Pat
Supporter
+1 Keith and Pete.
Read the NY Times article on PFC Bradley Manning. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/09/us/09manning.html
He's a complete whack-job with anger management issues. How he received and maintained a security clearance (much less access) is beyond me as is his ability to intercept, from a brigade level office, copy and transfer what Mr. Assange describes as half a million documents in addition to 400,000 related to the Iraq War without notice. He had access to SIPRNet (the government's classified internet) and somehow was able to discretely read and copy hundreds of thousands of diplomatic e-mails?? Bradley had also been demoted for assaulting an officer and he was discovered not through any skilled detection by the government security apparatus but be was reported to the U.S. authorities as an act of conscience by a confidant and fellow hacker. It certainly is reassuring that this same security apparatus is soon going to be the custodian of our health and medical records.
John, I've got to disagree with you on all this (by the way, read-up on Richard Armitage -he's certainly no Bush operative).
I don't believe on big government conspiracies. Like others, I've worked there and my belief is that they are simply an inept bloated bureaucracy. Hell, Nixon couldn't even pull off a burglary and Clinton couldn't privately doink an intern and Hillary can't snoop on U.N. diplomats without discovery and the FBI couldn't catch Bradley Manning without a friend turning him in. For me it's not the power of the government I fear, it's the size, spending and incompetence. Don't assume malice for what stupidity can explain.
I wonder if Manning knows how to get the TSA x-ray photos of a certain sales rep at work. She’s flying to Atlanta next week. He’s probably not interested but a number of us might be
Read the NY Times article on PFC Bradley Manning. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/08/09/us/09manning.html
He's a complete whack-job with anger management issues. How he received and maintained a security clearance (much less access) is beyond me as is his ability to intercept, from a brigade level office, copy and transfer what Mr. Assange describes as half a million documents in addition to 400,000 related to the Iraq War without notice. He had access to SIPRNet (the government's classified internet) and somehow was able to discretely read and copy hundreds of thousands of diplomatic e-mails?? Bradley had also been demoted for assaulting an officer and he was discovered not through any skilled detection by the government security apparatus but be was reported to the U.S. authorities as an act of conscience by a confidant and fellow hacker. It certainly is reassuring that this same security apparatus is soon going to be the custodian of our health and medical records.
John, I've got to disagree with you on all this (by the way, read-up on Richard Armitage -he's certainly no Bush operative).
I don't believe on big government conspiracies. Like others, I've worked there and my belief is that they are simply an inept bloated bureaucracy. Hell, Nixon couldn't even pull off a burglary and Clinton couldn't privately doink an intern and Hillary can't snoop on U.N. diplomats without discovery and the FBI couldn't catch Bradley Manning without a friend turning him in. For me it's not the power of the government I fear, it's the size, spending and incompetence. Don't assume malice for what stupidity can explain.
I wonder if Manning knows how to get the TSA x-ray photos of a certain sales rep at work. She’s flying to Atlanta next week. He’s probably not interested but a number of us might be
