Indymedia Estrecho / Madiaq - cia http://estrecho.indymedia.org/taxonomy/term/1135/0 es [Audio]'Claves de la Transición 1973-1986', de Alfredo Grimaldos http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/audioclaves-transici-n-1973-1986-alfredo-grimaldos <div class="rtecenter"> <object data="http://www.ivoox.com/playerivoox_ee_2415599_1.html" height="133" id="player2415599" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="240"><embed allowfullscreen="true" allowscriptaccess="always" height="133" src="http://www.ivoox.com/playerivoox_ee_2415599_1.html" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" width="240" wmode="transparent"></embed></object></div> <div class="rtejustify"> <br /> No pod&iacute;a ser. El paso de la dictadura fascista, nacional-cat&oacute;lica, al r&eacute;gimen constitucional dist&oacute; mucho d<span id="descripcion_audio">e ser Cu&eacute;ntame. La madurez del pueblo espa&ntilde;ol, repiten los voceros oficiales, unida a la estrategia del consenso y el voluntario sacrificio de las Cortes franquistas; la florentina maestr&iacute;a de los principales dirigentes: Su&aacute;rez, Juan Carlos I, Carrillo, Torcuato, Gonz&aacute;lez, Fraga. El storytelling es conocido. Conocido y falso. Aquello no fue una balsa de aceite. Al contrario. Cambiar, en apariencia, para que nada cambie se asemeja m&aacute;s a la Transici&oacute;n real. La mayor&iacute;a de los responsables pol&iacute;ticos, religiosos, policiales, militares y judiciales siguieron en sus cargos. Estas y otras muchas cosas describe y analiza Alfredo Grimaldos. Los bienpensantes negar&aacute;n el contenido de este demoledor libro. Un trabajo que conversa con la historia concreta de aquellos a&ntilde;os. La CIA al mando de las operaciones. Carrero Blanco asesinado, ay, cerca, demasiado cerca, de la Embajada de EE.UU. De aquellos barros vienen estos lodos. El dilema &laquo;reforma o ruptura&raquo; fue uno de los mitos del cambio. Aquello no pod&iacute;a ser: todo estaba &laquo;atado y bien atado&raquo;. </span></div> http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/audioclaves-transici-n-1973-1986-alfredo-grimaldos#comments General cia franquismo Monarquía otan Transición Sat, 05 Oct 2013 10:33:24 +0000 6426 at http://estrecho.indymedia.org Today in 1947: The National Security Act is signed into law http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/today-1947-national-security-act-signed-law <p>P { margin-bottom: 0.08in; }A:link { color: rgb(0, 0, 255); }</p> <p>July 26, 2013</p> <p>One of the most disturbing aspects of the National Security Agency&rsquo;s (NSA) surveillance operations revealed by Edward Snowden is the fact that this spying is being conducted on ordinary American citizens.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Notwithstanding any possible constitutional provisions that these surveillance activities may violate, the NSA is legally permitted to conduct intelligence-gathering activities on U.S. soil and on U.S. citizens. Another major federal intelligence agency &ndash; the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) &ndash; is statutorily prohibited from gathering intelligence on U.S. soil.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>This limitation was implemented by the same legislative act that created the CIA itself &ndash; the National Security Act of 1947, signed into law 66 years ago today.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The Act was created in the aftermath of World War II and in anticipation of the emerging Cold War.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>During World War II, inadequacies in civil‐military policy coordination became painfully apparent, as did shortcomings in coordination within the armed services and in intelligence-gathering.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>After the war, there were calls to remedy the problem of poor military coordination by merging the U.S. Army (along with its air force division) and U.S. Navy into a single department. Although the Army and its air force were in favor of this action (as was most of Congress), the Navy was opposed.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Recognizing the overwhelming support in favor of unifying the U.S. military, Navy Secretary James Forrestal understood that outright opposition would not stop Congress from acting. Instead, Forrestal sought out his former business colleague Ferdinand Eberstadt to evaluate the situation and propose alternatives tenable for the Navy.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Eberstadt found that military coordination was not the only problem. Rather, he also saw the need for improved civilian‐military coordination and better intelligence operations. Eberstadt submitted a report that identified the serious deficiencies in both intelligence-gathering and -sharing between the military and various civil agencies within the U.S. government.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Largely based on Eberstadt&rsquo;s recommendations, the National Security Act was signed into law on July 26, 1947 by President Harry Truman.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The Act consolidated the Department of War and the Department of the Navy into the National Military Establishment. It also created the Department of the Air Force from the division that was formerly a part of the U.S. Army.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The National Military Establishment, later renamed the &ldquo;Department of Defense&rdquo; in 1949, was headed by the Secretary of Defense. The National Military Establishment began operations on September 18, 1947 &ndash; the day after the Senate confirmed James Forrestal as the first Secretary of Defense.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>The Act also created the Joint Chiefs of Staff and the National Security Council, both of which are a central part of national security operations today.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Finally, as stated above, the Act created the CIA. The same provision of the Act that created the CIA also specifically stated that the Agency would have &ldquo;no police, subpoena, or law enforcement powers or internal security functions.&rdquo;</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>This limitation is widely understood to limit CIA activities within the U.S. to those that could be justified only to the extent they supported the CIA&rsquo;s primary foreign intelligence mission.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>This restriction arose over concerns among Congress and the American public that the CIA may become a &ldquo;Gestapo&rdquo; that spied on and secretly targeted U.S. citizens. Thus, the CIA was completely denied any internal security powers.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>Arguably, with the burgeoning Cold War, national security concerns were much greater when the National Security Act was being considered than today. If the implementation of the CIA&rsquo;s restrictions is of any indication, the size of the threat apparently didn&rsquo;t outweigh concerns for the protection of civil liberties.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p>It remains to be seen if Congress acts with the same high regard for the protection of civil liberties in its response, if any, to the NSA domestic surveillance activities of today.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> <p><u><a href="http://westlawinsider.com/legal-research/today-in-1947-the-national-security-act-is-signed-into-law/">http://westlawinsider.com/legal-research/today-in-1947-the-national-security-act-is-signed-into-law/</a></u></p> http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/today-1947-national-security-act-signed-law#comments General 1947 act cia globalization Thu, 19 Sep 2013 10:27:10 +0000 6363 at http://estrecho.indymedia.org THE AGE OF MADNESS & A Critical Review of fbi/cia Operations http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/age-madness-critical-review-fbicia-operations <p> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<strong>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; THE AGE OF MADNESS &amp; A Critical Review of fbi/cia Operations</strong></p> <p> &nbsp;</p> <p> <br /> <strong>This report represents a summary of my reflections &amp; analysis on fbi/cia/police/societal egregious agendas.</strong></p> <p> <strong>-----------------------------------------------------------------</strong></p> <p> <strong>As I reflect on the past two decades of vicious assaults on me by agents and operatives of the fbi and the cia, I sometimes in my quiet moments seek to comprehend the cause or genesis of the evil that characterizes many of the horrid events that I describe in &quot;My Story In Detail&quot; and related data and links at</strong></p> <p> <strong><a href="http://www.sosbeevfbi.com/"><u>http://www.sosbeevfbi.com</u></a></strong></p> <p> <strong>This report is a summary of some of my conclusions regarding the decadent public policy rationale that supports atrocities by government, including the imprisonment, torture (physical and psychological) and killing of human beings for no justifiable cause. I hope that an enlightened populace may someday look inward and demand to know how many deaths and how much needless sufferings have been caused through episodes (such as those I describe in my reports) of government barbarity, gross insensitvity and macabre methodology; in the understanding of the injustices perhaps we can end them.</strong></p> <p> &nbsp;</p> <p> <strong>As most persons have no insight into the criminal minds and operations of government intelligence agents, little opportunity exists to address their crimes against humanity. Similarly, police authorities assist the intelligence services in the coverup of many felonies committed by the agencies and by the police themselves. Whistleblowers and others who try to expose egregious government crimes are outnumbered, out gunned, and portrayed as outlaws or madmen by the government predators who are trying to harm them.</strong></p> <p> <br /> <strong>For the average citizen, furthermore, society in generally is unresponsive to pleas for guidance from those persons who are , at the hands of government predators and perpetrators, needlessly suffering and dying. The same systemic treachery that often greets the whistleblower is waiting to ensnare the average citizen in crisis, as I pointed out to the court in my Writ at 534US894.</strong></p> <p> <br /> <strong>The common threads of public malice and inhumanity towards the object of government predatory agendas run throughout many social institutions today; such widespread animosity is now mainstream and serves as a kind of mind programming for the general population who very often plays an integral role in the planned and orchestrated assaults on the Targets who are sometimes labeled as madmen.</strong></p> <p> <br /> <strong>As we are born into a complex world that changes from moment to moment in terms of advances in technology, scince, law, and contemporary standards for human conduct. No single individual can keep abreast of all the strictures (or expectations) that are brought to bear on our modern lives; even though we may think that we are experts in our own culture, we are not. Medical doctors do not know all the answers associated with causes forillnesses and diseases; lawyers often have no fast clue to finding remedies for legal issues that evolve from fast changing social mores; engineers and scientists must forever adjust design and focus of their work to deal with ever changing technologies, new discoveries and emerging societal forces and human needs.</strong></p> <p> <br /> <strong>The average individual human being may at times find himself adrift in an unfamiliar and alien sea filled with incalculable dangers. We have discovered that we cannot always cope with the stresses that we encounter on a daily basis. Returning war vets, or otherwise traumatized persons sometimes seek advice , treatment and comfort to ease medical conditions orpsychological pressures. When no effective assistance is available, some of our fellow citizens may suffer, collapse and die, even while we watch on some popular cop or quasi news shows. In extreme cases the confused or disoriented citizen is imprisoned, tortured, forced into suicide, or shot dead by the very same government agents who pretend to defend our liberties.</strong></p> <p> <br /> <strong>This is an important point because no one among us is immune from neurosis when tragedy strikes. We should therefore reconsider our societal relationship with those we condemn (to prison or death), lest we abruptly someday join their numbers. Actions against a citizen by government agents and their citizen action committees often provoke the Target into wild conduct; such intentional assaults are intended to cause the Target to respond violently so that he may be arrested or killed.</strong></p> <p> <br /> <strong>We see examples of this on our streets almost daily; and I have presented numerous instances of such intentional provocations in many of my reports.Further, no attention is focued on psychological operations against a targeted person even though a growing number of persons worldwide now testify that they are targeted by ruthless and painful campaigns. No law exists that may stop the type of violent activities in which the fbi andthe cia engage regularly against their Targets, foreign and domestic. Even civil court judges routinely ignore the criminal actions of police and fbi against the accused. Thus the person portrayed as a madman on some TV shows is in reality a product of a corrupt public policy standard that authorizes the torture, imprisonment and killing of a given Target. One plausible explanation for the apparent lunacy of government officials and their civilian supporters and followers is offered by Thomas Szasz, M.D. in his book <u>THE AGE OF MADNESS</u>, Jason Aronson, New York, 1974, Library of Congress , Catalogue Number 74-8401.</strong></p> <p> &nbsp;</p> <p> <strong>As I read his comments and analogies, I recall the hostilities against me (continuing to date for about twenty years) by the fbi; I believe that the most dangerous and destructive human beings in society are the members of the fbi, cia, police and their operatives throughout society who provoke, threaten, torture, malign, poison,libel, slander and attempt to kill (or to drive insane) the objects of their misguided misanthropy. Society in asense has become its own worst enemy; those otherwise innocent citizens (including doctors, lawyers and laymen) so engaged against their fellow citizen are accomplices to murder (or felonious assault) by aiding the murderers of the agencies of government we all rely upon. In this way we have become a nation of assassins.</strong></p> <p> &nbsp;</p> <p> <strong>Below is the explanation by Szasz which I find most compelling in the context of my review of the atrocities committed against me and others by the fbi and cia thugs. Italics are mine as are all brackets and contents therein:</strong></p> <p> <br /> <strong>As &quot;&quot;in the Age of Faith political power was the monopoly of Church and State, so in the Age Of Reason, it is the monopoly of Science [,Law] and State. The former celebrated its values by constructing cathedrals and religious shrines&quot;, while the latter does so by constructing hospitals&quot; insane asylums [ and prisons] and by forcibly treating madmen [and accused criminals].</strong></p> <p> &nbsp;</p> <p> <strong>In the Age of faith, men confirmed the existence and glory of God by creating witches who worshipped the devil, and confirmed the power of God by multiplying the number and magnifying the dangerousness of witches; in the Age of Reason, men confirm the existence and glory of Reason by creating madmen who worship unreason, and confirm the power of Reason by multiplying the number and magnifying the dangerousness of madmen [criminals].&quot; Men &quot;&quot;regarded themselves as most faithful when they were surrounded by heretics; and that they regarded themselves as most reasonable when surrounded by madmen [criminals].</strong></p> <p> &nbsp;</p> <p> <strong>Today we have tens of millions of persons imprisoned (or under threat of imprisonment) worldwide by men who regard themselves as &quot;most reasonable&#39;&#39;; the more people that they imprison, the more they fancy themselves as &quot;most reasonable&#39;&#39;. This is why, as Szasz writes, the Age of Faith was teeming with heretics; why the Age of Reason is teeming with madmen [criminals] and why I [Szasz] rename The Age of Reason, in honor of its victims,<u>The Age Of Madness</u>.(Szasz, page4).</strong></p> <p> <br /> PS: See also:<br /> <a href="http://www.sosbeevfbi.com/governmentmustcr.html"><u>http://www.sosbeevfbi.com/governmentmustcr.html</u></a></p> <p> <br /> For evidence that fbi hacks many of my reports see:</p> <p> <br /> <a href="http://barbarahartwellvscia.blogspot.com/2011/10/courts-and-fbi-torture-maim-or-kill_01.html"><u>http://barbarahartwellvscia.blogspot.com/2011/10/courts-and-fbi-torture-maim-or-kill_01.html</u></a><span>&nbsp;</span></p> http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/age-madness-critical-review-fbicia-operations#comments General cia fbi madness Sun, 11 Dec 2011 21:21:22 +0000 4771 at http://estrecho.indymedia.org The Hate You Hired http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/hate-you-hired <p>Once post 9/11 hysteria in the U.S. subsided Americans began to reflect on what happened that day and since.&nbsp; Our collective sense of national pride was renewed helping to make us stronger.&nbsp; We realized how precious our freedoms and liberties were.&nbsp; We became more vigilant over anything that threatened our way of life and culture.&nbsp; In the face of tragedy we pulled together.<br /> &nbsp;</p> <p> These changes occurred in part because terrorists snuck up on us, caught us off guard and the feeling was awful.&nbsp; What was also awful was that while we were fearing for our lives certain people whose salaries come out of our pockets conned us into the war in Iraq.&nbsp; We sent men and women from our armed services to risk their lives in a war based on lies.&nbsp; We paid private security contractors twice as much as U.S. Military personnel, and sent roughly the same amount of security contractors as we did our own troops to Iraq.</p> <p>Hazards inherent in hiring those contractors eventually emerged.&nbsp; One such pitfall was the lack of accountability on the part of those providing the security.&nbsp; When authorities wanted to investigate circumstances regarding a shooting in Baghdad last September they ran into some questionable road blocks.&nbsp; It turned out there were no laws holding private contractors accountable for criminal acts committed while under taxpayer employ.</p> <p>Allegations of contractor steroid abuse were also troubling as it follows there could have been other on the job substance abuse.&nbsp; We cannot trust the protection of our country's future to security personnel who might be drunk on the job for example.&nbsp; Nor can we wait until after problems arise to investigate such circumstances.&nbsp; Whether a&nbsp; high level security outfit or &lt;i&gt;Joes t-shirts, z's and whatever we could get for minimum wage security guyses&lt;/i&gt; most Americans would agree some measure of oversight is prudent.</p> <p>It concerns me because while a student at The University of Connecticut from 2003 to 2006 I discovered things most Americans would find troubling.&nbsp; I went through harassment, abuse and discrimination sponsored by professors who were aided by some students in such behavior.&nbsp; The behavior was aimed at getting me to either quit, flunk or end up kicked out of the program.&nbsp; It was insinuated one of the students involved was not actually a student but a private security personnel hired to observe me due to my involvement in a student protest thirteen years prior to my coming to UCONN.&nbsp; In fact I was told outright by two fellow students, Eduardo Colon and Dan Gallagher, while at lunch with them during junior year they heard he was some kind of private security personnel hired by the school.</p> <p>It made some sense because ever since I met this individual first semester of sophomore year 2003 his behavior was odd.&nbsp; He would follow me around school and just pop up when I was walking to class.&nbsp; He'd wait for me, unsolicited, sometimes a half an hour or more after class while I was doing extra work and would follow me to my car.&nbsp; Before ever saying hello he moved his seat from where he was sitting to a seat essentially across from me at a grouping of drafting tables.</p> <p>Once when exiting a meeting held for my place of employment in a small town an hour from school located in a run down industrial area of that small town between seven and eight AM on a Saturday morning I noticed two suspicious gentlemen standing in front of a car parked facing mine with the hood up on their car.&nbsp; The men weren't working on their car but watching me walk to mine.&nbsp; Once I got into my car one of the individuals put the cell phone he was holding by his side to his ear and began talking while staring at me.&nbsp; When I exited the parking lot, voila, there was the strange security guy from school at the four way intersection outside the building my meeting was in.&nbsp; This small town was also over half an hour's drive from his hometown and I don't believe he had anything to do with my job or my meeting, but there he was waiting at the four way intersection outside the hotel driving slowly past me.</p> <p>Things became more odd second semester sophomore year when he actually stopped behind me while walking to his chair, put his left hand on my left shoulder, jabbed his right hand into my lower back three or four times repeatedly and walked away.&nbsp; What made this even stranger was that prior to that incident the worst of the professors involved in harassing me did the exact same thing.&nbsp; At that point I asked him to stay away and not speak to me again.&nbsp; He never touched me again, but I believe he helped plan much of the harassment that went on from that point at UCONN.</p> <p>I would have no problem with him being there were he simply observing me, especially given the gravity of post 9/11 concerns.&nbsp; I take exception to his harassing me and his participation in such.&nbsp; I am not a danger and anyone who knows me would confirm that.&nbsp; The problem is it could have been someone else in my shoes.&nbsp; How secure is the decision to allow someone into rooms filled with college students you deem to be a threat to the lives of those students?&nbsp; It would seem to be more responsible to deny the person's application which after 9/11 would have been fairly easy.&nbsp; That would have ended things before they started.</p> <p>I don't understand why harassment and provocation of a person deemed a threat were chosen as solutions for dealing with the safety of the lives of young college students.&nbsp; If this were your child or yourself how would you feel about being an unwitting pawn in this hair brained scheme?&nbsp; What price could have been paid for this behavior.&nbsp; What was the cost for the services of this 'security guard?'&nbsp; The money was obviously wasted over the three years I dealt with this as he was ineffectual at getting me to drop out, flunk out or to get me kicked out due to the stress from all the&nbsp; harassment.&nbsp; I made a complaint and graduated.</p> <p>It is shameful that people supposed to protect us could not have done better.&nbsp; Hate and prejudice were fomented by the very people college students looked up to in order to manipulate students into participating in criminal acts which could have threatened their safety.&nbsp; People were hired to aid in this effort.&nbsp; This was all done on the taxpayers dime without anyone notifying the taxpayers, the students or parents about what they were in for.</p> <p>Apparently in Connecticut provoking an alleged threat to security in a room full of college students truly is 'good enough for the state.'&nbsp; Who would have guessed?</p> <p>To read more about my experiences at the University of Connecticut click here and go to the &quot;What Happened&quot; link on the corresponding site.</p> <p>&nbsp;</p> http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/hate-you-hired#comments General cia corruption Thu, 06 May 2010 11:54:06 +0000 1759 at http://estrecho.indymedia.org How Much Does A Mercenary Cost? http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/how-much-does-mercenary-cost <p>When the Bush Administration decided for the American public that there would be no fair bidding process to ensure the best possible deal for the taxpayers in return for support services provided during the War in Iraq they signed us on for more than just what is at face value.&nbsp; We know the American people are on the hook to Halliburton, its subsidiaries and all its sub-contractors for billions of dollars as long as we are in Iraq.&nbsp; This includes whoever Halliburton chooses for hotel services, food supplies and of course their private security contractors.&nbsp; Since 9/11 American concerns over private security, their costs (financial and otherwise) and their role in our national security have come under scrutiny. </p> <p>&nbsp;US troops put their lives on the lines every day in precarious circumstances all around the world.&nbsp; No greater is this sacrifice displayed than in Iraq.&nbsp; They have sacrificed mental health, physical health and for 4,500 their time here on earth to do the job of serving their nation.&nbsp; As Americans we value our troops and never forget what they relinquish. <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; The pay they receive seems small especially when compared to the tasks they perform.&nbsp; How much is it worth to put ones life on the line for one's country?&nbsp; How much are they worth to us as fellow countrymen and women on whose behalf they risk their lives?&nbsp; What's fair pay? <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Our men and women in uniform serve for country first; nonetheless they deserve the best for their service.&nbsp; For an unmarried soldier receiving the pay commensurate with Iraq war service with the rank of sergeant receives roughly $85 per day.&nbsp; If they are married that pay doubles to $170 per day.&nbsp; At the top of the pay scale is General David Petraeus making a reported $493 per day which is about $180,000 annually. <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Halliburton gets its money for services provided in Iraq from the US taxpayers they then subcontract companies like the Regency Hotels and ESS foods to provide services underneath them.&nbsp; They in turn hire private security firms to protect them and their interests in Iraq.&nbsp; Thus, those private security firms are getting paid via taxpayer dollars funneled down through Halliburton's no bid payments. &nbsp;<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; One of these companies is the infamous Blackwater security firm.&nbsp; Blackwater is sub-contracted to provide security, train personnel and oversee command centers for these firms among other things.&nbsp; The average pay US taxpayers are dishing out to Blackwater personnel is much higher than what we pay for our military.&nbsp; That average pay is roughly $600 per day.&nbsp; Once you add on costs and service fees the rate we dole out increases. <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; How much?&nbsp; The pay once costs and fees are included is $815 dollars a day in US citizen's taxpayer dollars, and that's for a mere operator.&nbsp; For a middle manager the average fee is $945 per day.&nbsp; When getting up to the level of senior managers we're paying $1,075 a day.&nbsp; Thus US taxpayers are paying senior managers at Blackwater overseeing a team of just 34 people more than double what we are paying General David Petraeus per day.&nbsp; Something isn&rsquo;t right there. <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; In terms of private security and national security concerns it doesn't stop with Blackwater's exorbitant fees in the middle of a recession and their well publicized less than disciplined behavior.&nbsp; There is another perhaps more insidious aspect of corporate militarism and its relationship to US interests.&nbsp; It was revealed in 2007 that about half of our National Clandestine Services operations (black ops) are also being carried out by private firms.&nbsp; That's right, top secret government spy services are being handled by special interest corporate firms like Lockheed-Martin, Raytheon and others. &nbsp;<br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; Of course we don't know exactly how much is being paid them as that is labeled &quot;classified.&quot;&nbsp; We do know that the black ops community has an interesting way of acquiring taxpayer funds.&nbsp; Here is a quote from a paper written by someone who investigated these interesting phenomena:<br /> &quot;The CIA has the unique legal ability among all US government departments and agencies to generate funds through appropriations of other federal government agencies and other sources 'without regard to any provisions of law' and without regard to the intent behind Congressional appropriations. Every year, billions of dollars of Congressional appropriations are diverted from their Congressionally sanctioned purposes to the CIA and DoD based intelligence agencies without knowledge of the public and with the collusion of Congressional leaders. The covert world of &lsquo;black programs&rsquo; acts with virtual impunity, overseen and regulated by itself, funding itself through secret slush funds, and is free of the limitations that come from Congressional oversight, proper auditing procedures and public scrutiny.&quot; The CIA black budget is annually in the vicinity of 1.1 trillion dollars &ndash; a truly staggering figure when one considers that the DoD budget for 2004 will be approximately 380 billion dollars. (<a href="http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=CIA#Outsourcing_the_NCS" title="http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=CIA#Outsourcing_the_NCS">http://www.sourcewatch.org/index.php?title=CIA#Outsourcing_the_NCS</a>) </p> <p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; So when we hear of millions of dollars being unaccounted for and mysteriously missing from agencies like HUD and others, it's most likely not accounting errors.&nbsp; Those agencies, which are effectively being looted of taxpayer funds that we sent people to Washington to grant, are forced to simply say &quot;well, we don't know what happened to those millions of dollars.&quot;&nbsp; This would account for a lot of so called Government inefficiency as far as the way the books look because there is no transparency.&nbsp; The CIA polices itself with regards to this practice with absolutely no oversight.&nbsp; We know the high prices we are forced to pay for security details in Iraq.&nbsp; How much do you want to guess we pay for unregulated spy services?&nbsp; My guess is it's even higher. <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We've seen with the recent financial crisis what leaving any industry to police itself can lead to.&nbsp; Would we allow anyone we were doing business with or handling thousands of dollars of our money to do with as they wish with no transparency at all or repercussions for their actions?&nbsp; Of course not, but that's exactly what we have been forced to do here and the figures are in the trillions of dollars.&nbsp; &ldquo;Just trust us&rdquo; is what we are being told.&nbsp; This is from the same people who helped sell us on WMD in Iraq. <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; We are in a time of economic upheaval and need to know now more than ever where and how our money is being spent.&nbsp; How else are we to know when it is being wasted?&nbsp; 50% of our national black ops are in the hands of special interest groups who help prepare intelligence reports for the White House.&nbsp; Are we to just believe blindly that nothing beneficial to those companies is being slipped in?&nbsp; With no oversight how can we know?&nbsp; What the KGB couldn&rsquo;t accomplish corporate America has and that&rsquo;s to effectively penetrate the CIA.&nbsp; Hopefully our new president charged with bringing change will reverse our intelligence services being effectively infiltration by the same special interests he and his opponent campaigned so hard against. <br /> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; To read about my inspiration for this article go to <a href="http://www.lawsuitagainstuconn.com" title="www.lawsuitagainstuconn.com">www.lawsuitagainstuconn.com</a><br /> &nbsp;</p> http://estrecho.indymedia.org/general/noticia/how-much-does-mercenary-cost#comments General cia corruption Mon, 19 Apr 2010 09:56:50 +0000 1601 at http://estrecho.indymedia.org