Categories: Uncategorized

The Not-So-Secret Bush Regime

I failed to mention this week the shocking revelation made by Mr “I can make my own decisions” Alberto Gonzales, our country’s attorney general under the second half of the Bush administration’s reign.

Six weeks ago it was unclear who to point the finger at for foiling the Justice Department’s investigation into the NSA’s secret eavesdropping program, which for years was known only to members of the Bush Administration and a select few members of Congress.

But that all changed this week, when Gonzales, testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Gonzales admitted to let slip that the president himself shut down the investigation. (video here). The Department of Justice had ordered its over 30-year-old Office of Professional Responsibility (OPR) to investigate NSA eavesdropping program but as Gonzales explained, The White House denied the OPR access to the materials needed for their investigation — a move that OPR director H. Marshall Jarrett descibed as unprecedented.

Its amazing that Bush and his cronies can rule so ridiculously above the law. But, I guess its easilyi done for a president with a simple enough (selfish) mind to demonstrate this basic rule:

there is no law to lawlessness. another beautiful day to go and mow the law.

Bonus: CIA Blogger Fired for Discussing Geneva Conventions

Christine Axsmith, was canned from her position at the CIA’s software-development shop where, as Dana Priest reported in the Post online today, she conducted “performance and stress testing” on computer programs. After writing a blog entry titled “somthing like ‘Waterboarding is Torture and Torture is Wrong,’ Axsmith lost her top-secret security clearance, her job, and who knows what else.

Needless to say, if the CIA really thinks it can keep anything secret that it leaves unencrypted online, one only need to recall the massive security upgrade that they ordered up years ago (or was it the FBI) and have since scrapped plans as they are so hopelessly behind. Axsmith should sue. She was employed by BAE Systems — a little background Here.

Another lesson: just because something is legal doesn’t make it right. Not to mention, the flipside of that statement.

Andy Sternberg

Andy Sternberg is a digital strategist and marketing specialist with a focus on enhancing interactive and user experience through content and social media. He's been tweaking content and music-related websites since the '90s and has a Master's in Online Journalism. He's currently the head of Social & Digital Media at Rotary International. Find him on Twitter @andysternberg.

View Comments

  • It's true -- with so many open outlets, bedwetting practically equates to suicide by electrocution. And it wouldn't smell very good.

    I wonder what former CIA chief GHWB has to say about the state of today's intel org...

    Pappy -- you there?

  • When every bed-wetting anti-American liberal is purged from the CIA, it may become effective again. Until then, it's a den of snakes.

Share
Published by
Andy Sternberg
Tags: d.c.

Recent Posts

How to Make YouTube and Chromecast More Social

Adding a subscriptions tab to profile pages would make YouTube more social, greatly improve Chromecast…

10 years ago

Unofficial SXSW 2014 Parties You Should RSVP To

SXSW Interactive is one of the most attended conferences of the year for tech and…

10 years ago

Coachella 2013 Highlights, Videos and Photos

This year's Coachella lineup was underwhelming from the start, so much so that I didn't…

11 years ago

Interview: Calexico’s Joey Burns

The lights went out last time Calexico visited Los Angeles. Fans at the Fonda Theatre…

11 years ago

Yes That’s Me in That Cisco Ad

I was featured in Mike Mills' Cisco commercial for a fraction of a second. This…

11 years ago

Two Weeks in Belize (Photos)

Late last year I found a two solid weeks to travel in a country that…

11 years ago