Friday, June 23, 2006

When Will This Stop?


For more posters like this go HERE

SUNDAY MORNING UPDATE As if revealing a SECRET program to track the financing of terrorisim wasn't enough, the NY TIMES has seen fit to publish classified information about troop levels...

"According to a classified briefing at the Pentagon this week by the commander, Gen. George W. Casey Jr., the number of American combat brigades in Iraq is projected to decrease to 5 or 6 from the current level of 14 by December 2007." The rest can be seen ON THIS SITE

They just can't help themselves...it is unreal the amount of damage these morons are attempting to inflict upon the nation as a whole and the armed forces and intellegence community in particular. UN-FUCKINGBELEAVABLE!

The original outrage follows below...

I understand this morning that the NY Times and the LA fish wrap have chosen to reveal a secret government program to track down and expose terrorists that has proved effective even after the government requested that they don't reveal it. I also understand that the printing of this information isn't illegal, the only person breaking the law was the person who gave them the SECRET information.

At what point do these people become citizens of this country? If the government can't prosecute, at what point do we "the people" make these business' pay for what they are doing? "THEY" in the name of "THE PUBLIC INTEREST" have chosen to make us all less safe by revealing a program that was by all accounts effective, all because they have appointed themselves the arbiter of what's right and wrong in this country. The unmitigated gaul.

Media Refuses to Hold Surveillance Story
Jun 23 12:23 AM US/Eastern

By JUSTIN BACHMAN
AP Business Writer


NEW YORK


The Bush administration and The New York Times are again at odds over national security, this time with new reports of a broad government effort to track global financial transfers.

The newspaper, which in December broke news of an effort by the National Security Agency to monitor Americans' telephone calls and e- mails, declined a White House request not to publish a story about the government's inspection of monies flowing in and out of the country.

The Los Angeles Times also reported on the issue Thursday night on its Web site, against the Bush administration's wishes. The Wall Street Journal said it received no request to hold its report of the surveillance.

Administration officials were concerned that news reports of the program would diminish its effectiveness and could harm overall national security...
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