Glenn Greenwald's Plan to Poke, Prod, and Piss Off the Powerful
Glenn Greenwald is a lawyer who has lost all interest in making legal arguments. The reason for his indifference should terrify anyone who believes that the law, and not arbitrary decision-making by government officials, should govern a nation. Asked whether NSA mass surveillance is legal under any conceivable interpretation of United States law, Greenwald told ReasonTV:
"I think it's important to understand, when we talk about what's legal, is the extent to which our institutions that determine legality have been completely co-opted, either by the other branches of government, or just by the post 9/11 fearmongering and hysteria that have subsumed federal judges as much as they have everybody else – if not more so."
Greenwald's experience in uncovering our national secrets – from deep within our security apparatus to the FISA courts – has taught him that sometimes the law doesn't matter. When the government is determined to act outside of its constitutional restraints, justifications will be made, legal memoranda will be written, in order that the outcome will be determined by a contest of institutional power.
Reason TV traveled to McGill University in Montréal to present Glenn Greenwald with Reason Foundation's 2014 Lanny Friedlander Prize. The prize honors media entrepreneurs who expand human freedom by increasing our ability to express ourselves, engage in debate, and generate new ways of understanding the power of "free minds and free markets."
In this case, Greenwald has earned the honors for standing up for some of the bedrock principles that have been neglected in an age of national security and mass surveillance. Since breaking the story of NSA abuses, he has championed whistleblowers, and schooled establishment journalists in the meaning of the first amendment. He also won the Pulitzer Prize for Public Service. Today he's a subject of Citizenfour, an Academy Award nominated documentary film about Edward Snowden.
Greenwald has not only broken the biggest news story in a generation, he's following it up by co-founding The Intercept, a new magazine that aims to shake up American journalism.
Video runs about 42 minutes.
Produced and hosted by Todd Krainin. Camera by Jim Epstein and Josh Swain.
CONTENTS
1:20 - ACCOUNTABILITY. Will anyone be held responsible for the mass violation of Internet privacy?
5:49 - LEGALITY. Is blanket NSA surveillance legal under any possible interpretation of the law?
8:59 - THE INTERCEPT. What's Greenwald's new publication all about?
11:18 - JOURNALISM. Objective vs. subjective; the democratizing power of the Internet; should journalism be backed by billionaires?
22:19 - INSIDERS vs. OUTSIDERS. How the establishment uses shame to maintain the status quo.
27:30 - ADVERSARIAL JOURNALISM. The virtues of excessive criticism.
31:08 - TYRANNY. The changing views of government in light of NSA surveillance.
33:27 - POLITICAL REACTION. Hypocrisy on the Left, mixed reaction on the Right.
36:03 - POLITICAL ACTION. Is politics the best means for reform?
38:12 - REASON MEDIA AWARDS. Reaction to winning the 2014 Lanny Friedlander Prize.
40:16 - THE LIBERTARIAN/PROGRESSIVE COALITION. The new political paradigm.
INTERVIEW TRANSCRIPT
Glenn Greenwald: I think one of the most crucial parts of journalism is to constantly poke and prod at convention and orthodoxy, and to challenge assumptions that people are just implicitly accepting. Not just even if it makes people uncomfortable, but especially then.
reason: Glenn Greenwald, it is a pleasure to talk to you.
Greenwald: Great to talk to you and thank you so much to Reason for this award, I'm really honored to receive it.
reason: So let's get right into it. I loved your book No Place to Hide. It reads in many ways like an All of the President's Men for the 21st century, with sort of you and Laura Poitras playing the role of Woodward and Bernstein. Where they differ is what really interests me. Even though it's a timeless tale, at the end of All of the President's Men you have a president who resigns, you have people who go to jail, you have some measure of accountability. That's the end game and I don't quite know if we're at the end game with this scenario. But do you see that ever happening? Do you see some measure of accountability? Or today have things changed to such a degree that the government just acts with impunity?
Greenwald: I do. Even in Watergate, that took a relatively long time from the original disclosures to the point where Washington, the political class, took it seriously enough so that there was accountability. In fact, if you look at the first year and a half and two years of Watergate reporting, overwhelmingly the polling broke down on partisan lines, where Republicans were rather dismissive of the seriousness of what was being reporting and Democrats were trying to exploit it for political gain. It was only once it reached a tipping point and prominent Republicans came out and said this is really wrong. And then the battle for the tapes, it all sort of unfolded the way we now remember it. But it took a good while. The nature of politically powerful people is that they have a lot of defenses and a lot of strength—by definition—and you don't deflate them or bring them down or hold them accountable easily. It's always a battle.
But I do think there have been some very significant changes as a result of [my] reporting. There hasn't been a lot of legislation passed. In fact, there's been none, at least yet, that has restricted what the NSA could do. But I never thought that the place to look for restrictions on the power of the U.S. government would be the U.S. government itself, because human beings generally don't walk around thinking about ways to restrict their own power. I think the much more significant changes are the changes in consciousness that people have—not just about surveillance, but about privacy, the role of government, their relationship to it, the dangers of exercising power in the dark—and the role of journalism as well. I think there are all kinds of ways that surveillance is now being curbed, from other governments acting in coalition to impede U.S. hegemony over the Internet to technology companies like Facebook, Yahoo, and Google knowing that, unless they make a real commitment to protecting their users' privacy, they're going to lose a generation of users to other countries' companies. The most important of all is the awareness of individuals about the need to protect their own privacy by using things like encryption and other tools of anonymity. I think these things are a really important form of change and accountability that will come from the reporting.
reason: Is time also a factor? Because I know you do mention this in the book, initially there's a fear of surveillance, there's a shock. And then over time, you get used to the cameras being on you—and I know this just as a photojournalist: in the beginning you put a camera on someone, and they're nervous, they're worried about their appearance, and after an hour it's like, oh, it's not even there anymore. Does that dilute the urgency in any way?
Greenwald: I think there is definitely an extent to which you can normalize almost every form of abusive behavior on the part of the state. You can pretty much accustom a population to almost anything. There are studies that show that at the end of the Stasi, when the wall and East Germany fell—and even once East Germans became integrated into the West or at least into reunified Germany—that, behaviorally, it took a long time for East Germans to change from the population under this repressive, tyrannical microscope of surveillance to one that was free. Because they had become acculturated to simply accepting the world with those kinds of limitations. But I also think that there is an instinctive drive that human beings have for privacy, for having a place where we can go and think and communicate and act without the judgmental eyes of other people being cast upon us. Because we understand reflexively how important that is to be able to dissent and explore who we are. So I don't ever see a time when people will be satisfied with having no privacy in the digital age.
reason: I do want to talk about whether the NSA blanket surveillance now is legally permissible under any possible interpretation of the law, in your opinion.
Greenwald: I think what's important to understand when we talk about what's legal is the extent to which our institutions that determine legality have been completely co-opted, either by the other branches of government or just by the kind of post-9/11 fear mongering hysteria that has subsumed federal judges as much as they have everybody else—if not more so. Take the PATRIOT Act, for example. Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act is the provision that the Justice Department cited to convince the FISA court to allow the NSA to collect all telephone records from Verizon and Sprint and every other major carrier. The metadata of every person with whom every other American is communicating. The legal provision that was cited was section 215 of the PATRIOT Act. If you go back and look at the debate that took place over the PATRIOT Act—and there was a debate over the PATRIOT Act, even in the wake of 9/11—there were lots of people standing up and saying, this is really alarming, this is going to vest extremist surveillance power in the government. Nobody thought—neither the proponents of the PATRIOT Act who wrote it, like Jim Sensenbrenner, who were devoted to extremist power in the wake of 9/11, nor the critics of the PATRIOT Act, who were motivated to depict as extreme a picture of the legislation as they could—nobody remotely dreamed that that law could ever be cited to justify mass indiscriminate surveillance on Americans. All it did was lower the standards so that you no longer needed probable cause, but a much lower level of proof of reasonable suspicion to target somebody for surveillance. Yet a FISA court ended up accepting this rendition of the PATRIOT Act in secret that nobody thinks that it plausibly permits. That's really become the problem—the law almost is irrelevant and it gets twisted and distorted, by the very institutions that are supposed to safeguard [it], to justify almost anything the government wants to do.
reason: It sounds like a very similar situation to how torture and water boarding were permitted, right?
Greenwald: Right. I mean, the law in its most idealized form is this consistent, objective, concrete, identifiable set of rules and principles that constrict people's behavior. But in reality, the law, like everything else, is an instrument that those who wield the greatest power can use to maximize their power and to shield themselves from challenge and protection. You're exactly right—nobody thought water boarding and these other techniques were anything but illegal, criminal torture. In fact, the U.S. government has prosecuted people for using them exactly on that theory. But legal memos got written. Courts have, if not accepted them, accepted the fact that their existence justified the decisions. So they just become legal by sort of fiat power. That's why, although I began writing about politics as a journalist, I focused a lot on legal questions. I almost never focus on them now because they're really not relevant to the struggle for power or popular opinion.
reason: I'd like to talk a little bit about The Intercept and the future, because I'm fascinated with where that is going. Can you explain what The Intercept is, first of all, and what is it going to provide to the public that isn't already out there in this diverse world of media in which we live?
Greenwald: It's a little difficult to describe what The Intercept is because it's still very much a work in progress. What it is, technically, is a digital magazine that was co-founded by myself, Jeremy Scahill, and Laura Poitras. It's funded by First Look Media, which is headed by Pierre Omidyar, the founder of eBay. The idea behind it when we began was that there's been fundamental flaws in American journalism that we wanted to set out—I wouldn't say "to rectify," because that's too much of an ambitious aspiration—but to at least start to work to produce other models. There are two central flaws I think we wanted to rectify. One was the fact that most well-funded institutional media outlets have become, for a variety of reasons, far too close to and deferential to those who wield the greatest political and economic power, as opposed to adversarial to it—and therefore have kind of gutted the purpose of journalism, which is to serve as a check on those who wield power and not as an uncritical servant or amplifier of their message. And then the second flaw that we wanted to rectify was the lack of vibrancy and independence in how journalists are allowed to report and opine and talk about the world. There's kind of become this very soul draining, soulless voice that journalists are expected to adopt. It's one of contrived neutrality or objectivity that prevents them from really having any passion or spirit behind their journalism. We really wanted to reanimate the idea of what journalism was supposed to be, which is not this cloistered profession that follows all these archaic, unwritten rules that really just kind of neuters it, but instead was about crusading for some kind of outcome or against a particular injustice. That means letting journalists be free to pursue their own voice and not trying to homogenize them or neuter them.
reason: I followed your debate with Bill Keller. I thought that was terrific, by the way. You're both on the opposite sides of that coin. But what I didn't gather entirely from that is the idea of the future of journalism. Is it objective, old, or not so old as you pointed out, but sort of the established, standard, objective news, or intensely subjective and more adversarial? Is there room for both?
Greenwald: There are a couple new media outlets that are making really ambitious claims about reinventing journalism and whatever the image is that they want to do. And we tried really hard to avoid that. We're not trying to reinvent journalism. We don't think we have the model of how journalism should be practiced. We have a model of journalism that we think has been woefully lacking. If there are media outlets that want to do different things, I think there's definitely other ways to do journalism that can contribute value. But I do think the prevailing model is actually quite destructive, in part because it is fraudulent: this idea that The New York Times or The Washington Post talks about the world and reports on the world without biases or subjectivity or opinions. As human beings, I just think we perceive the world through a subjective prism. We're not capable of the kind of objectivity to which these media outlets claim. I think it's much more honest to simply be candid about the subjective assumptions that you're embracing, rather than to pretend that you're something that you're not. But more to the point, I think that that kind of pseudo-objective journalism neuters it. It means that you can't really ever be perceived as taking a strong position because that somehow compromises your objectivity. It means that you're basically toothless, that you no longer have the ability to check those who are in power or to call out their lies when they're lying or to be aggressive in telling the truth. I think that's a big part of why journalism has been failing.
reason: Is that really at heart the promise of new media today? That it can engage in different ways of looking at things and with a multitude of different voices?
Greenwald: Yeah, diversity of voices is probably the most important part of how the Internet has affected journalism, because it really is true—it's an amazingly rapid and fundamental change in how information and news gets delivered to people. I mean, just ten years ago, if you wanted to find a large platform where you could reach large numbers of people, you pretty much had to go to work for one of these large institutions and subject yourself to all of their really constrictive rules for how journalism is supposed to be done. Now, you can just start a blog on the Internet. If you offer something unique, you'll find a big readership and you're free of all these constraints. You don't even need to start a blog. If you look at how the Israeli war on Gaza was perceived, which was, I think, much different around the world than prior Israeli incursions into Gaza were perceived, the primary reason that happened is because everybody in Gaza is essentially a journalist, because they all have cell phones with video capabilities and Internet access. So they can upload things to Twitter. It really has democratized the number of people and the kinds of voices who are shaping how we perceive the world. I think that's all for the good.
reason: And it gives you a leg up a little bit, because when you were struggling to get the very first dispatches of the Snowden story out, you had the option of saying, Well, if they keep delaying, if they keep postponing, I can set up my own website and publish it that way. Can you talk a little bit about how that actually gave you a little bit of an advantage you wouldn't have otherwise had? Before you would've been completely reliant on the mainstream.
Greenwald: Definitely. Just imagine pre-Internet, for example. If you go and talk to Daniel Ellsburg about the challenges he faced when he wanted to disseminate the Pentagon Papers, the first challenge that he faced was simply a logistical one of, how do you make a Xerox copy of 7,000 top secret pages without detection? Do you go into the drug store or the library with a stack of dimes and start copying the Pentagon Papers? But then, more so, there were very few media outlets capable of publishing it and disseminating it in any way that would make an impact. There was a small handful of them. Most of them were afraid and had all kinds of restrictions and The New York Times finally undertook the fight. But if they hadn't, he might've been prevented from having [the revelations] heard in any meaningful way. The Internet has completely obliterated that monopoly that these small number of large corporations, media companies, have on our discourse. You're actually right, this is the first story I really did with The Guardian where I had to work directly with their editors, because my arrangement with every publication where I had written—both my own blog and Salon and prior to that The Guardian—is I would write what I wanted to write. I uploaded it directly to the Internet. No editor reviews it, let alone changes it. But obviously with a story of this magnitude, with the legal liability and the journalistic challenges, I had to work with The Guardian. There was no basis of trust because we hadn't worked together on any kind of a story, and so any sign at all that they weren't going to be as aggressive as I wanted to be in publishing this did make me start considering other alternatives. The fact that I did have other alternatives, that I could've just published it all on my own site, and made as big of an impact, or at least certainly close to it, gave me a lot of leverage to be able to negotiate with them and reach an agreement about how the reporting should be done.
reason: That was an amazing part of the story, where literally we're talking about minutes before this self-imposed deadline you gave The Guardian.
Greenwald: I mean, a big part of it was we had just seen this 29-year-old kid, who grew up in a totally ordinary way, with no background of power or position or prestige, undertake this extraordinarily brave act, knowing that he was sacrificing his life to do it. So, I wanted to make sure that the reporting that was done on the materials he had furnished was done with the same ethos of boldness and fearlessness and courage. I was worried that The Guardian institutionally would be resistant to that. And ultimately they weren't. That courage not only was contagious and infused me and Laura and the other people with whom we were directly working, The Guardian as well, but I think a big part of it was the fact that you no longer need these big institutions and they know that, so they become much more flexible in what they're willing to do.
reason: Say The Intercept were to become very successful. What is to prevent it from falling into that trap and becoming the same old establishment publication that you criticize, say, The Washington Post for being at many times? To break big stories and to keep a blog, you're going to have to hire risk averse lawyers, you're going to have to have a hierarchy of editors and people who take orders from other people and who are responsible for different parts of the operation. Isn't that just part of having a news operation?
Greenwald: The danger is definitely there. But because this kind of journalistic ethos is not just something that we have on our checklist of things we hope to achieve but is central to everything that all of us at The Intercept believe in at our core, structuring our organization to avoid those dangers has been by far the first and overarching priority. So when we went to hire lawyers, we purposely went and hired lawyers who would be risk seeking and not risk averse. And that was one of the kind of core mandates of what we were doing, was that unlike media outlets that are suffering financially and therefore tell their lawyers [to] make sure to keep them out of expensive litigation that we cannot afford with governments and corporations, we've told our lawyers we want to seek out litigation when someone's threatening our journalistic freedom—to be able to litigate in defense of it, and fight for it. That's one of the advantages of being extremely well-funded. Or, hierarchically in how we structure ourselves, we don't want to impose, in this top-down way, editors who are now the bosses of journalists, who these journalists have to kind of get around or convince to allow them to publish. The journalists went and hired the editors with whom they're working and they work very collaboratively. There is no strict hierarchical or rigid sequence where nothing can get published unless an editor says, Yes, you can publish this. That danger does exist. But we're trying to construct everything so that it's infused with this spirit of fearless and independent journalism, so that we don't become The Washington Post.
reason: Culture goes a long way. I mean institutional culture.
Greenwald: Sure.
reason: At Reason I feel like there's a similar kind of culture, actually. There's a general tone but each one of us is given a tremendous amount of leeway to shape stories the way we want.
Greenwald: Right. And there are writers at Reason who I think agree with each other a lot but also disagree with each other quite a lot. There are writers who have very distinctive voices, but there seems to be this kind of spirit that you want people who are idiosyncratic and independent and have strong voices. I do think that's an important part of keeping journalism not just relevant but interesting.
reason: The funding, too, the economic side of journalism is really changing and what's interesting is you're not following the old models. They are, in a way, following you, right? I mean, if you look at The Washington Post, which you talk about a lot in the book, they're actually following The Intercept model now, right? A billionaire comes over and takes over the joint and starts hiring unusual, different voices that were never part of the mainstream before and giving them a bigger platform than ever before.
Greenwald: Yeah. I mean, I'm not one who thinks that finding billionaires is the only model to save journalism and it's not necessarily a very desirable one. Because there are dangers to having one person with huge economic power being the primary, if not sole, owner and funder of a news organization. The temptation to influence it is always going to be very potent. And even if it's not overt, it can be a chilling effect with the people at these institutions—they know what the funder and owner want and believe and kind of just subconsciously avoid doing things that might alienate him. And so the only reason we were willing to do it is because we became very convinced that the particular billionaire who happens to be funding our news organization (a) is really committed to the idea of journalistic independence. He could have bought The Washington Post if he had wanted to, but purposely didn't because he didn't want to inherit one of these legacy media outlets. He wanted to do something different. And (b) he's also extremely well aware that the minute he tried to interfere in any remote way in what we were doing would be the very minute that all of us would leave and the whole thing would just not exist anymore. There are hazards to that model as well, but all of these models for sustaining journalism in a meaningful way are imperfect and you just have to try and minimize the flaws and maximize the value.
reason: I'd like to go to this question, which I really think is such a key aspect of your book: In some ways the story of Snowden is really just a springboard for some larger philosophical issues that you really get into, about who gets to be considered an insider in the establishment, and who's an outsider.
Greenwald: I think that this dynamic is, I wouldn't necessarily say universal, because that's probably too great of a claim, but it's extremely common across cultures and eras. The idea that orthodoxies are maintained by imposing punishment for those who defy them. I think it's always the case, or most often the case, that the path of least resistance is to embrace and act in accordance with societal convention, and there are generally punishments for deviating from that convention. So a big part of it is just simply that normal human dynamic, that people who wield power have an interest in having the status quo, or the prevailing order, maintained. One important way of doing that is to ensure that there are penalties for those who challenge it. And I do think that one important penalty that gets imposed on those who challenge it is the idea of societal scorn or shame. You'll be depicted in the terms that you described: as crazy or unstable. You can find Soviet or Chinese dissidents who were put into mental hospitals rather than prisons, on the grounds that they were crazy for challenging the prevailing order. Scientists like Galileo and Copernicus, and Socrates in philosophy, were regarded similarly. So I think there is a very important component of it there, and I think one of the reasons why journalists who are very amply rewarded become some such reliable servants of power is because they too have an interest in preserving the status quo. But this concept of craziness is remarkable. There is actually a fantastic article written in 2010 in Newsweek by Conor Friedersdorf. I forget exactly the context but either Rand Paul or Ron Paul, I believe it was Rand Paul, had made a few statements and got vilified for being crazy, or the "the craziest person in Washington." Conor wrote an article saying, You can think some of those views are crazy, and they certainly don't have very much support, so they're probably, by definition, on the fringe. But it's important to remember that even the most popular opinions, or the things that are done by those who seem like they are the guardians of convention, can also be really crazy. Like the idea of being able to target an American citizen for execution by drone without due process. That is actually a really radical, and one could say crazy, idea. And if it were being proposed by some fringe ideologue, rather than being done by a popular American president, it would be regarded as self-evidently crazy. And this is a term that gets applied to any dissidents, to any people who express fringe views. It's just a way of delegitimizing views that challenge convention and orthodoxy, without having to do the work to engage them.
reason: And yet, at the same time, you make the point that it is absolutely crucial that journalists be outsiders.
Greenwald: Well, I'll give you an example. We were talking about this a little earlier, before we began the discussion. We're in Montreal right now—last night I was in Toronto and I gave a speech to an audience of several hundred people who were largely supportive and sympathetic of the work that I have done. And yet there was a discussion, as part of this event, where I was asked about a recent attack that is being called a terrorist attack in Canada. I made some points about the role that Canada had played in potentially provoking these kinds of attacks—the causal relationship between Canadian foreign policy, on the one hand, and the desire of Muslims to bring violence to Canada, on the other. And I could tell it made the audience extremely uncomfortable, notwithstanding the fact that they largely support what I was doing and probably agreed with me on most things. I mentioned that I had intended to write about it that day but didn't have time, but I was going to write about it for sure the next day, which is today. Someone afterwards, a journalist who works in Canada who I have worked with, came up to me and said, "You know, you should really think twice about whether you want to write that, because you could tell how uncomfortable it made even your supporters. And it's probably going to cause you a lot of grief if you do it, so you might want to think twice about doing it." And I said, "Well, that's actually all the more reason to do it." Right? That's my role. My role, as a journalist, is not to give comfort. I'm not a therapist, or a nurse, or a pastor. I think one of the most crucial parts of journalism is to constantly poke and prod at convention and orthodoxy, and to challenge assumptions that people are just implicitly accepting. Not just even if it makes people uncomfortable, but especially then. I think you need, always, to have every kind of human belief being challenged and scrutinized and put under a microscope. I think that's an important part of what journalism is about.
reason: It is, but do you romanticize that aspect of the journalistic viewpoint a little bit? I mean, for example, yes, you've come under fire from a lot of journalists, and people [have called] for your imprisonment in some cases. But isn't that just part of what you're actually promoting, which is adversarial journalism? Some people are going to look at you in a really negative light. They're going to ask you the same kind of hard questions that you would ask of the NSA, for example.
Greenwald: Absolutely. And I think that journalists tend to be really thin-skinned. Especially in the Internet age, where it's really the first time journalists had to be confronted with criticism. Ten years ago if you wrote a column for The New York Times, if you were Maureen Dowd or Tom Friedman, the only criticisms you ever heard were people who wrote letters to the editor and got published, and none of them ever cared at all about that. Now everywhere they go Tom Friedman and Maureen Dowd hear constant criticism, and sometimes the criticism is vicious, and it's vitriolic, and it's personal, and unproductive, and whatever. But I think that world, where people who have a platform and any kind of influence over public discourse—I would rather have those people, and I would include myself in that, subjected to excessive criticism and attack than insufficient criticism and attack.
reason: Well, I hope you read that Matt Taibbi famous [review of] The World Is Flat.
Greenwald: Yeah, sure, of course…
reason: That must have gotten to him, right?
Greenwald: There's no question that Tom Friedman is well aware of that essay.
reason: So you actually document by name—you don't shy away from this, and you don't with hardly anything out there—but you document a very long list of establishment journalists who have called for your arrest in many cases. And some of them actually apologized to you, like Andrew Ross Sorkin did [and] David Gregory has afterwards. I know they apologized, but do they ever explain what prompted that accusation? It's a very strange thing to say: "You should go to prison…I'm sorry I said that." Do they explain what prompts that?
Greenwald: Andrew Ross Sorkin did apologize; he apologized both on Twitter and then on air. I don't recall exactly what he said, but I think the essence of it was that he had just kind of gotten so caught up in the emotions of watching this person that he thinks had committed treason, or serious crimes—Edward Snowden—essentially get away with it, by being able to remain outside the grasp of the U.S., and that, to the extent that I had any kind of a role in that, he felt that I should have to pay a price for that as well. Even that view, although more mild than the view that I should be in prison, is itself really questionable. Because he is a journalist at The New York Times, which has a history of defending leakers and sources and actually going to court, all the way up to the Supreme Court, to win the right to publish huge amounts of top secret material when the government was trying to prevent them from doing so. So the fact that there is this prominent New York Times columnist who views what Edward Snowden did, not as an act of courage, or at the very least enabling journalism, but as an act of treason and criminality I think underscores how closely identified these journalists now are with those who wield power. The government looks at Edward Snowden, understandably, as a criminal and as an enemy, and therefore these journalists who see the world through the prism of the government do as well.
reason: So a lot of the revelations that you came across from Snowden, they have in many ways proven to be more outrageous than even the most creative of conspiracy theorists could have ever imagined. You even write about how shocked you were personally. I'm wondering, did that have an impact on how, or even whether, you view our government, in general, as a force for good? Did it make you more skeptical about it?
Greenwald: Definitely. I don't see how it can not do that. I've been writing about the dangers of state surveillance, U.S. surveillance, for a lot of years. And we've gotten little snippets of the magnitude of this surveillance, just how unaccountable and out of control it is. But to see the sheer breadth of it—the fact that their explicit institutional ambition is to collect all communications on the Internet, literally all—is something that is difficult to explain in terms of how you react. It does feel like you're confronted with this almost caricature of tyranny, which is a hard word to use when you're talking about your own government, because we are so inculcated to think that tyranny is something that happens elsewhere, in bad countries. But to watch the U.S. government, in its own documents, not just trying but coming very close to converting the Internet into a realm of unlimited, indiscriminate surveillance—which is another way of saying eliminating privacy in the digital age—is really stunning. But I think the more jarring part of it is how secretive it all was. You watch your government, that claims to be a democracy, and claims to be accountable to its citizenry through the ballot box, engaging in this indescribably consequential behavior, and purposefully keeping not just the details but the broad strokes of what they're doing completely secret from the people who are supposed to be deciding whether they want their government to be doing that. It's a real subversion of not just privacy but of democracy itself. And yeah, to watch it in action, essentially, with definitive proof of what they are doing, definitely heightened my skepticism over the reliability of the U.S. government's claims, the role they play in the world, and its motives as well.
reason: Have you been surprised, or disappointed in any way, with the weak reaction against the NSA by a lot of the people on the left?
Greenwald: No, I haven't been surprised. In part because there were so many other policies that progressives, or liberals, or Democrats—whatever you want to describe them as being—pretended not just to oppose but to vehemently condemn and be offended by, when they were done by George Bush and when Barack Obama was condemning them. And then they just stood by quietly, meekly acquiescing if not outright endorsing Obama once he was in power [and] embracing these same theories, and in some cases even expanding them. So this kind of radical, grotesque form of progressive hypocrisy was something that I had become extremely accustomed to, had written about, and had just expected as a fact of life. At the same time, the reaction to the NSA reporting on the conservative side was actually quite mixed. It is true that there were a lot of conservatives who were consistent, meaning they defended eavesdropping in the Bush regime and they defended it when done under Obama, and were hostile to the reporting. But a huge amount of the support for Edward Snowden and the reporting that we were doing came from the right, as well as the left. In part a lot of that was just as hypocritical as the hypocrisy on the left, because a lot of those conservatives were perfectly fine with the NSA scandal under George Bush, and suddenly got worried about individual privacy when a Democrat was in control. But a lot of it was this kind of small government, pro-individual privacy strain on the right that was offended by the idea of this level of government spying. It was really interesting because it didn't break down at all along partisan or ideological lines. In fact, if you look at the first NSA vote to defund the bulk metadata program, the two sponsors were John Conyers (D-Mich.) and Justin Amash (R-Mich.). You can't find more disparate members of Congress than those two, and the people that lined up behind them to do that were across the range of the political spectrum. Ultimately, the big breakdown was along demographic lines, where young people tend to support Snowden and to be really offended and alarmed by this kind of surveillance, while older people were more tolerant of it. But the behavior of Democrats was completely predictable. They pretended to be hideously bothered by a much smaller-scale amount of eavesdropping, revealed under George Bush, and then completely supportive of what was done under President Obama.
reason: Maybe you can help me clarify. I just want to quote you to you for a second: "I think the only means of true political change will come from people working outside of that two-party electoral system to undermine it, and to subvert it, and to weaken it, and to destroy it, not to try to work within it to change it." I'm curious how far you take this, because I know in other contexts you've actually written endorsing certain candidates who were either against NSA spying or in some cases against the war on drugs, even.
Greenwald: Right. So I don't think it's an absolute proposition that no value can ever come from working within the political system. There is value that I had in my own work from having Russ Feingold in the Senate, because he could call hearings on things nobody else would call hearings on. That could force some transparency. There are people who introduce debates that nobody else would introduce, like when Jim Webb introduced the idea of prison reform and drug policy reform—a really courageous thing to do that very few other members of Congress would have done. So it isn't that I don't think there is any value from working within the political process. And you're right, I've endorsed candidates, I've raised money for them, I've done it as recently as the last election cycle. But what I'm really critiquing there is the fact that the two primary parties, despite all these claims of a lack of bipartisanship and these claims that they can't get along, are in fact in accord on far more than they disagree on. And what they're in accord on isn't political or ideological perspectives, it's the fact that they serve the interests of those who control and fund the political system. The same prevailing, permanent factions in Washington end up reigning supreme, regardless of whether Republicans or Democrats win elections. Sometimes they exercise their power in the private sector and other times they exercise it in the public sector—which have become almost merged—but the same interests end up being served. So you can spend all your time and energy working to affect the outcome of political elections, so the Democrats [or] the Republicans are going to get empowered, but ultimately most of the weighty questions don't really end up being changed—some do, but most don't—by depending on that process.
reason: So as this year's winner of the Lanny Friedlander prize, can you just tell us a little bit about what winning that prize means to you?
Greenwald: I'm thrilled to win the award for a couple of reasons. One is, almost instantly, from the beginning of the time I started writing about politics, it was clear to me that there are people on the opposite sides of the political spectrum who are encouraged to view each other as implacable enemies [but] who actually have far more in common with one another than they do, often, with the people who they think they are on the same side as. So this coalition of people [was] conceived as a coalition of liberals and libertarians, but I think my views of that have become more complicated—about what this coalition is and who's involved in it. I try really hard never to be pigeonhole-able, ideologically or otherwise, because I want to make sure I can work with people with whom I'm in agreement on a whole wider range of issues. And I've done things in the past with reason and have had a lot of agreement with the policies and editorial positions of reason, so I'm thrilled to get recognition for that reason. But also, I think that the much more relevant split, politically, is no longer left vs. right, or Democrat vs. Republican, but has really become insider vs. outsider. And again, you saw this I think most prominently in the last year with that NSA vote I mentioned earlier, where the people who saved the NSA program of bulk metadata [collection] was the White House, Nancy Pelosi, and John Boehner—this kind of unholy trinity of establishment insiders—who whipped all their establishment members of Congress in defense of the NSA. And you had the kind of Tea Party outsiders with the outsiders on the left joining together to try to defund it. This coalition has actually become more apparent in lots of different areas, including drug policy and penal reform and intervention and war questions. And so any kind of award that's based on encouraging or trying to recognize people who are trying to work outside these establishment institutions, and work against them, is one I'm really happy to receive.
reason: Do you have specific areas of overlap between the left and libertarian coalitions here? I mean, NSA spying, obviously—things like that? The war on drugs I mentioned earlier you've discussed.
Greenwald: Absolutely. I mean, the question of intervention and war has become, I think, a hugely divisive issue on the right. There are all kinds of conservatives—whether Ted Cruz or Rand Paul—who are questioning the kind of Reagan-esque or John McCain pro-intervention posture, in almost every single case, and often find common ground on the left. But even on economic questions—when it came time to try to audit the Fed, a long time cause of Ron Paul, he found a really important ally in Alan Grayson (D-Fla.). It was only because they were able to then tap into liberals and libertarians that they were able to get a bill passed. Even if you look at the two outside agitation movements of the last five years, which were Occupy Wall Street and the Tea Party movement, perceived as polar opposite, they were both actually born out of anger over the bailout. So I think objections to crony capitalism and the kind of inherent corruption of how the public and private sectors are interacting are also commonalities among the left and the right, and those are some extremely significant issues. You can [add] social issues to that as well, whether it be choice or marriage equality, where you find advocates of those positions on both the right and the left. So I think there is a lot more common ground than people typically recognize.
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Spoiler 2: No politician resigns or goes to jail.
Nixon? Scooter Libby? Jesse Jackson, Jr.? Ray Nagin?
+1 Chocolate City
Blaggo!
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Establishing a government to protect individual rights should not be a suicide pact.
Spying on other nations, spying on US citizens that might pose a threat, allowing inspections of personal property and other such acts by a government should only be permissible during wartime--during times when a country is defending itself from outside threats and such activities are necessary to secure people's lives. Otherwise, such activities should obviously never exist in a free society.
Allowing the government to act like this is another reason that declarations of war are necessary. When declaring a war the government must clearly identify the enemy and have as a goal of destroy the enemy as soon as possible using whatever means is necessary. The enemy has to be an entity that has attacked the country's citizens or who poses a clear and present threat to the citizens lives and their individual rights. It is the job of the political leaders to make the case for war and they have to have the country behind them. In such cases, spying, monitoring phones, searches, and other normally nefarious activities are logically justified. But such acts have to be clearly deemed temporary license given to the government until the source of the threat is eliminated. This why wars should be fought and won as quickly as possible. Such acts should not become the norm they have become in the country.
This was the case for much of America's history until after WWII with some notable exceptions.
David,
I think there is enough evidence to show that our government is using its intelligence resources in violation of the rule of law and is generally acting against our best interests: http://www.theguardian.com/com.....on-control
Although a declaration of war is necessary for the reasons you discuss, I don't think it would curtail illegal activity or prevent more abuses.
Aside from that, the U.S. should not have any special powers over domestic activity in times of war. Those rights we have are continuous and universal, not subject to change during emergencies.
Absolutely Paul.
no.
Which government do you speak of establishing? The one established for you by thoughtful founders, well aware of the cabal of war profiteering which brought the settlement war product from Europe to the Americas? OR is it Truman's ruinous blank check Dark State; which is incredibly hostile to standing Liberty? You speak of government as if it were a self, yourself. Self interested are we, in pinching off outcomes that come from the prospects of war? The enemy in any war is the one that State decides that it is. We, The People, are involved in a virtual undeclared cold war of intimidation, threats and Kafkan jail sentencing over Internet commerce - data. We didn't ask to be here. Yet... here we are. And since war is an undignified dirty business I became aware, so rudely of this fact, once Greenwald and The Intercept did their work to show us that the US Secrecy State went ahead and targeted anyone with a computer, as the enemy. There is a particular lack of discrimination which makes this kind of warring tension exist. However, you cannot blame people like me or people like Greenwald for its point of origin. Blame is useless, in fact. Especially, if you have no plan but to sit on this comment board and expect the US people to swallow the unending stream of accusation that they are potential terrorists.
The NSA and the like should do no spying in this country. Only when there is probable cause and a warrant is issued ,then ,civil law enforcement will be involved.As for Greenwald,He may be good on some issues,but, when it comes to personal property,your money and gun rights he sucks.I hate people like him talking about democracy.He means,do as we say,he's as bad as the NSA in some cases.
I disagree with Greenwald on "other countries resisting U.S. hegemony over the internet" in regards to the question of surveillance.
Many other countries-- western, liberal democracies-- who are as bad or worse than the U.S.
Countries like England have pretty much carte blanche to their citizen's emails, and it's not even done surreptitiously, it's done by law.
You can mostly ignore him when he starts talking like that. He knows that England is terrible - Citizenfour's climax is mostly about how intrusive the UK's program is, and how they could legally shut down the Guardian's reporting of it - but he has a thing for "US hegemony."
Part of that sentiment comes from the U.S. government's lofty statements about press/speech freedom, liberty, puppies, sunshine, etc
No one is surprised when, in Putin's Russia, free speech has YOU. It is, though, sickening to hear our Dear Leaders talk about freedom while attempting to destroy it.
"You can mostly ignore him when he starts talking like that."
Why wait?
No, you can't ignore him, you should listen very carefully if you want to know how the man thinks. I think Greenwald is more thoughtful than the average progressive intellectual, I think he still shares many of their prejudices and mistaken beliefs.
Serious question: What's The Guardian's record on criticizing the British pan-surveillance state?
@20:40
Greewald criticizes the "vanity mogul" model where a wealthy individual buys and influences a news source. But then he goes on to say it's ok if it's the "correct" billionaire.
Under the circumstances (one mogul or another, apparently) that certainly makes sense. You've just got to get the right mogul.
Top. Men.
Greenwald did the country a great service publishing Snowden's story. That fact, however, doesn't change that Greenwald is for the most part a fascist crap weasel who is not and never has been a friend of freedom. Greenwald loves freedom when doing so is useful in furthering his ideology. If Greenwald were ever to live in a nation that suited his political tastes, he would have no problem with the government spying and doing all sorts of nasty things to those he perceived as enemies.
Well, he is, or was living in Brazil, which just elected once again, a far left president who is corrupt as hell. So if you're saying Greenwald is a leftist, then he should be paying a visit to Dilma soon to help her get a massive spy agency going to further both of their agendas.
If Dilma does set up a spy agency, Greenwald won't say a word about it.
I don't know about that. As an active member and speaker with my he Brazil chapter of LEAP he's critical of Brazil's WOD policies.
Brazil's WOD policies like most of the world, are a direct result of pressure from the USA. At least that's how it started before it took on a life of it's own, like most government backed rackets do.
If they do that, the Brazilians will probably burn Brasilia to the ground. They would probably do that if the government told them they cannot drink alcohol in the streets.
He seems to take it to the Obama administrations violations as much as Bush's, so that's in his favor IMO
That is because he is an anti-American leftist. He doesn't give a flying fuck about the actions of Hammas or the really any other government he views as one of the oppressed.
Greenwald doesn't care about rights. He cares about politics. He doesn't give a shit about the people Hammas victimize because doing so doesn't further his politics. He only pretends to care about the privacy of Americans because doing so furthers his politics.
He is an awful piece of shit. I am very glad he published Snowden. But it didn't change my opinion of him one bit.
Maybe he thinks the things he cared about are more threatened by what a global super power is up to than what Hamas is up to. I can't blame a guy for caring more about something that more directly affects him.
Or maybe he realizes that the opinions of a gay Jewish newspaper writer would have less than zero impact on Hamas, and so chooses to focus his time and energy on influencing people he thinks he has a chance to influence: the bicoastal leftist elites of the United States, and likeminded people in Europe.
I never speak or write about or contact my legislators about gay marriage. I don't care about it on a personal level, not the way I do about taxes and gun rights and 4th Amendment concerns. That doesn't mean I'm against gay marriage, it just means that I choose to devote my limited time for advocacy to things that are more important to me.
He strongly criticizes the American government for its meddling and military and financial support abroad, something that is in line with libertarian views and principles. Where do you see the contradiction?
As an American and a libertarian, I don't give a flying fuck about the actions of Hammas. Why should I?
I don't care about the superfluous ways in which Greenwald isn't Rothbard. In this instance, good is serving perfection.
Libertarians and Gramscian totalitarians may both have reasons to criticize the actions of the Federal government.
Just don't make the mistake of thinking they are shared reasons.
I think Greenwald still clings to many progressive and left wing ideas. However, I get the impression that he is doing some serious thinking and reflecting, and gradually reaching more libertarian positions. Read, for example, his commentary on Citizens United on Salon http://www.salon.com/2010/01/22/citizens_united/
Greenwald has done some good stuff and he doesn't seem to be blindly beholden to progressive ideology or Democrats. And he actually seems to be accessible to reason and argument. I think that's better than 99.9% of the journalists out there. I'd say: give the guy a break and disagree with him on specific points if you like.
Exactly, Win Bear. If the litmus test continues to be pledging allegiance to the libertarian party platform, we'll remain a cute little fringe movement.
Wow 14 comments so far on a story not slamming Greenwald. Imagine that....
What's there to slam? Greenwald is a pretty awesome guy.
Fuck that guy!
Do I win?
He is short! HA!
He should be winning some type of journalist award for reporting on some stuff that the typical coward journalist in this country is afraid to even speak of.
He should get a medal from the President if we had a President who gave a fig about freedom and privacy. But we have this one
I'm sure Obama will be giving him that, right after he gives one to Snowden.
The worst thing about this program is the fact that it was done in secret without any public debate. Even if you believe that these programs are good and necessary, that doesn't make it right to just enforce them on the public with no debate or even knowledge of their existence.
If these programs are so necessary and effective, it shouldn't be any problem to convince the public of their necessity and virtue. If there is no way to operate them effectively without telling the public, then they are not worth doing.
I agree with that on some level, and that's Greenwald's point, too.
I just can't get over the feeling that warrantless surveillance, "general warrants," if you will, has been addressed somewhere before...
Just because 51% of the electorate thinks it's a good idea to spy on me doesn't make it correct.
dude, that things like 1000 years old
And what the hell's a "Congrefs"??
Congolese umpires?
So THAT's what they were going on about.
A family of apes, according to Melifsa Harrif Perry?
Sure it has. But the 4th Amendment does actually say what people think it does. It doesn't say any warrants or even probable cause are always required.
The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects,[a] against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by Oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized.
We are protected from "unreasonable" searches and seizures. What is reasonable depends upon the circumstances. The people who defend these programs have a point that in some really extreme circumstances a search without even probable cause could be reasonable and consistent with the amendment.
Their problem is that they really can't make a very good case that this is one of those circumstances. They can't point to any immediate danger or how these programs have been in any way effective in accomplishing their avowed purpose.
The public has every right to through its elected officials have a voice in what is reasonable or not under the 4th Amendment.
What about when my "elected officials" are a bunch of assholes with a lust for power who appear to have been taken to DC in a short bus?
Then the public has no one to blame but themselves for not replacing them. We own our Republic. No robed overlord or fancy document is going to save it if the public doesn't won't.
and if the public decides that cavity searches at airport security stations are reasonable?
Then they are ignoring the document and the courts should say no. Just because the word is subject to interpretation doesn't mean there are not limits to its meaning.
My point is that you or I have no more right to put a boot on the country's face and tell them what is "reasonable" than the NSA does. Tyranny in the name of privacy is still tyranny.
Moreover, the Amendment says "reasonable". It doesn't say all searches must have a warrant and probable cause. If you don't like that, amend the document don't pretend it says what you want it to.
Nothing is unreasonable, that's the problem. To our current federal government, anything that is possibly unreasonable can be make reasonable by one of the following things, just switch unreasonable with unconstitutional when necessary.
1. Commerce Clause
2. Penaltax
3. National security
4. For the children.
That is our fault, not the document's fault. And the solution to that is for the public to take back control of their government and protect their own rights. It does no good for enlightened robed overlords to do it for them. Once you say "fuck you America the Constitution means what we say", you have lost even if you make it mean all kinds of wonderful things. Eventually, someone else will show up and make it mean what they want and that will eventually be bad.
We have to take power and money out of politics.
A good start would be to eliminate the WOD and end cronyism. Cronyism has run amok to the point that we will soon have a small group of politically connected oligarchs, elected officials, and unelected bureaucrats controlling virtually all commerce in the USA. Outside of that group it will be impossible for you to enter into any sort of business start up. All of the rest of us will be wage slaves or serfs living off government benefits.
We could argue that what's reasonable is in nearly all cases a search with a warrant. That's actually the Court's starting point, it's just they've carved out so many exceptions they've swallowed the rule.
Since telling an individual what they can or cannot put into their own bodies is unreasonable to anyone who respects liberty and the natural rights of an individual, then that automatically makes about 99% of those searches and seizures unconstitutional.
The WOD is about as unreasonable as you can get. Unless you want to go back to burning witches.
Prohibitions are not searches. I don't like the WOD either. And the federal government has no business criminalizing the possession of anything. They can ban the importation of things. They can ban them being put into interstate commerce. But they can't, consistent with what the Constitution actually says be able to ban possession or use.
That said, good or bad, the states most certainly can. I don't like WOD either. But the constitution doesn't protect us from every harmful policy.
I've always understood the "reasonable" part was addressed when they explain what is required to obtain a warrant.
The Amendment, IMO, says: A search is only reasonable with a warrant ... Followed by the requirements of obtaining one.
Does this not make sense?
I like it.
I believe this to be the intent. The purpose of a Republic (as opposed to a Democracy) is to protect the individual from the tyranny of the majority.
If John's interpretation is correct, the Founders essentially limited the government from taking/searching your shit, only to give them the power to take/search your shit whenever they want. All they have to do is find it reasonable. And if 51% of the constituents agree, we have the tyranny of the majority.
John's interpretation of 4A, as opposed to Sloopy's, is precisely why 4A has been reduced to meaninglessness.
Here's an excellent publication on The Framers' Intent, which supports Sloopy's interpretation.
It goes into historical detail about John Adams' influence on the 4th Amendment, which was based on what he wrote into Article 14 of the Massachusetts Constitution:
That's awesome DK. Ima keep that link. thx
Yeah, I'm glad I researched it. A very interesting read. I like Adams' description of one's House:
Fourth amendment protections are against unreasonable searches and seizures, not unpopular ones. In our system of government, objective truth (i.e., whether something is "reasonable", according to reason) is not determined by vote but by the courts.
Could some of the coders here help me with a question.
Is it possible, and if not, why, (in layman's terms please) to build software or even a hardware box containing the software, that anonomizes the user ? Maybe something at the individual modem perhaps ?
And could it also anonomize the user requesting data by giving out false info about the users address ?
Maybe a force field like program shield that sends out fake addresses while hiding the real IP ?
Thanks to any who reply.
Isn't a proxy server about as good as it gets right now? Because your ISP is always gonna have your info anyway.
Maybe a force field like program shield that sends out fake addresses while hiding the real IP?
A force field? You mean an anonymizer? There are tons of those available. How well they actually work is a big topic of debate.
If you want to make sure that your identity and data are completely anonymous and safe, don't connect to the internet. Once you do, all bets are off.
As long as there are logs and the authorities have access to them, they can trace your activities. Because the system must know where something is going and where it came from in order to deliver information packets.
This all depends on your adversary and how much interest they take in you.
You can anonymize, but you still have to make a connection to Teh Interwebs, and you generally have to pay for that. There is then some record of your connection, and an adversary with enough resources could get to that.
You could minimize that risk by constantly driving around and connecting via different points with no record: Starbucks, for example.
I don't think I'm wrong on this, but I can't pretend to be a master of identity concealment.
In a word, "no".
"[G]iving out false info about the users address" is called IP address spoofing (note: this is often confused with using a proxy, a VPN, or Tor -- but it is absolutely not the same thing).
See, if your network card's drivers support it (and many do), you can tell your computer to set the "from" IP address of any packets you send to whatever (public) IP address you want. There is no little gnome in your computer watching what you're doing.
Terminology note: "packets" are the individual pieces that data is broken up into to be sent over the Internet Protocol (there are other, analogous units for different protocols used on the internet, e.g. Ethernet, but we are not worried about them right now). Each has a "to" and "from" address.
What should happen next is that your ISP says "this isn't an IP address we assigned to that customer -- drop that packet" (or more crudely "this isn't within the range of IP addresses we use -- drop that packet").
Even when that doesn't happen, the networks between your ISP and the destination of your packet with a spoofed address should often (though not always) be able to say "we shouldn't have gotten a packet with that 'from' address from that network -- drop it".
In practice, however, those things don't always happen correctly (or at all). There are a couple network engineers on here who might be able to offer some insight as to why.
So it is possible for some knowledgeable/nefarious folks to spoof the source addresses of their packets if they find the right place to send them from. But this does not help with anonymity 99.9% of the time.
Why? Well, it's pretty simple (and I probably could have skipped to this part if I'd wanted to): whoever gets the spoofed packet will send its response back to the real owner of the source address*.
It's like putting Wrigley Field as the return address on an envelope: sure, you can send the letter from wherever (ignoring postmarks for the moment), but if someone tries to send something to the falsified return address, it won't get to you -- it'll go to Wrigley Field.
And most interesting things you can do on the internet -- even if they don't seem like it on the surface -- require two-way communication.
So, even barring any logging on the part of your ISP or any surveillance by intelligence agencies, IP address spoofing will not help you with anonymity.
(As a side note, if you're left wondering why anyone would want to spoof an IP address: among other uses, it is integral to a popular class of distributed denial of service [DDoS] attacks called amplification attacks.)
*AFAIK there are a couple of circumstances that provide an exception to this rule, but not enough to matter for this case.
Give me your honest opinions on this video. Looks to me like the cop needlessly started and escalated the situation and the second and third girl in ended up paying the price for her lack of restraint.
http://m.wbaltv.com/news/girls.....r/31004666
Wade into the comments to see how horribly racist the fine upstanding people of progressive Maryland are.
People here are terribly racist, and that includes the lefties who won't shut the fuck up for two minutes about diversity and racism and who 100% of them live in all white neighborhoods.
The people in that thread are bootlicking cowards who blame all of society's problems on mouthy black kids and their "welfare queen" families.
It's nauseating to read.
Didn't you guys just elect a GOP governor Hyperion? Any opinion on the guy?
They have a Republican governor and we have a Democrat. Truly a sign of the end times.
Well, NOVA is even more leftist than nearly all of MD, with even more government employees.
I'm trying to build support for DC annexing Fairfax County.
I'm still waiting for Western Maryland to secede from the state so that I can move to Frederick.
Yes, Larry Hogan. I voted for him, but I know very little about the guy. I just typically vote a straight GOP ticket here and vote against all of the crony referendums on the ballot.
I still know very little about Hogan, but I'll be paying attention to what he's doing because the guy, as far as I know, has never held a high political office before.
I think part of what put Hogan over the top is that his wife is Korean and there are some very large Korean communities here, especially in Howard County.
Besides that, when all you talk about or do is raising taxes, like that jackass O'Malley did, people will eventually start to turn against you and your party.
"Yes, Larry Hogan"
Dammit, I like you.
That's not Larry Hogan, that's that JR Yewings dude from The Ponderosa.
How much do you want to bet that security guard has a double-digit IQ and an 8th grade (at most) education?
She's a duly sworn police officer, so the first is a given. Not sure on the latter, as I know several cops,in California that only had a GED. Not sure if Maryland has higher standards.
(Spits coffee)
True, and that's all they can get (of course, half the population has a double-digit IQ).
Smart people, realizing that, don't pick fights with gun-wielding morons, any more than we pick fights with tigers or elephants.
The phrase...
"School Police Officer" is simply an abomination unto itself. This country is fucked!
Prohibitions are not searches
My point is that prohibition is what leads to most searches and seizures by a huge margin.
Sure. But that is because people ignore the constitution. The cause of that is people ignoring the Constitution. The reason they use is incidental.
Margaret Carlson- dumb cunt, or partisan hack?
Paul said he's not anti-vaccine but "most of them ought to be voluntary." He'd heard "of many tragic cases of walking, talking normal children who wound up with profound mental disorders after vaccines."
He then articulated the broader philosophy of the anti-vaxxer movement, whose adherents aren't limited to the "Don't-Tread-on-Me" bunch, but include a sizable left-wing contingent in liberal enclaves in New York City and in California.
"The state doesn't own your children," he said. "Parents own the children and it is an issue of freedom."
This freedom concept ? sometimes called "free-range" parenting -- is all the rage. It has been used to justify all kinds of questionable actions, from rejecting vaccines to dropping kids at the park to play unattended to leaving kids locked in cars while parents go shopping and out to dinner.
Yes.
Dropping kids to play at the park unattended? Where, oh where is this paradise, because when I was a kid we had to ride our bikes to the park to play unattended.
Seriously, though, she's an idiot.
I was often left locked in a running car while my parents ran errands. I got out a book and read for ten to fifteen minutes.
Who the fuck would leave their kid in the car while they went out to dinner? I was either in the restaurant with my parents, and you can bet I behaved, or I was at home either with a babysitter or by myself.
My mom would ask me if I wanted to join her in the supermarket; sometimes I did, sometimes I stayed in the car. Somehow, I was never abducted or melted to a puddle of flesh.
And this was in Hawaii, where it was almost always 80 degrees and humid.
Otherwise known as common practice until just recently. She took the issue and completely inverted it as if these practices are and have been the norm forever. The mendacity is breathtaking.
I'm amazed there aren't scare quotes around this freedom concept.
OT: Reason likes to whine about people being prosecuted for social-media threats, but this case shows that prosecutors aren't going to make a big deal about it.
""In multiple posts, the girl donned a Hitler mustache and swastika. In one image, she gives the Nazi salute in what appears to be a State Police hat. The picture is captioned, "1944: crematorium crew."
On the same Twitter account, the user uploaded a picture of young Orthodox Jewish families outside an Italian ice shop with the caption, "perfect bombing time."
"In another tweet, the user wrote, "I really wanna drive around Lakewood and run over every Jew with my car.""
What's that you say? She got preferential treatment because her dad is a sergeant in the State Police? Get out of here with your paranoid selves:
"The teen, who is not being named because she is a minor, was not given any special treatment because of her father's position, [prosecutorial spokesman Al] Della Fave said."
http://www.nydailynews.com/new.....ailyNewsTw
To clarify: "Prosecutors said they will not charge a New Jersey State Police sergeant's teen daughter..." etc.
Reminds me of that guy in Texas who was charged with making terroristic theats when he made a joke about shooting up a school. They just dropped those right away - oh, wait...
And-
We expect truthing, birthering, anti-vaxxing and climate-change denial from the most conservative wing of the party but not from its presidential timber. Most Republicans realize that the positions that get candidates to the nomination are an albatross in the general election. That's why they are softening their views in advance of 2016. That's also why the reaction to Christie and Paul from headquarters was so swift. Maybe Paul was always planning on getting a booster shot this week but it's doubtful he would have posted a photo of his ouchie on Twitter were he not climbing back off the limb he was sharing with free-range parents.
OMG hilarious! Parents "owning" their children.
Nannytarian village idiot is ostentatiously outraged.
Thursday afternoon I was talking with some of my software developer comrades at work, all of whom are younger than me by 10-20 years. We were talking about children and discipline and how children these days are over protected.
They were talking about how they discipline the children, some of the methods were beyond silly to me. One of them was something about giving the kid a card that they liked to collect when they did what they were told, and taking one away when they were bad.
I said, when I was a kid, we didn't get cards when we misbehaved, we got our arses tanned.
They were astonished, I mean truly literally astonished that our parents actually spanked us. They couldn't believe it. They looked at me like I was straight out of a barbarian hordes movie.
I got a similar reaction when I told a teenager whose mother was waiting till he was 16 to return to work that I got a house key when I was 8, and was expected to ride the bus home, walk from the stop (about a quarter mile), let myself in at 4, and finish my homework before my parents arrived home at 6.
Once I was ten, I was often left instructions to preheat the oven, boil water, turn the crockpot to warm, or other simple cooking tasks.
This was in the late 90s, and it's apparently borderline child abuse today.
"it's apparently borderline child abuse today."
Well, at the very least, its tax-advantaged behavior that should probably warrant additional IRS scrutiny. You could have been rented out as slave labor to *others*!!
(ever since that josh barro piece was introduced to me its been the highlight of how fucking awful the prog-mind is = that *everything in human existence* - labor, not income - is treated as 'potentially/inherently-taxable'. their desire to micromanage society never ends)
I just typically vote a straight GOP ticket here
*Hit-and-Run-Publican surfaces, circles boat, accompanied by ominous music*
I'm waiting for Shreek to come along at any moment now and say that this proves I'm a Republican.
Interestingly, the LP candidate for governor got 1.5% of the vote in the last election.
Must have been a low turn out since there are only 3 of us libertarians in the state and one of us stayed home.
We're gonna need a bigger boat.
Michael Bloomberg decries Colorado marijuana decriminalization, suggests government should focus on disarming black people
Bloomberg claimed that 95 percent of murders fall into a specific category: male, minority and between the ages of 15 and 25. Cities need to get guns out of this group's hands and keep them alive, he said.
"These kids think they're going to get killed anyway because all their friends are getting killed," Bloomberg said. "They just don't have any long-term focus or anything. It's a joke to have a gun. It's a joke to pull a trigger."
If this were a conservative cause you can bet the mainstream media would be giddily pointing out that the founder of a major gun control group has the same view on black people and guns as Stormfront and the Ku Klux Klan.
Well, that explains it then.
"Bloomberg claimed that 95 percent of murders fall into a specific category: male, minority and between the ages of 15 and 25."
That's just straight not true.
No, it's more like 50% when you look at the entire country. Although in the inner cities, it may well be 95%.
Well, it's probably closer to 50%, but still.
Since most of these kids already can't possess guns legally and would get locked away for years if caught with one, and frequently stops them randomly on the street, it seems to me government has run out of possible enforcement options. Unless, of course, Bloomberg is advocating the death penalty for unlicensed gun possession.
Michael Bloomberg decries Colorado marijuana decriminalization, suggests government should focus on disarming black people
He should start in West Baltimore. I think he should personally go there and do this himself, just to prove how much he cares.
I've never been in West Baltimore, but I just rewatched the entire run of The Wire, so that makes me an expert, right?
No, you have to go there and hang out to be an expert. Don't worry, you'll be fine, (;
Robert Reich is outraged.
The euphemism is the "share" economy. A more accurate term would be the "share-the-scraps" economy.
New software technologies are allowing almost any job to be divided up into discrete tasks that can be parceled out to workers when they're needed, with pay determined by demand for that particular job at that particular moment.
Customers and workers are matched online. Workers are rated on quality and reliability.
The big money goes to the corporations that own the software. The scraps go to the on-demand workers.
----------
This is the logical culmination of a process that began thirty years ago when corporations began turning over full-time jobs to temporary workers, independent contractors, free-lancers, and consultants.
It was a way to shift risks and uncertainties onto the workers?work that might entail more hours than planned for, or was more stressful than expected.
Why can't corporations be just like a super-duper Mommy and Daddy?
Only government possesses the high moral character necessary to be a super nanny.
"This is the logical culmination of a process that began thirty years ago when corporations began turning over full-time jobs to temporary workers, independent contractors, free-lancers, and consultants.
It was a way to shift risks and uncertainties onto the workers?work that might entail more hours than planned for, or was more stressful than expected."
And none of this was a result of the labor regulations favored by Kruggie!
Not at all! And it couldn't be foreseen, either!
And just one more law will make everything wonderful!
He agrees:
And a way to circumvent labor laws that set minimal standards for wages, hours, and working conditions. And that enabled employees to join together to bargain for better pay and benefits.
We can fix it with just one moar regulation.
almost any job to be divided up into discrete tasks that can be parceled out to workers when they're needed, with pay determined by demand for that particular job at that particular moment.
Customers and workers are matched online. Workers are rated on quality and reliability.
WOW,
It's almost like a division of labor, or something.
What a crazy, radical, new idea.
I'm waiting for Shreek to come along at any moment now and say that this proves I'm a Republican.
I'm surprised Bo didn't latch onto it with his needle-sharp puppy teeth.
More Reich:
Some economists laud on-demand work as a means of utilizing people more efficiently.
But the biggest economic challenge we face isn't using people more efficiently. It's allocating work and the gains from work more decently.
On this measure, the share-the-scraps economy is hurtling us backwards.
It's a bleedin' tragedy, it is.
"It's allocating work and the gains from work more decently."
And it's odds-on that HE knows what 'decently' means here.
You don't.
Oh come on folks, it's really not that bad. Look at it this way. If a Swede or a Dane (or whatever) wants to talk to their nations' secret police, they generally have to dial a number and be on hold for twenty minutes. I can just pick up the phone and talk, or even fire off an email with "Allahu Akbar" in the subject line, and I know I've been heard. There are many advantages to living in a country that is not a democracy, easy contact with the secret police is just one of them.
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Did anyone else catch this interview with Twitter CEO re: "digital abuse" - look forward to being booted from a website near you for dissenting opinions.
http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000352629