|
|
|
September 23 2008
According to the "Washington Post," what was new about domestic surveillance afte 9/11 was the use of satellites to track U.$. citizens 24/7. The magazine "Scientific America" for September 2008 also reviews all the technologies being used to invade privacy, a supposed right corresponding to private property. MIM has explained before that there are various classes of citizens despite what the pieces of paper called law say.
On October 1, Department of Justice head Mukasey will sign into law various rights for the FBI. It's basically about coordinating conspiracies against civil rights with various law enforcement agencies, with the knowledge of Congress. It's also about starting rumor campaigns with the public against un-indicted people.
No to be left out--MIM was busy putting up seven articles on September 21, but it being campaign season we had a little dirty trick waiting for us in a public place. Wait for target, call in reinforcements, make a scene, that is the new employment available in the spy economy.
What to say? We cannot tell people to "get a life," because our economy is so parasitically out of whack it would not make any sense.
On another note, it was probably a frustrated Democrat or crypto-Democrat who defaced our Alexa entry with information about a defunct Marxist website. Those jealous of MIM's large circulation are trying to say with their graffiti-style attack that MIM is not as widely read as claimed. We've explained this many times before, but after our second-to-last web traffic report, the frustrated apparently lost their cool.
So for example, the "Traffic Rank" of Alexa.com is mostly useless to us except for trends. It does not correspond to the 1 to 10 rankings that we care about. MIM is ranked 8th in "Black Nationalism" and it used to be higher. The top ten popular websites ranking in no way corresponds to the "Traffic Rank" of the various websites. Alexa's "most popular" entries categorize web pages, so MIM's Black Panther page traffic is counted as Black nationalist traffic. We hope the immature attacks on this point will stop.
Note
http://jurist.law.pitt.edu/paperchase/2008/09/fbi-director-defends-proposed.php
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|