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  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarA99:   2 months, 1 week ago · View

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  • Anon posted an update:   2 months, 3 weeks ago · View

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  • Anon posted a new activity comment:   5 months, 3 weeks ago · View

    fyi, video 1 was posted on Mar 12, 2011
    video 2 was posted on Jun 11, 2011

    In reply to - Anon posted an update in the group A99: Co-Opted Yet Again! We’ve been co-opted 99 thousand ways so far, but it’s all good, that was the plan, plant the seed and watch it evolve. But this is way too funny, now even Paul Krugman has been reading from our playbook and wants on our bandwagon: We Are the 99.9% [...] · View
  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarA99:   5 months, 3 weeks ago · View

    Co-Opted Yet Again!

    We’ve been co-opted 99 thousand ways so far, but it’s all good, that was the plan, plant the seed and watch it evolve. But this is way too funny, now even Paul Krugman has been reading from our playbook and wants on our bandwagon:

    We Are the 99.9%

    “We are the 99 percent” is a great slogan. It correctly defines the issue as being the middle class versus the elite (as opposed to the middle class versus the poor). And it also gets past the common but wrong establishment notion that rising inequality is mainly about the well educated doing better than the less educated; the big winners in this new Gilded Age have been a handful of very wealthy people, not college graduates in general. If anything, however, the 99 percent slogan aims too low. A large fraction of the top 1 percent’s gains have actually gone to an even smaller group, the top 0.1 percent…

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/25/opinion/we-are-the-99-9.html?_r=1

    Oh Paul, you and your well-groomed beard are so brilliant! We are awed by your ivory tower wisdom. We humbly bow before your genius. A true visionary! Where did you ever come out with such an amazing… idea

    Take the long road…
    http://ampedstatus.org/a-report-from-the-frontlines-the-long-road-to-occupywallstreet-and-the-origins-of-the-99-movement/

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      Anon · 5 months, 3 weeks ago

      fyi, video 1 was posted on Mar 12, 2011
      video 2 was posted on Jun 11, 2011

  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarA99:   7 months, 1 week ago · View

    Welcome to the #OWS 99% Movement “We Will NOT Be Co-Opted” Working Group

    This is not an official statement from the #OWS 99% Movement. As a decentralized leaderless movement, in our opinion, there is no one group, organization, website or individual who can speak for the movement as a whole.

    We, a working group of people currently occupying Liberty Park and many other locations throughout the US, are growing increasingly concerned about divide and conquer attempts being made to co-opt the movement. In the following message, we are issuing our first proposed statement. If you agree with the statement, please post it to your website and/or spread it throughout your social networks, both online and offline at occupations throughout the country. If you would like to read this statement at your local GA meetings and vote or edit it, feel free. If you disagree with the statement, please air your disagreements – this is what democracy looks like.

    We appreciate, respect and encourage endorsements from individuals and organizations. We invite them. However, just because an individual or organization endorses our movement, does not mean that they in any way have a leadership role in deciding the future direction of this movement. We will not be co-opted by hierarchical organizations. No matter how wonderful their cause may be.

    There are many people, organizations and media outlets within both the Democratic and Republican parties who are trying to label us as the Democrat’s version of the Tea Party. In this working groups opinion, not only is this incorrect, but in labeling us this way, you are, whether you realize it or not, undermining the very essence of this movement with your obsolete divide and conquer groupthink propaganda. Just as the mainstream media and both political parties aided and abetted the co-option of the Tea Party by the Republican Party, there is an attempt being made to do the same to us within the Democratic Party.

    We the People, We the 99%, are not the pawns of either wing of the two-party oligarchy.

    We emphatically reject the attempted leadership of any political party, organization or individual. If there are elected officials or organizations who endorse our movement, we welcome them.

    However, they must do so knowing this: Your voice will be just as loud as any other voice. We are led by no one. You cannot co-opt We The People.

    Respect Us.

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      iknowit’swhatibeentryinnaTELLya!!! :D

      Great post! I want to work for this group.

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      @pcvcolin · 7 months, 1 week ago

      #OpESR In Response to ”We Will Not Be Co-Opted” Working Group: Your communications have been co-opted. Come to AmpedStatus.org/network to discuss.

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      1 http://ampedstatus.org/network/activity/p/43804/

      2 http://ampedstatus.org/network/activity/p/44172/

      And now attempting to prompt users to ”report me?” Why? I bring honesty in heaps. My letters are not always well-structured, but at least they are genuine. I post all kinds of tutorials and float all kinds of ideas, at irregular, humanized intervals. I have altruistic intentions, high expectations for this movement & moreover, a deep respect for its members’ intelligence. This is what I am talking about.

      I just can’t respect furtive agenda pimping by way of deception.

      TO THE READER:
      It’s like, you couldn’t make this up if you tried.
      I am generally uncomfortable with any kind of confrontation. Seems to me that I have earned a place here through good-faith contribution to the discussion, even at my most anguished. Seems to me this is as much my chalk board as it is anyone else(s). Attempting to rally others to strike is more than a little hostile, in my opinion.

      It also intentionally doesn’t address my point.

      imagebam.com

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        Ed Diver · 7 months, 1 week ago

        This is a network dedicated to sharing information and ideas with the goal to making this broken world a better place -on going personal attacks are not welcome. Be warned.

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      adoration · 7 months, 1 week ago

      helping without interfering

      To @bombenhagel aka rookspurt schmucko in drag aka In the Streets, Yet This Night, Left & Right UNITE to Fight: In your absolutely unjustifiable attack on me in the first place, in terms of anonymity, you have likely outed more than one innocent bystander; creating controversy and disruption where none needed to exist in their lives or for their circle of friends and family who have no connection, until now, to what we’re trying to do around here… and all of that damage to them and to us because of your bull (in a china shop) social irresponsibility and immaturity. I won’t ask you to take down the graphics and names named. The damage may have already been done, but maybe not. Personally, having written my little newspaper online for 10 years, I am not so anonymous, so I don’t care. The question is, how much will those you outed care, which doesn’t matter, because you are anonymous right? Too bad for the sake of all, you aren’t more #ANONYMOUS-like; speaking of what we’re trying to do around here. The movement hasn’t formally adopted helping without interfering, but in any case, we’re not terrorists. We’re not here to harm the proverbial least of these, the 99%, and we should take care not to. هل فهمت؟ Capicé?

      BACKGROUNDER: Is @bombenhagel aka In the Streets, Yet This Night, Left & Right UNITE to Fight! a reincarnation of rookspurt schmucko resurrected from the dread? I think so.

      http://bit.ly/poQJ3K

      The text (below) was ”edited” out from the QJ3K URL (above):

      @bombenhagel: In a violence-prone tone, you as rookspurt schmucko bring ON/OFF SUBJECT distraction to the process. Not even cozying up to the #OWS 99% Movement “We Will NOT Be Co-Opted” Working Group can absolve you from having already undermined our ”respect us” efforts.

      [Cross-posted in the AmpedStatus/Network enemy of my enemy discussion group, and the helping without interfering archive]

      Note: This is a raw feed of all activity throughout this social network. Most people on this network are dedicated to our two core common ground goals. However, as with all popular movements, we do have some people who join this network in an attempt to undermine our efforts and create distractions. If you see any saboteurs, please click on the ”report user” button next to their posts.

  • Anon posted a new activity comment:   7 months, 2 weeks ago · View

    Thanks J! You’re doing an excellent job w/ this group :)

    In reply to - jiachinger posted on the forum topic Occupy Wall Street News in the group News Discussion: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XhyGfbxGBwI · View
  • Anon started the forum topic Introducing the AmpedStatus Board of Trust – Cast Your Vote in the group AvatarA99:   9 months, 3 weeks ago · View

    We’ve been informally asking our readers to name their most trusted reporters. We are specifically looking for people who are independent and not trapped in partisan Democrat Vs Republican groupthinking boxes, i.e. funded by partisan organizations that serve as divide and conquer pawns. Here are the top 20 most often mentioned people thus far: Charles [...]

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      Melanie Bray · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

      Mother Mousekeeter too!

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      adoration · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

      Danny Schechter, Juan Cole and Tom Engelhardt

      Danny Schechter, Juan Cole and Tom Engelhardt , and a number of the tomdispatch.com writers are deemed reliable and should added to the AmpedStatus/Network’s public list. I am enthusiastically supportive of the writers AmpedStatus posted. I second the nominations of David DeGraw, Glen Ford, and Dylan Ratigan (the only ”MSM” rep), and I would also include Rachel Maddow. Neither should Lawrence O’Donnell and Cenk Unger be discriminated against for their MSM affiliations, or for their unabashedly leftist-to-socialistic leanings.

      cc: AmpedStatus[@]AmpedStatus.com

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      Voltaire · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

      surprised that no one has named Jon Stewart.

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        adoration · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

        Jon Stewart is saddled with Israel-sympathetic baggage verging on pro-Zionist, or anti-Palestinian, no matter what he says most of the time; he isn’t as journalistically ”clean” as the other AmpedStatus/Network nominees are perceived to be. It would be great for him to come clean on all of the above so he could be included without hesitation.

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          Voltaire · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

          true…although the list is for ”most trusted Journalist”…though I see no reason why those facts, true as they may be, should preclude him from being a ”trusted journalist”.

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      m · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

      i deleted my reply. why are you looking for our ”most trusted” reporters?

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        adoration · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

        its a news junky thing. Best leave it be

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          [)@$J0o@n0n · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

          Alrighty here goes-
          I think I’m about to piss some people off but I’m pretty sure the people that matter will get what I’m saying. Disclaimer: I fucking love to play devils advocate.

          First off. There is a HUGE difference between being Jewish, and being a practicing member of the Jewish faith. I’m really, really hoping everyone knows that… otherwise I’ll cry

          So. Straight up bud, you sounds like you’ve been listening to too much fox news :-/ Just like… I’m jewish. My grandmother and her sister, and my aunt and a few cousins live there. My grandma went from Italy, to the Netherlands, to Argentina, and finally to Israel. She spent 19 months on a boat and the first thing that happened to her when she got off was protesters threw bricks at her. She became heavily involved in the Zionist movement. No shit, I think she would jump at the chance to demolish an Arab settlement by hand, w/a sledge, and have a huge fucking smile on her face the entire time.
          My aunt told my grandmother that she was in love with an Arab. They’re both secular as hell and he’s one seriously cool guy. My grandmother disowned her on the spot, told her she had an hour to pack and leave, that she never wanted to see her again, and they haven’t communicated AT ALL other than birthday cards, and hannukah cards. The cards are empty. It’s depressing as fuck.

          THAT is a Zionist. AIPAC are Zionists. People like Koch, Kissinger, Wisenthal, and Roth are Zionist.

          Honestly the little rant about his baggage reminded me of this chick who tried to convince me that Lenin was a Jew because he had one Jewish grandparent. It’s the same thing. I’m a Jew by race and culture, I’m an anarchist towards religion, if i deign to give it even that much of my time.

          And then not only that, but Voltaire is totally right. You’re talking about an op/ed writer/or tv personality. A journalist writes facts. period. IDEALLY, you shouldn’t be able to glean anything about the authors leanings from a straight news article.

          And while I definitely support some of the people on you’re list, in my opinion, you’re missing some people who both deserve to be there in favor of more… well, it fits, politically suitable people. If they’re a trusted news name, I don’t care if he makes Hitler look like Bernie Sanders, he’s that far right, I just want to trust what they say.

          @voodooman @yodabear144 @admin @voltaire @marrii

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            adoration · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

            A lot of @zdj415 ’s ”devil’s advocating” is the old ”Who is a Jew?” rehash, which is really a conversation for another day having nothing to do who is a journalist or who is an Israeli Zionist, and all of what that means. I’d loved to’ve been in the room when the rabbis were sorting it out over whether to include ”the chosen” and ”Abraham’s ’only’ son” in writing up the Torah. Jeez, those two lines have created such havoc, particularly for Jews, even before 1948. But that too is another conversation for another day having nothing to do who is a journalists – unless the journalist in question is locked into the post-1948, ”chosen” or ”’only’ son” mindset, and then, against the grain of history editorializes in favor of hell on earth against Palestinians. The very much still with us Shock and Awe aftermath of Cheney-Bush White House (neocon) and AIPAC up-together, also makes for all-roads-lead-to anti-Israeli perceived as anti-Semitic fodder. Do we really want to keep going there, even via Iran? I say instead, name more names of trustworthy journalists who many of us might not otherwise know; who will be there for us when we need (Robert) Heinlein-type Fair Witness journalists to say what’s happening, man.

            @zdj415 @yodabear144 @admin @voltaire @marrii

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              [)@$J0o@n0n · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

              ooof it was a little winded, didn’t sleep much last night, it happens to me. I guess what I really should have said is,
              ”What does he do that makes you think that?”

              And honestly, I have no desire for an argument, it’s just that after I read your post I did a tiny bit of research (like 6 mins, nowhere near thorough) and the stuff i found online was… um… reactionary, to say the least lol. And I’m curious. i think that would actually really piss me off, because I like the daily show. for entertainment anyways, not as a news source

              @yodabear144 @admin @voltaire @marrii @zdj415

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                [)@$J0o@n0n · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

                oh and one thing I just thought of, you guys should check out vice tv
                yes mtv made an awful watered down version for tv that was terrible, but the stuff on their website is pretty nutty.
                This video is them in Pakistan very shortly after Bin Laden was killed.
                I really like the fact that their ”agenda” as such seems to just be to show people how fucked up the world is, no more, no less.

                video episodes: http://www.vbs.tv/newsroom

                Christian Lombardi and Tim Freccia are incredible politically driven photojournalists too.

                hehe and adoration if we ever get a jewish journalist as popular in mainstream culture as Stewart with a ’chosen’ mentality you guys are ours anyways :D MUHAHAHAHAHHAA

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                adoration · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

                @zdj415: It isn’t what Jon Stewart did or said, it was what he didn’t say in an interview with Rachel Maddow that, in that moment reminded me of a scene from Syriana (the movie), when the fictional business man with the authority to order a not-so-fictional GHWB-CIA to conduct assassinations in behalf of the oil and energy corporations, and who confronts a fictional Saudi prince who wants to be king, but doesn’t know how to ask the authority figure for a favor, or in the case of Jon Stewart, who could say anything but couldn’t say anything… Jon Stewart at a loss for words? At that moment, I thought, oh shit… no shit! Its like listening to a Jazz solo. You can more or less know which note is going to be played next based on the series of notes that carried the tune up to that point; where the tune’s going is based on where its already been. When a musician plays an unexpected note and keeps it together, well, that’s Jazz. That’s the thrill of spontaneity. Jon Stewart could have taken the conversation anywhere he wanted it to go, but instead he said nothing. He couldn’t or wouldn’t say. On its face, that was contrary to everything the comedy-as-honesty genre stands for. I was stunned. Except for the clips rerun on MSNBC, I don’t ever watch the guy for entertainment or news, or Bill Maher or Stephen Colbert. Maher feeds my already undiagnosed already terminal cynicism, and Colbert in-character is a 1970s Archie Bunker-like figure; a modern times establishment Republican, ”conservative” or GOP Tea Bagger. I despise those ignorant assholes. I cannot stand seeing or hearing ”W” either, or Cheney, or Rumsfeld, or Kissinger, or Condoleeza Rice, or Sarah Palin, or Lanny Davis, or the Clintons. I have that choice. My TV remote is never out of reach.

                cc: @zdj415 @yodabear144 @admin @voltaire @marrii @zdj415

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      adoration · 9 months, 3 weeks ago

      Without such a list, some AmpedStatus/Network readers might not come to know who John Pilger is.

  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarGlobal Insurrection News:   9 months, 4 weeks ago · View

    Global Insurrection News Roundup – 7/23 | Waging NonViolence

    Hundreds of thousands of Syrians defied a violent government crackdown Friday, insisting they will not be terrified into submission through bullets, mass arrests and more than four months of attacks by security forces. At least five people were killed, activists said.

    Alpha Natural Resources Inc. halted blasting operations on Coal River Mountain for hours Wednesday as it searched for two mountaintop removal mining protesters with the group Radical Action for Mountain People’s Survival who erected platforms in trees 80 feet above ground within 300 feet of a blasting site. They are now on day three of the tree sit.

    Russian police beat and arrested activists trying to save Khimki Forest from being destroyed by the controversial Moscow-St.Petersburg Motorway project.

    1,000 cyclists took part in a rally on Wednesday night in Toronto to protest the City’s decision to remove a number of bike lanes.

    Union workers at the world’s top copper mine, Chile’s Escondida, started a 24-hour strike on Thursday over a series of wage contract demands that if not met could lead to an indefinite work stoppage.

    Several hundred protesters are rallying in Cairo and other cities, keeping pressure on Egypt’s military rulers and government to uproot and try former regime officials.

    Twenty students in Chile are on a hunger strike to support demands for improvements to the country’s education system.

    About a thousand Turks and Kurds demonstrated in central Istanbul on Thursday, calling for peace and an end to Turkey’s longstanding Kurdish problem.

    Greek taxi drivers blocked ports and airports on the popular tourist islands of Crete and Corfu on Thursday, in a strike to protest government plans to open up their trade to competition.

    34 people were arrested during a march to the statehouse in Nairobi on Tuesday, where demonstrators attempted to petition the President to sack corrupt senior government officials.

    Hundreds of union and nonunion workers protested in front of the Grand Hyatt hotel in San Francisco on Thursday to protest the abuse of workers and a clause in their contract that takes away their right to go on strike. 80 people were cited for civil disobedience.

  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarResources For A Revolution:   10 months ago · View

    We know that most people on this network do not participate in any illegal activity, mostly engaging in legal non-violent civil disobedience. However, given the recent arrests of supposed Anonymous ”members” [sic] by the FBI, and the crackdowns on peace protesters, we figured we should share this with everyone to make sure you know your legal and Constitutional rights.

    What To Do If An Agent Knocks: Federal Investigators and Your Rights
    By the Center for Constitutional Rights, via News Junkies


    Do I have to talk to the FBI?

    No. The FBI does not have the authority to make anyone answer questions (other than name and address [see errata]), to permit a search without a warrant, or to otherwise cooperate with an investigation. Agents are usually lawyers, and they are always trained as investigators; they have learned the power of persuasion, the ability to make a person feel scared, guilty, or impolite for refusing their requests for information. So remember, they have no legal authority to force people to do anything — unless they have obtained an arrest or search warrant. Even when agents do have warrants, you still don’t have to answer their question.

    Under what laws do the agents operate?

    In 1976, FBI guidelines regulating the investigation of political activities were issued by Attorney General Edward H. Levi. Criticized by liberals and conservatives alike, the guidelines were issued in the wake of a Congressional committee’s report of highly questionable activities by the FBI: monitoring the activities of domestic political groups seeking to effect change.

    The report exposed the FBI’s counter-intelligence program (COINTELPRO) under which the agency infiltrated groups, compiled dossiers on, and directly interfered with individuals engaged in activities protected by the First Amendment rights to freedom of expression and association.

    The FBI COINTELPRO program was initiated in 1956. Its purpose, as described later by FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover, was “to expose, disrupt, misdirect, discredit, or otherwise neutralize activities” of those individuals and organizations whose ideas or goals he opposed. Tactics included: falsely labelling individuals as informants; infiltrating groups with persons instructed to disrupt the group; sending anonymous or forged letters designed to promote strife between groups; initiating politically motivated IRS investigations; carrying out burglaries of offices and unlawful wiretaps; and disseminating to other government agencies and to the media unlawfully obtained derogatory information on individuals and groups.
    In 1983, Attorney General William French Smith issued superseding guidelines that authorized “domestic security/terrorism” investigations against political organizations whenever the FBI had a reasonable belief that these groups might violate a law. The new guidelines permitted the same intrusive techniques the FBI used against organized crime.
    The Smith guidelines were justified by the Attorney General’s observation that “our citizens are no less threatened by groups which engage in criminal violence for political… purposes that by those which operate lawlessly for financial gain.” He concluded: “we must ensure that criminal intelligence resources that have been brought to bear so effectively in organized crime and racketeering investigations are effectively employed in domestic security/ terrorism cases.” The guidelines provide, therefore, no safeguards to protect against infringements of First Amendment rights.

    Worst, they ignore the history of COINTELPRO abuses, and abolish the distinction between regular criminal investigations and investigations of groups and individuals seeking political change. They fail to limit the investigative techniques used to obtain data on political groups, so that now the FBI may use any technique, including electronic surveillance and informers, against political organizations.

    Today, the FBI may begin a full investigation whenever there is a reasonable indication that “two or more persons are engaged in an enterprise for the purpose of furthering political or social goals wholly or in part through activities that involve force or violence and a violation of the criminal laws of the United States.” The FBI has interpreted “force or violence” to include the destruction of property as a symbolic act, and the mere advocacy of such property destruction would trigger an investigation. Even without any reasonable indication, under a separate guideline on “Civil Disorders and Demonstrations Involving a Federal Interest,” the FBI may investigate an organization that plans only legal and peaceful demonstrations.

    Another set of rules governing federal intelligence gathering is Executive Order 12333, in force since 1981. It authorizes the FBI and CIA to infiltrate, manipulate and destroy U.S.political organizations, as well as to use electronic surveillance –under the pretext of an international intelligence investigation.

    What federal agencies are likely to be interested in a citizen’s political activities andaffiliations?

    The FBI is still the major national intelligence-gathering agency. There are also many other federal, state, local and private investigative agencies. At least 26 federal agencies may gather intelligence, including the Immigration & Naturalization Service, Internal Revenue Service, and the Treasury Department’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms. Local police agencies sometimes contain “special services” units and narcotics or other “strike forces” in which federal, state, and local agencies cooperate. The Central Intelligence Agency and National Security Agency are particularly active when a political organization has or is suspected to have international contacts. Military security agencies and increasingly significant “private” research institutes and security agencies also gather intelligence.

    A recent Freedom of Information Act request on behalf of the Livermore Action Group, an anti-nuclear organization, revealed that the Navy, the U.S. Marshal’s Service, and the Marine Corps all sent agents to the Group’s public meetings and kept newspaper reports of such meetings. Most chilling was the revelation that the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) — the federal agency charged with implementing martial law in the event of a nuclear war — was also watching the Livermore group.

    Federal and state, local and private agencies, all tend to share information in a variety of ways.

    How does the FBI learn about citizens and organizations?

    Political intelligence is gathered from public sources, such as newspapers and leaflets. It is also collected by informers who may be government employees or people recruited by them. Political intelligence is also collected through FBI visits to your home or office. We are here most concerned with this aspect of intelligence gathering.

    Agents may be sent to interview people after FBI officials decide there is a “reasonable indication” that an organization or person meets the guidelines for a “domestic security” investigation. Such interviews are a primary source of information, for most people are not aware of their right not to talk to federal agents.

    Most people are also unaware of the limits to the power of FBI and other investigative agents. Many people visited by agents are also afraid of being rude or uncooperative. Agents may be friendly and courteous, as if they are attempting to protect you or your organization, or express admiration for your organization and its goals. Occasionally, the FBI may persuade a disaffected member of an organization to give them information about other members, including their personal lives, character and vulnerabilities.

    A major job of FBI agents is to convince people to give up their rights to silence and privacy. For example, after a Quaker pacifist spoke in Anchorage, Alaska, at a memorial Service for El Salvador’s Archbishop Romero, FBI agents visited a local priest and interrogated him about the speaker. The agents asked about the speaker’s organizational affiliations and expressed fears about “terrorist connections.” The agents informed the priest that they would do a “computer check” on the speaker and his wife, and asked the priest if the two might do violence to the U.S. President, scheduled to visit the area. These interrogations were repeated in the community by agents who later admitted there was no basis for their questions about “terrorist connections” and the danger to the President.

    What if I suspect surveillance?

    Prudence is the best course, no matter who you suspect, or what the basis of your suspicion. When possible, confront the suspected person in public, with at least one other person present. If the suspect declines to answer, he or she at least now knows that you are aware of the surveillance. Recently, religious supporters of a nation-wide call to resist possible U.S. intervention in Central America noticed unfamiliar people lurking around their offices at 6 a.m., but failed to ask what they wanted and who they were. If you suspect surveillance, you should not hesitate to ask the suspected agents names and inquire about their business.

    The events giving rise to suspicions of surveillance vary widely, but a general principle remains constant: confront the suspected agents politely and in public (never alone) and inquire of their business. If the answer does not dispel your suspicion, share it with others who may be affected and discuss a collective response. Do not let fears generated by “conspicuous” surveillance create unspoken tensions that undermine your work and organization. Creating fear is often the purpose of obvious surveillance. When in doubt, call a trusted lawyer familiar with political surveillance.

    How should I respond to threatening letters or calls?

    If your home or office is broken into, or threats have been made against you, your organization, or someone you work with, share this information with everyone affected. Take immediate steps to increase personal and office security. You should discuss with your organization’s officials and with a lawyer whether and how to report such incidents to the police. If you decide to make a report, do not do so without the presence of counsel.

    What rights do I have?
    1. The Right to Work for Change. The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the rights of groups and individuals who advocate, petition, and assemble to accomplish changes in laws, government practices, and even the form of government Political intelligence gathering is not supposed to interfere with these rights.

    2. The Right to Remain Silent. The Fifth Amendment of the Constitution provides that every person has the right to remain silent in the face of questions (other than name and address) posed by any police officer or government agent.
    Since 1970, however, federal prosecutors may request judges to order a subpoenaed witness to testify, after a grant of immunity, at a grand jury hearing or at a criminal trial. This grant of immunity means that your Fifth Amendment right to refuse to testify is taken away. What is given to you is only the promise not to use your testimony against you in a subsequent criminal prosecution. But you can still be charged with a crime. Failure to testify after a grant of immunity is discussed on page 12 below.
    3. The Right to be Free from “Unreasonable Searches and Seizures.” Without a warrant, no government agent is allowed to search your home or office (or any other place that is yours and private) You may refuse to let FBI agents come into your house or into your workplace. unless they have a search warrant. Politeness aside, the wisest policy is never to let agents inside. They are trained investigators and will make it difficult for you to refuse to talk. Once inside your home or office, just by looking around, they can easily gather information about your lifestyle, organization, and reading habits.

    The right to be free from “unreasonable searches and seizures” is based on the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution. This Amendment is supposed to protect against government access lo your mail and other written communications, telephone and other conversations. Unfortunately, it is difficult to detect government interference with writings and conversations. Modern technology makes it difficult to detect electronic surveillance on a telephone line, other listening devices, or cameras that record whatever occurs in a room. Also common are physical surveillance (such as agents following in car or on foot), mail covers, and informers carrying tape recorders.

    What should I do if police, FBI, or other agents appear with an arrest or search warrant?

    Agents who have an arrest or search warrant are the only ones you are legally required to let into your home or office. You should ask to see the warrant before permitting access. And you should immediately ask to call a lawyer. For your own physical safety you should not resist, even if they do not show you the warrant, or if they refuse to let you call your lawyer. To the extent permitted by the agents conducting a search, you should observe the search carefully, following them and making mental or written notes of what the agents are doing. As soon as possible, write down what happened and discuss it with your lawyer.

    What should I do if agents come to question me?

    Even when agents come with a warrant, you are under no legal obligation to tell them anything other than your name and address. It is important, if agents try to question you, not to answer or make any statements, at least not until after you have consulted a lawyer.

    Announce your desire to consult a lawyer, and make every reasonable effort to contact one as quickly as possible. Your statement that you wish to speak to the FBI only in the presence of a lawyer, even if it accomplishes nothing else, should put an end to the agents’ questions. Department of Justice policy requires agents to cease questioning, or refrain from questioning, anyone who informs them that he or she is represented by a lawyer. To reiterate: upon first being contacted by any government investigator the safest thing to say is, “Excuse me, but I’d like to talk to my lawyer before I say anything to you.” Or, “I have nothing to say to you. I will talk to my lawyer and have her [or him] contact you.” If agents ask for your lawyer’s name, ask for their business card, and say you will have your lawyer contact them. Remember to get the name,agency, and telephone number of any investigator who visits you. If you do not have a lawyer call the local office of the National Lawyers Guild.

    As soon as possible after your first contact with an investigator, write a short memo about the visit, including the date, time, location, people present, any names mentioned by the investigators, and the reason they gave for their investigation. Also include descriptions of the agents and their car, if any. This may be useful to your lawyer and to others who may be contacted by the same agents.

    After discussing the situation with your lawyer, you may want to alert your co-workers, friends, neighbors, or politicalassociates about the visit. The purpose is not to alarm them, but to insure that they understand their rights. It might be a good idea to do this at a meeting at which the history of investigative abuse is presented.

    If I don’t cooperate, doesn’t it look like I have something to hide?

    This is one of the most frequently asked questions. The answer involves the nature of political “intelligence” investigations and the job of the FBI. Agents will try to make you feel that it will “look bad” if you don’t cooperate with them. Many people not familiar with how the FBI operates worry about being uncooperative. Though agents may say they are only interested in “terrorists” or protecting the President, they are intent on learning about the habits, opinions, and affiliations of people not suspected of wrongdoing. Such investigations, and the kind of controls they make possible, are completely incompatible with political freedom, and with the political and legal system envisaged by the Constitution.

    While honesty may be the best policy in dealing with other people, FBI agents and other investigators are employed to ferret out information you would not freely share with strangers. Trying to answer agents’ questions, or trying to “educate them” about your cause, can be very dangerous — as dangerous as trying to outsmart them, or trying to find out their real purpose. By talking to federal investigators you may, unwittingly, lay the basis for your own prosecution — for giving false or inconsistent information to the FBI. It is a federal crime to make a false statement to an FBI agent or other federal investigator. A violation could even be charged on the basis of two inconsistent statements spoken out of fear or forgetfulness.

    Are there any circumstances under which it is advisable to cooperate with an FBI investigation?

    Never without a lawyer. There are situations, however, in which an investigation appears to be legitimate, narrowly focused, and not designed to gather political intelligence. Such an investigation might occur if you have been the victim of a crime, or are a witness to civil rights violations being prosecuted by the federal government. Under those circumstances, you should work closely with a lawyer to see that your rights are protected while you provide only necessary information relevant to a specific incident. Lawyers may be able to avoid a witness’ appearance before a grand jury, or control the circumstances of the appearance so that no one’s rights are jeopardized.

    How can grand juries make people go to jail?

    After being granted immunity and ordered to testify by a judge, grand jury witnesses who persist in refusing to testify can be held in “civil contempt.” Such contempt is not a crime, but it results in the witness being jailed for up to 18 months, or the duration of the grand jury, whichever is less. The purpose of the incarceration is to coerce the recalcitrant witness to testify. In most political cases, testifying before a grand jury means giving up basic political principles, and so the intended coercion has no effect — witnesses continue to refuse to testify.

    Witnesses who, upon the request of a grand jury, refuse to provide “physical exemplars” (samples of handwriting, hair, appearance in a lineup, or documents) may also be jailed for civil contempt, without having been granted immunity.

    The charge of “criminal contempt” is also available to the government as a weapon against uncooperative grand jury witnesses. For “criminal contempt” there is no maximum penalty — the sentence depends entirely on what the judge thinks is appropriate. Charges of criminal contempt are still rare. They have been used, however, against Puerto Rican independentistas, especially those who have already served periods of incarceration for civil contempt.

    Is there any way to prevent grand jury witnesses from going to jail?

    There is no sure-fire way to keep a grand jury witness from going to jail. Combined legal and community support often make a difference, however, in whether a witness goes to jail and, if so, for how long. Early awareness of people’s rights torefuse to talk to the FBI may, in fact, prevent you from receiving a grand jury subpoena. If the FBI is only interested ingetting information from you, but not in jailing you, you may not receive a grand jury subpoena.

    What can lawyers do?

    A lawyer can help to ensure that government investigators only do what they are authorized to do. An attorney can see to it that you do not give up any of your rights. If you are subpoenaed to a grand jury your lawyer can challenge the subpoena in court, help to raise the political issues that underlie the investigation, and negotiate for time. Your lawyer can also explain to you the grand jury’s procedures and the legal consequences or your acts, so that you can rationally decide on your response.

    ERRATA

    A law enforcement official can only obtain your name and address if he or she has a reasonable suspicion to believe that you have committed or are about to commit a crime [note #2]. Thus, if an FBI agent knocks at your door you do not have to identify yourself to him; you can simply say “I don’t want to talk to you,” or “You’ll have to speak to my lawyer,” and then close the door. An FBI agent, unlike a local police officer, does not have jurisdiction to investigate violations of state statute.
    First Edition published March 1985.
    Published by
    Center for Constitutional Rights
    853 Broadway, 14th Floor
    NY, NY 10003
    (212) 674-3303

    The Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) is a non-profit legal and educational corporation dedicated to advancing and protecting the rights guaranteed by the United States Constitution and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

    Download full PDF
    In 4 languages here: http://ccrjustice.org/ifanagentknocks

    • Avatar Image
      Matt Prather · 10 months ago

      I’ve seen an increase in uploading and sharing of police abuse / misconduct / brutality on the web lately.

      Here’s a video of a policeman and citizen handling things legally and respectfully.

    • Avatar Image
      Rita Jacobs · 10 months ago

      Good post. Thanks

  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarA99:   10 months ago · View

    Talk of an all Anonymous Social Network: A+ AnonPlus

    http://newsjunkiepost.com/2011/07/19/an-anonymous-social-network-brilliance-or-bollocks/comment-page-1/

    We may not all be Anonymous, but we are building an independent Anonymous inspired social network right here.

  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarGlobal Insurrection News:   10 months ago · View

    Global Insurrection News Roundup – 7/20 | Waging NonViolence

    Tens of thousands of anti-regime demonstrators marched through Yemeni streets on Tuesday to condemn what they said were government attacks on protesters the day before.

    Thousands of demonstrators, including Islamists, held peaceful rallies in Rabat, Casablanca and Tangiers Sunday to demand greater political reforms and social justice in Morocco.

    Syrian troops and militiamen loyal to President Bashar al-Assad killed 16 people in attacks in the city of Homs on Tuesday, residents said, an escalation of a crackdown against a focal point for pro-democracy protests.

    The Israeli navy intercepted a French boat carrying pro-Palestinian activists as the vessel attempted to breach Israel’s naval blockade of the Gaza Strip on Tuesday.

    Thousands took to the streets of Bissau Tuesday for the second rally in five days to demand the resignation of Prime Minister Carlos Gomes Junior, accused of hindering an assassination probe.

    More than 3,000 democracy supporters led by Aung San Suu Kyi marched Tuesday in Myanmar’s biggest city in honor of her father, the nation’s independence hero. The short march was the biggest public demonstration since 2007, when the military junta launched a bloody crackdown on pro-democracy protesters.

    Over the weekend, residents of Southwest Ranches, Florida protested the proposed construction of a privately run immigration detention center.

    In the Philippines, college students in Manila and Quezon City walked out of their classes on Tuesday to protest what they called the Aquino administration’s neglect of the education sector.

    Dozens of Romanians protested Tuesday against a Canadian company’s plans to open a gold mine in Transylvania and called on the culture minister to resign over his support to this project.

    The two-week strike by 120,000 members of the National Union of Metalworkers’ of South Africa (NUMSA) ended over the weekend when union members accepted a three-year contract from the Steel and Engineering Federation of South Africa (SEIFSA), the main metal employers’ federation in South Africa.

  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarA99:   10 months ago · View

    Adbusters Joins #OpESR with #OCCUPYWALLSTREET

    End the System of Political Bribery

    #OCCUPYWALLSTREET

    Alright you 90,000 redeemers, rebels and radicals out there,

    A worldwide shift in revolutionary tactics is underway right now that bodes well for the future. The spirit of this fresh tactic, a fusion of Tahrir with the acampadas of Spain, is captured in this quote:

    ”The antiglobalization movement was the first step on the road. Back then our model was to attack the system like a pack of wolves. There was an alpha male, a wolf who led the pack, and those who followed behind. Now the model has evolved. Today we are one big swarm of people.” – Raimundo Viejo, Pompeu Fabra UniversityBarcelona, Spain

    The beauty of this new formula, and what makes this novel tactic exciting, is its pragmatic simplicity: we talk to each other in various physical gatherings and virtual people’s assemblies … we zero in on what our one demand will be, a demand that awakens the imagination and, if achieved, would propel us toward the radical democracy of the future … and then we go out and seize a square of singular symbolic significance and put our asses on the line to make it happen.

    The time has come to deploy this emerging stratagem against the greatest corrupter of our democracy: Wall Street, the financial Gomorrah of America.

    On September 17, we want to see 20,000 people flood into lower Manhattan, set up tents, kitchens, peaceful barricades and occupy Wall Street for a few months. Once there, we shall incessantly repeat one simple demand in a plurality of voices.

    #OCCUPYWALLSTREET

    Tahrir succeeded in large part because the people of Egypt made a straightforward ultimatum – that Mubarak must go – over and over again until they won. Following this model, what is our equally uncomplicated demand?

    The most exciting candidate that we’ve heard so far is one that gets at the core of why the American political establishment is currently unworthy of being called a democracy: we demand that Barack Obama ordain a Presidential Commission tasked with ending the influence money has over our representatives in Washington. It’s time for DEMOCRACY NOT CORPORATOCRACY, we’re doomed without it.

    This demand seems to capture the current national mood because cleaning up corruption in Washington is something all Americans, right and left, yearn for and can stand behind. If we hang in there, 20,000-strong, week after week against every police and National Guard effort to expel us from Wall Street, it would be impossible for Obama to ignore us. Our government would be forced to choose publicly between the will of the people and the lucre of the corporations.

    This could be the beginning of a whole new social dynamic in America, a step beyond the Tea Party movement, where, instead of being caught helpless by the current power structure, we the people start getting what we want whether it be the dismantling of half the 1,000 military bases America has around the world to the reinstatement of the Glass-Steagall Act or a three strikes and you’re out law for corporate criminals. Beginning from one simple demand – a presidential commission to separate money from politics – we start setting the agenda for a new America.

    Post a comment and help each other zero in on what our one demand will be. And then let’s screw up our courage, pack our tents and head to Wall Street with a vengeance September 17.

    for the wild,Culture Jammers HQ

  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarGlobal Insurrection News:   10 months ago · View

    Global Insurrection News Roundup – 7/18 | Waging NonViolence

    Hundreds of thousands of protesters flooded the streets across Yemen on Sunday to demand the ouster of President Ali Abdullah Saleh on the anniversary of his rise to power in  1978.

    Dozens of tents have been erected in Tel Aviv, with plans for further encampments in other Israeli towns and cities, to protest high house prices.

    Several Indian and Pakistani citizens Saturday gathered near Rajghat, Delhi and formed a human chain on Saturday to protest the July 13 Mumbai blasts that left at least 19 people dead and injured 130.

    Journalists at the BBC walked off their jobs Friday to protest planned job cuts as a result of lower government funding.

    Greenpeace activists dressed as polar bears occupied the Edinburgh offices of Cairn Energy on Monday as the environmental group stepped up the pressure on the company over its Arctic exploration plans.

    Around 2,000 farmers, backed by student groups and academics gathered in front of the presidential office in Taipei late on Saturday to protest government proposals that would make it easier for farm land to be forcibly turned over to developers.

    Around 200 people gathered at the Jordan Press Association headquarters earlier today to denounce an attack on journalists by riot police on Friday.

    Greek taxi drivers blocked roads to Athens’ airport and main harbor today, holding up thousands of tourists at the start of a two-day protest against plans to liberalize their trade.

    Several hundred people attended a protest march against the EU-IMF austerity programme in Dublin on Saturday.

    A small group of mass transit activists against freeway expansion unfurled a banner overlooking the 405 Freeway in Los Angeles on Sunday that read “L.A. Beyond Cars.”

  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarGlobal Insurrection News:   10 months, 1 week ago · View

    Global Insurrection News Roundup – 7/13 | Waging NonViolence

    More than 100 environmental activists from across the country descended on Montana Gov. Brian Schweitzer’s office Tuesday to demand that he rescind his support for the Keystone XL oil pipeline and the ExxonMobil megaload transportation project. Six of the activists are occupying the lobby of the governor’s office indefinitely.

    Thousands of Egyptians marched on the cabinet headquarters in central Cairo on Tuesday to demand the removal of the ruling military council. Meanwhile, in Alexandria, hundreds of demonstrators cordoned off the stock exchange building, posting a sign that reads, “Closed until all revolution demands are met!”

    Hundreds gathered outside the White House on Monday to protest the Colombia free trade agreement, which they say will kill jobs here, and threaten communities in Colombia.

    Thousands of Greek Cypriots have marched on the presidential palace in Nicosia to protest the deaths of 12 people in a blast at a navy base.

    Several dozen union workers gathered at a downtown state office building yesterday to protest Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn’s decision to block raises for 33,000 employees.

    Opponents of Senate Bill 1070, Arizona’s immigration law, marched to Chase Field Tuesday afternoon to picket outside Major League Baseball’s All-Star Game.

    Workers at state-owned Corporacion del Cobre de Chile, the world’s biggest copper producer, went on strike Monday to protest a modernization plan they see as a step toward privatization.

    South Korean female activist Kim Jin-Suk began the 188th day of a sit-in on Tuesday atop a giant crane to protest major layoffs at a South Korean shipyard.

    Hundreds of Afghans took to the streets Monday to protest cross-border shelling from Pakistan that has killed dozens of people in recent weeks.

    More than a hundred people gathered in Morris Cove—New Haven, Connecticut’s easternmost area—last weekend to protest the Army Corps of Engineers’ plan to dump 250,000 cubic yards of toxic dredging waste in New Haven Harbor. They were joined by a flotilla of 43 kayaks and power boats, which processed around the dumping site.

  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarGlobal Insurrection News:   10 months, 1 week ago · View

    Global Insurrection News Roundup – 7/12 | Waging NonViolence

    Tens of thousands of Malaysian protesters ignored police warnings and descended on the capital Kuala Lumpur to attend a banned rally on Friday, demanding electoral reforms. Police arrested almost 1,700 people, fired rounds of tear gas and used toxic-laced water cannons to disperse the crowds.

    Thousands of Moroccans staged protests on Sunday, the latest in a series of peaceful demonstrations by a youth-led movement to demand reforms that go beyond constitutional changes crafted by the palace.

    Members of the 6 April Movement in Egypt and others who have been staging a sit-in at Al-Mansheia Square in Port Said declared Saturday that they have started a hunger strike at 2pm that will last until all their demands are met.

    Israel has begun deporting activists attempting to enter the occupied West Bank as part of a so-called “flytilla” operation. Thirty-six people were deported from Israel’s Ben-Gurion International Airport to Frankfurt, Germany, Sunday. Another group is expected to be deported on a Geneva-bound flight today.

    On Friday, there was a demonstration in the northern city of Tripoli in support of  the uprising in Syria.

    In Iraq, at least seven anti-government protesters were arrested and beaten by Iraqi security forces as hundreds of angry demonstrators gathered Friday in central Baghdad.

    Over the weekend in California, about 1,600 inmates continued to take part in a hunger strike protesting conditions in the state prison system’s maximum-security isolation units.

    Standard Chartered bank’s South Korean unit said Monday it would temporarily shut dozens of offices due to a strike by workers, which started more than two weeks ago, protesting at attempts to adopt a performance-based pay system.

    • Avatar Image
      Matt Prather · 10 months, 1 week ago

      =(
      a global insurrection indeed
      coming soon to a country near you

  • Anon posted a new activity comment:   10 months, 1 week ago · View

    Great to hear Rita – Just added your original statement to Social Network news wire on Amped homepage – @kevinzeese

    In reply to - Rita Jacobs posted an update: Is there anyone here besides me that has any interest in joining the October2011.org rally in Washington on Oct. 6? I can’t believe that no one at all responded to my previous post. We won’t accomplish anything if we just sit at our computers all day long. · View
  • Anon posted a new activity comment:   10 months, 1 week ago · View

    Interesting take:

    Anonymous Goes Legit ? Introducing the Anon Political Party:

    http://newsjunkiepost.com/2011/07/09/anonymous-goes-legit-introducing-the-anon-political-party/

    @pcvcolin

    Your point is understood and agreed. However, there are many of this network who identify as Ron Paul supporters and many as being ”progressives.”

    As you and @ddegraw make clear, OpESR people are from all over the political spectrum, ”people from all walks of life, from all ideologies, or who may not even have a particular ideology”

    we should have made our comments clearer

    In reply to - Anon posted an update in the group A99: What do people here think of this new idea for an Anonymous political party? We have mixed feeling on it. http://youtu.be/CBQvNVnemdM Hello people of the world. We were Anonymous. But now Anonymous is entering a new stage in its evolution. We are transitioning from attacking the system from the outside to [...] · View
  • Anon posted a new activity comment:   10 months, 1 week ago · View

    cool

    In reply to - Masta420Chiefa posted an update in the group A99: Tis really a great article =P Investigative Analysis: Why We Need Anonymous as Much as Anonymous Needs Us http://uleak.it/?0ss · View
  • Anon posted an update in the group AvatarA99:   10 months, 1 week ago · View

  • Anon posted a new activity comment:   10 months, 1 week ago · View

    cool!

    In reply to - Matt Prather posted an update: http://cargocollective.com/4thamendment http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4th_Amendment_to_the_United_States_Constitution (I honestly have no financial incentive for linking this. I just really like the idea and wanted to show everyone.) · View
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