforcement agency, for an intelligence agency, you’re not going to submit the proposal that “We won the war on terror and everything’s great,” cuz the first thing that’s gonna happen is your budget’s gonna be cut in half. You know, it’s my opposite of Jesse Jackson’s ‘Keep Hope Alive’—it’s ‘Keep Fear Alive.’ Keep it alive.

That is the FBI’s terrorism strategy – keep fear alive – and it drives everything they do.

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It's Official: NSA Spying Is Hurting the US Tech Economy Print
Thursday, 26 February 2015 09:42

Whittaker writes: "China is no longer using high-profile US technology brands for state purchases, amid ongoing revelations about mass surveillance and hacking by the US government."

A new report confirmed key brands, including Cisco, Apple, Intel, and McAfee - among others - have been dropped from the Chinese government's list of authorized brands. (photo: CBS News)
A new report confirmed key brands, including Cisco, Apple, Intel, and McAfee - among others - have been dropped from the Chinese government's list of authorized brands. (photo: CBS News)


It's Official: NSA Spying Is Hurting the US Tech Economy

By Zack Whittaker, ZDNet

26 February 15

 

hina is no longer using high-profile US technology brands for state purchases, amid ongoing revelations about mass surveillance and hacking by the US government.

A new report confirmed key brands, including Cisco, Apple, Intel, and McAfee -- among others -- have been dropped from the Chinese government's list of authorized brands, a Reuters report said Wednesday.

The number of approved foreign technology brands fell by a third, based on an analysis of the procurement list. Less than half of those companies with security products remain on the list.

Although a number of reasons were cited, domestic companies were said to offer "more product guarantees" than overseas rivals in the wake of the Edward Snowden leaks. Some reports have attempted to pin a multi-billion dollar figure on the impact of the leaks.

In reality, the figure could be incalculable.

The report confirms what many US technology companies have been saying for the past year: the activities by the NSA are harming their businesses in crucial growth markets, including China.

The Chinese government's procurement list changes coincided with a series of high profile leaks that showed the US government have been on an international mass surveillance spree, as well as hacking expeditions into technology companies, governments, and the personal cellphones of world leaders.

Concerned about backdoors implanted by the NSA, those revelations sparked a change in Chinese policy by forcing Western technology companies to hand over their source code for inspection. That led to an outcry in the capital by politicians who in the not-so-distant past accused Chinese companies of doing exactly the same thing.

The fear is that as the China-US cybersecurity standoff continues, it's come too late for Silicon Valley companies, which are already suffering financially thanks to the NSA's activities.

Microsoft said in January at its fiscal fourth-quarter earnings that China "fell short" of its expectations, which chief executive Satya Nadella described as a "set of geopolitical issues" that the company was working through. He did not elaborate.

Most recently, HP said on Tuesday at its fiscal first-quarter earnings call that it had "execution issues" in China thanks to the "tough market" with increasing competition from the local vendors approved by the Chinese government.

But one company stands out: Cisco probably suffered the worst of all.

Earlier this month at its fiscal second-quarter earnings, the networking giant said it took a 19 percent revenue ding in China, amid claims the NSA was installing backdoors and implants on its routers in transit.

China remains a vital core geography for most US technology giants with a global reach. But until some middle-ground can be reached between the two governments, expect Silicon Valley's struggles in the country to only get worse.

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Republicans Unlearning Facts Learned in Third Grade to Compete in Primary Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=9160"><span class="small">Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Wednesday, 25 February 2015 15:34

Borowitz writes: "In the hopes of appealing to Republican primary voters, candidates for the 2016 Presidential nomination are working around the clock to unlearn everything that they have learned since the third grade, aides to the candidates have confirmed."

Republicans Rick Perry, Jeb Bush, and Scott Walker. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty, Kevork Djansezian/Getty, Darren Hauck/Getty)
Republicans Rick Perry, Jeb Bush, and Scott Walker. (photo: Chip Somodevilla/Getty, Kevork Djansezian/Getty, Darren Hauck/Getty)


Republicans Unlearning Facts Learned in Third Grade to Compete in Primary

By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker

25 February 15

 

The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."


n the hopes of appealing to Republican primary voters, candidates for the 2016 Presidential nomination are working around the clock to unlearn everything that they have learned since the third grade, aides to the candidates have confirmed.

With the Iowa caucuses less than a year away, the hopefuls are busy scrubbing their brains of basic facts of math, science, and geography in an attempt to resemble the semi-sentient beings that Republican primary voters prize.

An aide to Jeb Bush acknowledged that, for the former Florida governor, “The unlearning curve has been daunting.”

“The biggest strike against Jeb is that he graduated from college Phi Beta Kappa,” the aide said. “It’s going to take a lot of work to get his brain back to its factory settings.”

At the campaign of Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, the mood was considerably more upbeat, as aides indicated that Walker’s ironclad façade of ignorance is being polished to a high sheen.

“The fact that Scott instinctively says that he doesn’t know the answers to even the easiest questions gives him an enormous leg up,” an aide said.

But while some G.O.P. candidates are pulling all-nighters to rid themselves of knowledge acquired when they were eight, the campaign of Rick Perry, the former governor of Texas, is exuding a quiet confidence.

“I don’t want to sound too cocky about Rick,” said one Perry aide. “But what little he knows, he’s shown he can forget.”

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