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Sunday, February 26, 2006

Bush Says He Is Tough on National Security, Is He?

Bush wants the Iraq War and warrantless wiretapping to continue as that is being STRONG on National Security; however, Bush has done nothing about securing the Ports or the Borders.

People wise up. Bush has been lying to us since the start of the Iraq War.

The Holloway/Twitty Lawsuit Against Joran and Paulus Vander Sloot

Beth Twitty and Dave Holloway vs Joran and Pualus Van Der Sloot Lawsuit

Jacko Lawyer Tom Mesereau Quits

A year ago, Tom Mesereau was living large as Michael Jackson’s criminal defense attorney. As the prosecution offered witness after witness in the state of California’s child molestation case against Jackson, Mesereau won kudos for swatting each one away.
But the party is over. Yesterday, Mesereau and his partner Susan Yu resigned as Jackson’s attorneys. Since the end of the child molestation case last June, the pair had been representing Jackson in civil matters, including a $4 million lawsuit brought on by Jackson’s ex-business partner Marc Schaffel.
Last week, neither Mesereau nor Yu showed up for Schaffel’s deposition in that case — a sign that something was wrong. Yesterday, when Jackson’s longtime associate Evvy Tavasci was set to be deposed, Schaffel’s attorney Howard King received notice that the pair no longer represented Jackson.
Calls and e-mails to Mesereau and Yu were not returned last night, but the issue, sources say, is money. Like all of Jackson’s employees, the attorneys have not been paid.
Also leaving Jackson’s legal team is Houston attorney Michael Sydow. I told you a couple of weeks ago that Sydow was out, along with Brent Asycough, associate and friend of self-appointed Jackson lawyer and spokesperson, Brian Oxman.
In fact, Oxman and Mesereau have clashed for more than a year. At one point Mesereau managed to get Oxman fired from Jackson’s criminal defense, but Oxman resurfaced after the trial and continued to make public appearances on behalf of Jackson despite Mesereau’s warnings to stop.
Jackson has now run through so many attorneys in Beverly Hills and its environs that he may have exhausted the supply. He is now represented by Thomas Mundell of Westlake Village, Calif.
I’m told that in Schaffel’s deposition, as well as a few others in the same case, Mundell — no doubt highly qualified in most matters — was unprepared and did not have a full grasp of Jackson’s Byzantine world or the cast of characters who have come and gone in the last few years.
Interestingly, Jackson’s signature appears on the form changing attorneys, dated Feb. 21, 2003, which is odd since he’s been abroad since a one-day appearance in the U.S. on Nov. 23, 2005. Otherwise, Mesereau would only have seen Jackson in person at his own deposition in London last September at the Dorchester Hotel.
According to sources, Mesereau was so tired from the quick trip that he can be heard dozing on the videotape. Sydow did all of the talking, which didn’t amount to much in the way of objections. That nine-hour inquisition of Jackson is said to be devastating for the singer, enough so that Mesereau may have seen the case was a loser.
Ironically, Mesereau was so high on adrenaline after winning Jackson’s criminal case last June that he and Yu left their firm and started a new one based on “saving” Jackson from all legal predators.
But they could have asked a host of former attorneys — which include John Branca, Bert Fields, Brian Wolf, Zia Modabber and so on — who have tried to untangle Jackson’s many messes, only to leave unappreciated, uncompensated and unfulfilled.
Mesereau leaves at a time when Jackson faces several civil suits, including a $48 million breach of contract from Darien Dash, a $90,000 suit from his veterinarian for owed fees and a recovered memory/child molestation case in New Orleans.
There may be more, since today marks nine weeks since any of Jackson’s 60 or so employees have received paychecks.
Mesereau will be missed. Despite the fact that he doesn’t return phone calls and took our admiration of him last spring for granted, I will always recall his deft cross-examination of District Attorney Tom Sneddon’s many shaky witnesses.
No one in the courtroom will ever forget the famous assertion Mesereau elicited from the mother of Jackson’s teen accuser, Janet Arvizo, that the singer planned to kidnap her children via a hot air balloon. It was priceless, and no doubt won Jackson his acquittal.
Meantime, we’re still trying to figure out what Yu’s e-mail handle means. The first part, without the domain, is “michaelhandsomeboy.”

From Gretawire: MIcrosoft vs Gneral Motors

I received this today and thought of you under your desk trying to fix your computer: For all of us who feel only the deepest love and affection for the way computers have enhanced our lives, read on.At a recent computer expo, Bill Gates reportedly compared the computer industry with the auto industry and stated, "If GM had kept up with technology like the computer industry has, we would all be driving $25.00 cars that got 1,000 miles to the gallon." In response to Bill's comments, General Motors issued a press release stating: If GM had developed technology like Microsoft, we would all be driving cars with the following characteristics (and I just love this part): 1) For no reason whatsoever, your car would crash twice a day. 2) Every time they repainted the lines in the road, you would have to buy a new car. 3) Occasionally your car would die on the freeway for no reason. You would have to pull to the side of the road, close all of the windows, shut off the car, restart it, and reopen the windows before you could continue. For some reason you would simply accept this. 4) Occasionally, executing a maneuver such as a left turn would cause your car to shut down and refuse to restart, in which case you would have to reinstall the engine. 5) Macintosh would make a car that was powered by the sun, was reliable, five times as fast and twice as easy to drive — but would run on only five percent of the roads. 6) The oil, water temperature, and alternator warning lights would all be replaced by a single "This Car Has Performed An Illegal Operation" warning light. 7) The airbag system would ask, "Are you sure?" before deploying. 8) Occasionally, for no reason whatsoever, your car would lock you out and refuse to let you in until you simultaneously lifted the door handle, turned the key and grabbed hold of the radio antenna. 9) Every time a new car was introduced car buyers would have to learn how to drive all over again because none of the controls would operate in the same manner as the old car. 10) You'd have to press the "Start" button to turn the engine off.

From Gretawire: Natalee Holloway

Greta,In regards to the issue of convenient forum in the Natalee Holloway case and burdening the taxpayers of the Great State of New York... well, as one of the taxpayers of the State of New York, I would like to say that I don't mind at all. It is zero inconvenience to me. Just the opposite: I would gladly contribute and also raise money to offset costs, if my beloved city and the Great State of New York would allow the Natalee Holloway lawsuit filed by John Q. Kelley on behalf of the family to proceed.God bless all good and kind people. The truth in this case will come out and I truly hope that is a very, very scary prospect for those hiding, covering up, lying to police, investigators, a grieving innocent family, all friends, all good hearts all over the world and your family, friends and neighbors — the good hearts of Aruba. We are all suffering — the truth will come out. God is watching and judgment day is approaching.Great thanks, Greta, to you and the OTR team for the great job you all do,David

Cheney’s bumbling is nonstop

Vice President Dick Cheney has been widely criticized across party lines for the way he handled his quail-hunting accident. He kept it secret for a day, then didn’t put it out himself, but had his host call a newspaper.
Finally, under pressure (including from the White House, by his own account), he agreed to an interview, and then only on Robert Murdoch’s Republican-friendly Fox network.
He took full responsibility for the shooting. Good. But he also offered some gibberish of a defense for his post-shooting behavior, selling it to nobody who had an open mind.
If he has bumbled his way through this, nobody should be surprised. Dick Cheney is, after all, the most — how to say this politely? — overrated man in Washington. ...

Democrats Will Pound Bush On His Strongest Trick: National Security.

How can Bush be strong on National Security when the ports are most VULNERABLE and little money is shifted to them for security. Remember only 5% of containers are now searched. Do you really think it will go up under Dubai?

Democrats will say Bush has POUNDED into Americans that we should be afraid. So we fear but yet he is giving our ports to a goverment owned company where the terrorists hail.

Sure people will say Dubai is an ally but will they STAY an ally. They probably had their plans together to befriend America, to get on the good side, and when we aren't watching blow up America. Bush since he loves oil and in the oil industry was paid enough to turn his eyes to what is going on.

I am not for Democrats and certainly not for Bush any longer. However, something needs to change on Capitol Hill.

I am tire of all the secrecy, incompetent cronies in jobs, Bush coming late to crisises, and backroom deals by Puppet Bush.

Democrats need to get their act together and get an real game plan. I would like to see John McCain in office. He has been through wars and torture unlike Camp Cupcake Bush and Deferment Cheney and Rumsfeld.


Whe will Americans say enough is enough?

Impeach Bush and Cheney

Bush uses fundraiser to stress war on terror

MISHAWAKA, Ind. -- President Bush turned to the war against terror in campaigning on Thursday for a Northern Indiana lawmaker seen as potentially vulnerable in this fall's elections.

The president condemned those responsible for bombing a Shiite shrine in Iraq this week.
"Whoever did this is trying to stop the advance of freedom," Bush said during his appearance on the campus of Bethel College. "The U.S. strongly condemns the person responsible. This is not a religious person, but an evil person."
He also praised religious leaders in Iraq who are calling for calm in the wake of rioting in the streets, which led to dozens of deaths Thursday.
Bush's 33-minute appearance drew more than 500 supporters who paid $500 per plate. He was at a campaign fundraiser for U.S. Rep. Chris Chocola, R-Bristol.
The president said news out of Iraq that the gleaming dome of the 1,200-year-old Askariya shrine had been reduced to rubble served as a reminder that there is much work to do on the other side of the globe.
Inside the Wiekamp Athletic Center, few disagreed.
"The president was very clear on his decision-making process and I don't think the party has done a good job of explaining that," said Charles Hasnerl, 36, a financial planner from Knox. "I have full faith and confidence in our military, our president and Congressman Chocola."
Outside, there a different opinion could be seen and heard from dozens of protesters who braved a crisp, windy day to carry signs along the street where Bush's caravan entered the campus.
"My main concern is our commitment to the foolish endeavor in Iraq," said Marshall D'Arcy, 62, Ogden Dunes, who said he was a Vietnam veteran. "This war is just as stupid and ignorant as that one was."
Bush began his remarks by endorsing Chocola for another term in Congress, calling him a "decent, down-to-earth" person who is a "rising star in the House."
He then touted their common support for the war on terror and agreement on domestic issues like giving federal dollars to religious groups that provide social services.
Chocola is not believed to be in serious jeopardy of losing a re-election bid but his district is evenly matched between Democrats and Republicans.
The president spent most of his speech talking about the war on terror, noting again that the events of Sept. 11, 2001, changed the way he views the world.
Alternative energy was also on his mind. Bush repeated his support of developing ways to wean America off foreign oil.
"I want us to develop new batteries so you can plug in your car at night and drive 40 minutes on electricity and not use a drop of gas," Bush said. He also said he supports the continued research and development of ethanol, a corn-based gas alternative -- and a subject dear to the hearts of many corn farmers in Northern Indiana.
At the corner of Liberty Drive and La Salle Avenue, where only students were allowed to protest, Bethel freshman Ryan DeLine, 24, Mishawaka, was the lone holder of a placard that read: "$500 could feed a family for two weeks."
DeLine, whose fingers were red from the cold, had been standing on the corner for nearly two hours. Not to protest Bush, he said, but to expose the folly of paying $500 for a plate of chicken when so many families -- particularly in New Orleans, where he has traveled twice on mission trips -- are in need.

Cheney's shot heard around the world

Unscrupulous liberals are now claiming that alcohol might have been involved in Cheney's tragic hunting accident. They are saying that there is something suspicious about the 22-hour delay between the time the incident occurred and the time it was reported, claiming that he may have needed that time to sober up before talking to the sheriff's deputies. They are also trying to make hay out of the fact that Cheney acknowledged he had had a beer at lunch and that he consumed a quick cocktail right after the accident, as if to conceal the fact he had been drinking while hunting. These wild-eyed critics even have the temerity to suggest that Cheney's two convictions for drunk driving may indicate that he has a drinking problem of long standing. Don't fall for these liberal lies, people.Be assured that your vice president was cold sober when he whirled around and blasted his 78-year-old hunting buddy in the face with a shotgun.

I do believe Cheney was drunk when he shot that man. Why else for the delay? Cheny said he wanted to find out the facts or how the man was doing. However, did he ride in the ambulance with the man he shot? Was he pacing in the corridors awaiting word of the man's condition? If Cheney is so concerned, why would he be home with another cocktail instead of at the hospital drinking water?

People, Cheney is spinning another lie. Why is everyone ready to believe Cheney's accounting when ANYONE with half a brain knows that isn't how shootings are handled?

Schweitzer's Plan of Coal to Diesel Fuel

The processing steps are several, and potential environmental burdens real, yet, according to a recent Reuters story, the Governor of Montana "wants to solve America's rising energy costs using a technology discovered in Germany 80 years ago that converts coal into gasoline, diesel and aviation fuel. The Fischer-Tropsch technology, discovered by German researchers in 1923 and later used by the Nazis to convert coal into wartime fuels, was not economical as long as oil cost less than $30 a barrel...But with U.S. crude oil now hitting more than double that price, Gov. Brian Schweitzer's plan is getting more attention across the country and some analysts are taking him very seriously". Apparently Governer Schweitzer feels that "Montana could supply the entire United States with its aviation, gas and diesel fuel for 40 years without creating environmental damage". Right.
According to the South African firm Sasol's website, the only continuous commercially successful application of the Fischer-Tropsch technology to coal gas has been done by them. Sasol's material states that: “Sasol has pioneered the commercial application of Fischer-Tropsch technology since the early 1950s when we built our first petrochemical plant at Sasolburg and began producing fuel based synfuels and chemicals. This pioneering spirit has resulted in Sasol being recognised as a global technology and innovation leader, and we are now poised to deliver the world's cleanest diesel early in 2006, when our first international commercial scale gas-to-liquids (GTL) plant at Doha in Qatar commences production,” says Sasol chief executive, Pat Davies".

this hypothetical list does not reflect on any specific patented, or trademarked coal conversion process, either pro or con.
*Dig coal.
*Sort, crush, grade and clean it, disposing of the stone and washings, if any.
*Ship to conversion operation.
*Leach coal with strong acid solution if needed, to remove heavy metals and sulfer.
*Treat the acid wash water prior to disposal, producing a heavy metal bearing sludge.
*Generate methane (natural gas) from the coal's carbon content, borrowing hydrogen from water (steam) inside the coal gasification process step.
*Synthesize the "coal gas" (methane) into liquid hydrocarbon fuel (this is the Fisher-Tropfsch process step).*Manage, according to regulations of the governmental entitites where the process is deployed, aqueous waste, waste steam, fly ash, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, coal tar, "char", various sulfer compounds or elemental sulfer, and so on.
*Deliver liquid hydrocarbon fuel to refinery.
*Refine and distribute liquid fuel products.
*Continue to liberally consume hydrocarbon fuels in overpowered cars, SUV's and Mega-Trucks, once freed from the price increases that otherwise would be caused by worsening oil shortages.

The US probably will need to convert coal to liquid fuels. Come to think of it, it's bound to happen in this century (we're fond of the long view). But, setting expectations to a negligible environmental burden is wrong. Every process has its inputs and outputs. And while we're still in reality mode, a 40-year supply won't help our grand children much will it?
Efficiency is where the game needs to start.

US Ports Security

Steven Flynn thinks the its outrageous that our govenment allows Port owners or mangers provide security to the ports they manage in USA.
Where is the USA government? When is the government do the job we pay our taxes to do.
Bush is asleep at the wheel. Bush has drummed into us about Terrorism, terrorism, and terrorism. Now he is going to delegate the responsibility of security to our ports to another nation.

Funny, I and perhaps, we didn't know our ports were owned by other foreign governments. Why didn't we know this? What are we paying our taxes for, to be kept in the dark?

Iraq: The Slam Dunk War will be The Civil War

James Baker during Senior Bush Administration said if they invaded Iraq at that time, it would be a Civil War. That was over ten years ago. George Bush must not have heard that but chose to listen to his Neo-Cons cronies.

Does anyone really believe that the 22 hour curfew in Iraq has stem the growing anger? In fact, those men and women will be just as hostile if not more hostile when the curfew is lift.

Bush broke Iraq and now he OWNS it. Unforfortunately, we do too.

Why Should Anyone Worry About Whose Communications Bush and Cheney Are Intercepting, If It Helps To Find Terrorists?

Although the Bush Administration does not encourage public debate over decisions it has made regarding how to govern, more and more people are asking questions about the ways and means employed during this presidency.

In my last column, I addressed the seemingly irresolvable issue of the allocation of government powers - among the president, Congress and the federal courts - regarding matters of national security. Since then, the debate about the Bush Administration's refusal to comply with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act - and its parallel insistence on defending its warrantless wiretapping -- has only continued.
news230

Both Republicans and Democrats have raised questions about the administration's defiance of the law in the name of fighting terrorism. One organization at the forefront of concern about this blatant lawbreaking is the ACLU - which recently convened a panel in Washington to discuss this subject. This broad-based dialogue, in which I participated, certainly added to my understanding. Not surprisingly, it raised issues that need further attention.

One, in particular, that has been gnawing at me, is the question why anyone should worry about the government listening in on conversations if they are doing nothing wrong. This is an old question that often arises in issues relating to privacy. Yet frankly, it still annoys me every time it is asked.
The Why-Should-I-Worry Question
The NSA surveillance program seeks to uncover persons in the United States who are conversing internationally and by telephone or email with known al Qaeda organization or operative abroad, or with affiliates of such organizations and operatives.
"I am not personally worried about the government listening to any of my conversations, for not only do I not know anyone even remotely connected with terrorism," one questioner said to me after the panel, "But furthermore, I would be happy to give up my privacy," she said, "if it helps to find terrorists." This young lady wanted to know why others were so concerned about the government's using the latest technology to find terrorists.
Let's set aside the issue of whether the President can simply ignore the FISA law validly enacted by Congress - and signed by a prior president. I will return to that in another, later column, for it is an important question that is not going to go away. Here, I will look only at the issue of whether the average American has anything to truly be worried about, as NSA electronically sifts through endless digital exchanges to find the proverbial needle-in-a-haystack.

One Reason Americans Should Worry: Data Mining Makes MistakesColumn continues below ↓

The details of the NSA surveillance program remain cloaked in secrecy. None of the experts with whom I spoke had any knowledge of its operations, other than what has been leaked, principally to New York Times reporter James Risen. In his book, State of War: the Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration - a fascinating and alarming read because it reveals ongoing incompetence within the intelligence community - Risen himself provides some details.
"The NSA is now eavesdropping on as many as five hundred people in the United States at any given time," Risen writes, "and it potentially has access to phone calls and e-mails of millions more." He adds that "NSA is now tapping into the heart of the nation's telephone network through direct access to key telecommunications switches that carry many of America's daily phone calls and e-mail messages."
Experts believe the way NSA is handling such masses of digital traffic is probably by what is called "data mining" - the use of computer algorithms to search automatically through massive amounts of data.
They also believe that the greatest threat that such non-human snooping has for the average American is that it frequently produces false positives. This is a point that was made by Jim Harper, Director of Information Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, during the ACLU's panel discussion.
Data mining's search tools, according to experts, are not particularly accurate at flushing out terrorists. Indeed, such electronic sleuthing frequently makes mistakes in who it tags as targets.
The government may claim data mining is accurate - but Americans ought to be wary: Even greater claims of accuracy are typically made for fingerprint identification, and that has already gone grievously wrong in one notorious war on terror example.
Fingerprints on a bag holding detonators involved in the 2004 Madrid subway terror attacks were supposedly linked to Portland, Oregon attorney Brandon Mayfield. As a result, Mayfield - also suspicious in authority's eyes because he'd converted to his wife's religion, Islam -- found himself in solitary confinement for two weeks as a "material witness." But in the end, the FBI was wrong; the prints weren't his.
With Data Collection Greatly Increased, Where Is All The Data Going?
Aside from the potential of mistakes, an even more serious problem is the remarkable increase in collection of data about Americans. While computers certainly make our life easier, and it is difficult now to imagine how we got along before the Internet, we pay a price in privacy for these marvels.
Literally gigantic amounts of digital data are being collected about almost every American: data that is connected to credit cards, airline tickets, motor vehicle licenses, health records, business records, satellite pictures of your home, and more. No organization gathers and hoards more private information than the federal government.
It was the mining of both privately-collected and government-collected data, that the Department of Defense's Total Information Awareness (TIA) program envisioned exploiting. Congress may have rejected the TIA program, but the technology has not been rejected. In fact, many believe it is being employed by NSA in its electronic surveillance of Americans. (If so, Congress may have been bypassed twice - with not only its passage of FISA, but its clear-cut rejection of the TIA program, ignored by the executive.)
With NSA listening to some five-hundred telephone calls at any given time and apparently potentially capturing millions others, mountains of digital information are accumulating. There is no oversight of the NSA program. And under the Patriot Act, the information NSA is gathering can be shared with other law enforcement authorities.
Many people trust the government not to abuse or misuse this information. Based on experience, I don't. But if you do, imagine what a hacker might do after cracking into all that private and government information - the kind of security breach that happens every day. Such hacking could trigger scenarios that range from blackmail to graymail to identity theft, to others knowing more about you and your life than even you may know.

Why Should Anyone Worry About Whose Communications Bush and Cheney Are Intercepting, If It Helps To Find Terrorists?

Although the Bush Administration does not encourage public debate over decisions it has made regarding how to govern, more and more people are asking questions about the ways and means employed during this presidency.

In my last column, I addressed the seemingly irresolvable issue of the allocation of government powers - among the president, Congress and the federal courts - regarding matters of national security. Since then, the debate about the Bush Administration's refusal to comply with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act - and its parallel insistence on defending its warrantless wiretapping -- has only continued.
news230

Both Republicans and Democrats have raised questions about the administration's defiance of the law in the name of fighting terrorism. One organization at the forefront of concern about this blatant lawbreaking is the ACLU - which recently convened a panel in Washington to discuss this subject. This broad-based dialogue, in which I participated, certainly added to my understanding. Not surprisingly, it raised issues that need further attention.

One, in particular, that has been gnawing at me, is the question why anyone should worry about the government listening in on conversations if they are doing nothing wrong. This is an old question that often arises in issues relating to privacy. Yet frankly, it still annoys me every time it is asked.
The Why-Should-I-Worry Question
The NSA surveillance program seeks to uncover persons in the United States who are conversing internationally and by telephone or email with known al Qaeda organization or operative abroad, or with affiliates of such organizations and operatives.
"I am not personally worried about the government listening to any of my conversations, for not only do I not know anyone even remotely connected with terrorism," one questioner said to me after the panel, "But furthermore, I would be happy to give up my privacy," she said, "if it helps to find terrorists." This young lady wanted to know why others were so concerned about the government's using the latest technology to find terrorists.
Let's set aside the issue of whether the President can simply ignore the FISA law validly enacted by Congress - and signed by a prior president. I will return to that in another, later column, for it is an important question that is not going to go away. Here, I will look only at the issue of whether the average American has anything to truly be worried about, as NSA electronically sifts through endless digital exchanges to find the proverbial needle-in-a-haystack.

One Reason Americans Should Worry: Data Mining Makes MistakesColumn continues below ↓

The details of the NSA surveillance program remain cloaked in secrecy. None of the experts with whom I spoke had any knowledge of its operations, other than what has been leaked, principally to New York Times reporter James Risen. In his book, State of War: the Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration - a fascinating and alarming read because it reveals ongoing incompetence within the intelligence community - Risen himself provides some details.
"The NSA is now eavesdropping on as many as five hundred people in the United States at any given time," Risen writes, "and it potentially has access to phone calls and e-mails of millions more." He adds that "NSA is now tapping into the heart of the nation's telephone network through direct access to key telecommunications switches that carry many of America's daily phone calls and e-mail messages."
Experts believe the way NSA is handling such masses of digital traffic is probably by what is called "data mining" - the use of computer algorithms to search automatically through massive amounts of data.
They also believe that the greatest threat that such non-human snooping has for the average American is that it frequently produces false positives. This is a point that was made by Jim Harper, Director of Information Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, during the ACLU's panel discussion.
Data mining's search tools, according to experts, are not particularly accurate at flushing out terrorists. Indeed, such electronic sleuthing frequently makes mistakes in who it tags as targets.
The government may claim data mining is accurate - but Americans ought to be wary: Even greater claims of accuracy are typically made for fingerprint identification, and that has already gone grievously wrong in one notorious war on terror example.
Fingerprints on a bag holding detonators involved in the 2004 Madrid subway terror attacks were supposedly linked to Portland, Oregon attorney Brandon Mayfield. As a result, Mayfield - also suspicious in authority's eyes because he'd converted to his wife's religion, Islam -- found himself in solitary confinement for two weeks as a "material witness." But in the end, the FBI was wrong; the prints weren't his.
With Data Collection Greatly Increased, Where Is All The Data Going?
Aside from the potential of mistakes, an even more serious problem is the remarkable increase in collection of data about Americans. While computers certainly make our life easier, and it is difficult now to imagine how we got along before the Internet, we pay a price in privacy for these marvels.
Literally gigantic amounts of digital data are being collected about almost every American: data that is connected to credit cards, airline tickets, motor vehicle licenses, health records, business records, satellite pictures of your home, and more. No organization gathers and hoards more private information than the federal government.
It was the mining of both privately-collected and government-collected data, that the Department of Defense's Total Information Awareness (TIA) program envisioned exploiting. Congress may have rejected the TIA program, but the technology has not been rejected. In fact, many believe it is being employed by NSA in its electronic surveillance of Americans. (If so, Congress may have been bypassed twice - with not only its passage of FISA, but its clear-cut rejection of the TIA program, ignored by the executive.)
With NSA listening to some five-hundred telephone calls at any given time and apparently potentially capturing millions others, mountains of digital information are accumulating. There is no oversight of the NSA program. And under the Patriot Act, the information NSA is gathering can be shared with other law enforcement authorities.
Many people trust the government not to abuse or misuse this information. Based on experience, I don't. But if you do, imagine what a hacker might do after cracking into all that private and government information - the kind of security breach that happens every day. Such hacking could trigger scenarios that range from blackmail to graymail to identity theft, to others knowing more about you and your life than even you may know.

Jurine's Famile needs money: From an Email

Yes they are desperate for money too so i assume they thought the advance to a book deal was going to go somewhere and now it is tied up in a lawsuit. as i recall his home was no palace but i also recall he did win a lawsuit against thearuban gov?

From an Email: Jurine Blames Deepak

IMHO it was a pr move against deepak for saying they gang banged natalee in and out of consciousness injoran's house. joran did this to un-implicate himselfand put the big question mark back over the kalpoe brothers' heads in the american court of publicopinion, face it most people don't know the details ofthe case as we all do.that was the goal and i would not be surprised if thequeen of sheba there in aruba was not inticate inputting the spin on it.but you see, edward junior didn't get an interview sohe is not going to be perpetuating the myth muchlonger and queen vashti is going to have to findanother haman to hang her bushit on.get what i mean?