Showing posts with label Anthony Weiner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthony Weiner. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Weinergate and National Security


www.biggovernment.com 


Rep. Anthony Weiner's now infamous (and creepy) tweeting incident has been monopolizing news coverage for the past week. While it may seem silly and insignificant, it should draw our attention to the broader issue of cyber-security.  Last week, U.S. officials announced that Gmail accounts of top U.S. officials had been hacked - by China.  
"Thursday, U.S. officials revealed that hackers in the Chinese city of Jinan were responsible for a crude "phishing" effort specifically targeting the Google email accounts of hundreds of top U.S. officials... 
"...That the attack originated in Jinan is significant because it's one of seven command centers of the Chinese military, with a special designation as a center for Internet work. It has been caught in other attacks against the U.S. government."
This is not the first time China has hacked Google.  At least twice before, attacks originating in China have been detected by Google - one in 2009 prompting Google to shut down its search engine operations there. 


According to a Wall Street Journal report, Google says senior U.S. officials, Chinese activists and others were targeted and tricked into disclosing their Gmail passwords with "bad actors" based in China:
"Stewart Baker, a former homeland security official in the Bush administration, said he suspects the ultimate goal of the hacking may have been to use the email accounts as a stepping stone to penetrate the officials' home computers."If you can compromise that machine, you may well be able to access the communications they are having with the office,'' said Mr. Baker."
One problem is the increasing tendency of public officials to use private e-mail accounts for government business that they wish to shield from public records laws,  like the Freedom of Information Act:
"If all White House officials were following rules prohibiting the use of personal email for official business, there would simply be no sensitive information to find," said Rep. Darrell Issa, Republican chairman of the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, and a frequent thorn in the Obama administration's side. "Unfortunately, we know that not everyone at the White House follows those rules and that creates an unnecessary risk."
And so we have Rep. Anthony Weiner, with his loose thumbs, tweeting his private parts for all the world to see.  Accidentally.   The 46-year-old married man meant to send his privates as a private message to a college co-ed but somehow slipped up and sent it to all his Twitter followers. Then he lied and claimed he was "hacked' and proceeded to participate in an elaborate conspiracy theory about the alleged hacking, allowing the sordid story to marinate for a week before finally confessing that they were indeed his privates and he was the one who tweeted them.   As a joke.  Ha ha.  

Today, Weiner held a press conference where he apologized for his "hugely regrettable" lapse of judgement and took responsibility for his actions.  Which means, of course, he's sorry he got caught and  he won't be that stupid again. 

Except that he's a United States Congressman.  And while the fact that Weiner is a pervert is troubling enough, the national security issues are even more troubling.  Weiner's fumbling thumbs likely have access to sensitive intelligence information.   He's on the House Energy and Commerce Committee, which ironically, on the day before Weiner held his creepy media blitz, held a hearing on Protecting the Electrical Grid: The Grid Reliability and Infrastructure Defense Act.  These hearings focused on the threats of cyber attacks on the power grids and testimony mentioned several times the vulnerabilities of Google.  

A 2008 National Review report documented multiple instances of cyber espionage and terrorism traced to Chinese sources, including the 2003 blackout in the Northeast, the largest in the country's history.  It was originally blamed on some overgrown trees in Ohio, but later traced to hackers in China.  The article states that the threat is not just from the Chinese government:
“There’s a huge pool of Chinese individuals, students, academics, unemployed, whatever it may be, who are, at minimum, not discouraged from trying this out,” said Rodger Baker, a senior China analyst for Stratfor, a private intelligence firm. So-called patriotic-hacker groups have launched attacks from inside China, usually aimed at people they think have offended the country or pose a threat to its strategic interests. At a minimum the Chinese government has done little to shut down these groups, which are typically composed of technologically skilled and highly nationalistic young men."
And Rep. Anthony Weiner, who has no idea with whom he is exchanging naked pictures and having sexually charged conversations on any give day, and has admitted he has poor judgement, has access to information about our power grids and infrastructure defense systems. 

James Madison, in Federalist 61 gives this advice across the ages:
"An individual who is observed to be inconstant to his plans, or perhaps to carry on his affairs without any plan at all, is marked at once, by all prudent people, as a speedy victim to his own unsteadiness and folly. His more friendly neighbors may pity him, but all will decline to connect their fortunes with his; and not a few will seize the opportunity of making their fortunes out of his. One nation is to another what one individual is to another; with this melancholy distinction perhaps, that the former, with fewer of the benevolent emotions than the latter, are under fewer restraints also from taking undue advantage from the indiscretions of each other. Every nation, consequently, whose affairs betray a want of wisdom and stability, may calculate on every loss which can be sustained from the more systematic policy of their wiser neighbors. But the best instruction on this subject is unhappily conveyed to America by the example of her own situation. She finds that she is held in no respect by her friends; that she is the derision of her enemies; and that she is a prey to every nation which has an interest in speculating on her fluctuating councils and embarrassed affairs."
This perceived instability in a U.S. leader and his threat to our national security is sufficient reason for him to be removed from office....immediately, before he damages more than just his own family and credibility. 









Friday, March 18, 2011

March 18, 2011

Today was a gorgeous spring day in Wayne County, Ohio - the thermometer hit a balmy 61 degrees!  I spent a lot of time in the car today and noted some sure signs of spring:


  • Golfers on the golf course
  • A few hopeful farmers plowing their waterlogged fields
  • The beautiful sound of the crack of the bat as I watched Kyle and the Smithville Smimthies' baseball practice
We're enjoying it while it lasts, knowing we will surely have at least one more good snow before spring is here to stay (and that we'll be sitting through baseball games in the freezing rain). 


Here's today's roundup:


Malaysia garbles Lady Gaga's 'Born This Way' lyrics | Los Angeles Times
"Broadcasters in that country have chosen to electronically garble the part of the tune that says, 'No matter gay, straight or bi, lesbian, transgendered life, I'm on the right track, baby.' 
One broadcaster said they are being cautious regarding Lady Gaga's lyrics, which promote racial and sexual tolerance, because of government restrictions against airing material that might go against 'good taste or decency or [are] offensive to public feeling.'"
I wonder how many teens are running around singing this song, in its 5th week on the Billboard  Hot 100,   without even knowing what the lyrics are about?  It was featured last night on American Idol, with all the fresh-faced contestants enthusiastically belting it out, while the audience sang along.


House Votes to Defund National Public Radio - FoxNews.com:
"The House of Representatives on Thursday voted 228-192 on a bill to defund National Public Radio, the vast public radio network whose leadership has been questioned after a series of executive decisions about programming, staffing and reporting bias."
See how your representative voted here


This defunding caused Rep. Anthony Weiner to become positively unhinged, unleashing a mocking tirade against the GOP, accusing them of forcing Click and Clack into the unemployment lines.  What Weiner doesn't understand is that we want Click and Clack off the government payroll.  And while we're at it, let's go after PBS and take Big Bird and Curious George off the government payroll too.  Don't worry...if the market demands it, they'll stick around. 



Meanwhile...


"The national debt jumped by $72 billion on Tuesday even as the Republican-led U.S. House of Representatives passed a continuing resolution to fund the government for just three weeks that will cut $6 billion from government spending.

"If Congress were to cut $6 billion every three weeks for the next 36 weeks, it would manage to save between now and late November as much money as the Treasury added to the nation’s net debt during just the business hours of Tuesday, March 15."
State monitor orders Barack Obama School closed
Asbury Park Press (HT: Michelle Malkin)
"The state fiscal monitor who oversees financial operations in the school district Thursday morning ordered the closing of the Barack H. Obama Elementary School as of July 1...
"Students next year will go to the district's two other more modern elementary schools -- Thurgood Marshall on the east side and Bradley on the west side...
"Officially renamed early in 2010 after the president, the building was known as the Bangs Avenue School since it was built a century ago. The state School Development Authority had planned to build a new school to replace the historic building, but has pulled back and Lowe said recently the state would not build a new school."
 Japanese people are setting the example, will the U.S. follow? | iVoters.com - Elaine Merritt
"There has been no surge of lawlessness in Sendai, the Japanese city hit hardest by the 9.0-magnitude earthquake.  For some reason, Japan has proven to be an exception." 
"When crises and national disasters happen in the United States, there are usually reports of violence, looting, and incivility as people scramble to survive or even just take advantage of the situation for personal gain. Remember the images from Hurricanes’ Andrew and Katrina when people were stealing TV’s and other electronics?...
"...In the United States, we have always been known for our caring and generosity to others but has something happened to us along the way?  Should a disaster of this magnitude happen here can we say as Japan that violence and incivility will not be the norm?
"Will we continue to see the attitudes of the people displayed in Andrew, Katrina, Wisconsin, and Ohio?
"Will Japan continue to be the world’s exception?" 
Sherrod Brown admits free trade in oil will save us (and himself) | RedState
"Senator Sherrod Brown (D) has sure noticed. He’s also noticed that gas prices are going up, and up, and up since Barack Obama took office, skyrocketing from under $2/gal to over $3.50/gal, an increase of about 75%. 
"So what does a Democrat (and Daily Kos darling) who has built a career by crusading against international trade do, when his career is on the line in 2012? Why, become a champion of trade, of course...
"Another comes from Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio), who has urged the State Department to press oil-producing nations to increase their production while the U.S. economy continues to recover from the 2008 financial collapse."
"This is pure hypocrisy on Brown’s part. He’ll prescribe trade restrictions all day and all night; Bush’s bilateral trade juggernaut was slowed up only by Democrat stonewalling in the Senate. But as soon as Brown looks at Kasich, looks at Portman, and realizes he’s the odd man out in 2012, he starts screaming for trade."
Gotta love these election season conversions!


Birther? Potential 2012 Contender Donald Trump Doubts Obama’s Citizenship | The Blaze
“Everybody that even gives a hint of being a birther … even a little bit of a hint, like, gee, you know, maybe, just maybe this much of a chance, they label them as an idiot. Let me tell you, I’m a really smart guy,” he said in the interview, which took place aboard his private plane, Trump Force One.
“I was a really good student at the best school in the country. The reason I have a little doubt, just a little, is because he grew up and nobody knew him.”
Trump went on to say, “When you interview people, if I ever got the nomination, if I ever decide to run, you may go back and interview people from my kindergarten. They’ll remember me. Nobody ever comes forward. Nobody knows who he is until later in his life. It’s very strange. The whole thing is very strange.
Irony Alert: Salon points out that a Spy Magazine article quotes a candy store owner from the neighborhood Trump grew up in saying, "I've been running this store for 28 years, and I don't remember him," even though Trump has bragged of being "something of a leader" in his old neighborhood. Hmmmm....


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This is so sad. ..Erick Erickson from RedState shared this Twitter exchange tonight.  Personhood Florida is a group working to get a Personhood Amendment on the Florida ballot.  Referring to a human being as an "unwanted growth" as if it were a cancerous tumor, is disgusting. 




 Personhood Florida · 


Promoting Personhood of all human beings irrespective of age, race, health, function, condition of dependency. Pro-life, Against Abortion, Prolife, , #912





SherrieGG  

@ Abortion does not kill children. It removes an unwanted growth. More women have had their lives SAVED by abortion than died.




Erick Erickson
The person who can rationalize this is a person who needs a lot of prayer.



I agree with Erick.  Sherrie, and other like her, need prayer.  While we can and should work for legislation to stop abortion, ultimately, we need God to change the hearts and minds of people who don't believe in the sanctity of life. 




Phil Johnson Tweeted this "Fur Coat"video.  I keep watching the ending and trying to figure out how they did it.