U.S. ARMY CENSORSHIP: “Restricted Web access to The Guardian is Army wide, officials say” / Phillip Molnar

The PentagonThe Army admitted Thursday to not only restricting access to The Guardian news website at the Presidio of Monterey, as reported in Thursday’s Herald, but Army wide.

Presidio employees said the site had been blocked since The Guardian broke several stories on data collection by the National Security Agency.

Gordon Van Vleet, an Arizona-based spokesman for the Army Network Enterprise Technology Command, or NETCOM, said in an email the Army is filtering “some access to press coverage and online content about the NSA leaks.”

He wrote it is routine for the Department of Defense to take preventative “network hygiene” measures to mitigate unauthorized disclosures of classified information.

Continue reading . . .

U.S. ARMY CENSORSHIP: “The Guardian news website blocked at Presidio of Monterey, California” / Phillip Molnar

Presidio of Monterey

Photo credit: United States Army Garrison Presidio of Monterey

Presidio of Monterey employees on the base’s network are blocked from accessing parts of the news website that recently broke several stories on the National Security Agency’s data collection.

Limited access to The Guardian started shortly after the articles were released, according to employees across several departments.

Some of the site was still unavailable Wednesday — although the server granted access to the Washington Post and other newspapers.

Employees could go to The Guardian’s U.S. home page, www.guardiannews.com, but were blocked from reading stories, such as NSA articles, that redirected to the British site, Presidio spokesman Dan Carpenter said.

Yet, why the website remained largely unaccessible is a mystery.

Continue reading . . .

PRISON-INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX: “The Ironic “War on Drugs”” / MUST WATCH!

The House I Live In

Is The War On Drugs Nearing An End?
Watch video here . . .
The War on Drugs Is a War on America! Time to End It!
Read more here . . .

INTELLECTUALISM: “The Treason of the Intellectuals” / Chris Hedges

Chris Hedges

The rewriting of history by the power elite was painfully evident as the nation marked the 10th anniversary of the start of the Iraq War. Some claimed they had opposed the war when they had not. Others among “Bush’s useful idiots” argued that they had merely acted in good faith on the information available; if they had known then what they know now, they assured us, they would have acted differently. This, of course, is false.

[…]

The critique that I and other opponents of war delivered, no matter how well grounded in fact and experience, turned us into objects of scorn by a liberal elite that cravenly wanted to demonstrate its own “patriotism” and “realism” about national security. The liberal class fueled a rabid, irrational hatred of all war critics. Many of us received death threats and lost our jobs, for me one at The New York Times. These liberal warmongers, 10 years later, remain both clueless about their moral bankruptcy and cloyingly sanctimonious. They have the blood of hundreds of thousands of innocents on their hands.

The power elite, especially the liberal elite, has always been willing to sacrifice integrity and truth for power, personal advancement, foundation grants, awards, tenured professorships, columns, book contracts, television appearances, generous lecture fees and social status. They know what they need to say. They know which ideology they have to serve. They know what lies must be told—the biggest being that they take moral stances on issues that aren’t safe and anodyne. They have been at this game a long time. And they will, should their careers require it, happily sell us out again.

[…]

Julien Benda argued in his 1927 book “The Treason of Intellectuals”—“La Trahison des Clercs”—that it is only when we are not in pursuit of practical aims or material advantages that we can serve as a conscience and a corrective. Those who transfer their allegiance to the practical aims of power and material advantage emasculate themselves intellectually and morally.

[…]

“The desire to tell the truth,” wrote Paul Baran, the brilliant Marxist economist and author of “The Political Economy of Growth,” is “only one condition for being an intellectual. The other is courage, readiness to carry on rational inquiry to wherever it may lead … to withstand … comfortable and lucrative conformity.”

Read more . . .