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  1. #1
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    Obama has internet censorship and can heavily for clicking on a link Please Read

    Once again the internet is under fire and ALIPAC and its site and its message about the dangers of illegal immigration may become under fire if this treaty goes through. Right now Obama is getting ready to sign an executive order to legally spy on America's e-mails and web page views with his Cyber Security bill:

    There Is No Need For A Cybersecurity Executive Order - Forbes

    Now there is talk of another dangerous internet censorship bill that can lead to fines for just clicking unknowingly on the wrong link, it is called the Trans Pacific Partnership of TPP. Under this bill your website can not only be shut down but if you click on a link in this forum and unknowingly go to a webpage that someone deemed copyright even YOUTUBE you will have to pay a heavy fine: MORE CAN BE READ HERE:

    https://www.eff.org/issues/tpp

    Please as well read these 2 petitions and sign them, they will explain more, ALIPAC is not exactly loved by the main stream media and the only way to get are message across is through the internet. Please sign these two petitions and help keep the internet free so we can get are message abroad about the dangers of illegal immigration.

    Stop The Trap | OpenMedia International

    Open The TPP

    THANKS

  2. #2
    Senior Member JohnDoe2's Avatar
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    Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: Drone Strikes on People With AIDS?

    Posted: 09/10/2012 10:36 pm

    It is reported that Stalin said, "The death of one person is a tragedy; the death of a million people is a statistic." Today, a latter-day Stalin might say, "The death of four Yemeni civilians in a U.S. drone strike is a tragedy; the death of a million people because we let brand-name drug companies own U.S. 'trade policy' would be a statistic."

    Right now, in Leesburg, Va., the office of the U.S. Trade Representative is negotiating a so-called "trade agreement" -- the "Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement" -- that could put the lives of millions of innocent civilians at risk. The process is secret: USTR refuses to publish a draft negotiating text, so any American who isn't cleared by USTR to see the text can't say for sure exactly what USTR is doing right now.

    I put the phrase "trade agreement" in quotation marks because calling these deals "trade agreements" is fundamentally misleading for many people. The phrase "trade agreement" suggests to some that governments are only talking about "lowering barriers to trade." If you call it a "trade agreement," some people might think, "That doesn't concern me very much. I'll go check to see if Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie are still married instead." If you called it "an agreement to raise drug prices so people you care about can't get life-saving medicines," more people might think, "I'd better pay attention to this. I can catch up with Brangelina later."

    Bloomberg reports (emphasis mine):
    Transparency has become an issue of the Pacific-region talks, with consumer, labor and environmental groups siding with some U.S. lawmakers who want participants to make their positions public. U.S. officials have said they will hold a public comment period and congressional review after talks are complete, in line with their policy for recent trade deals including those with Colombia, Panama and South Korea.
    That's cold comfort, because "after talks are complete," as a practical matter it's almost impossible to change such agreements. If you don't have input before "talks are complete," then as a practical matter you have no effective input.

    But because there was a previous leak of the chapter of the draft negotiating text that dealt with intellectual property claims, people who have followed these issues closely have some idea of what USTR has been doing on our dime. What we can say with confidence is this: In an agreement that USTR hopes will eventually cover 40 percent of the world's population, the negotiating position of USTR has reneged on previous commitments the U.S. government has made to promote the ability of governments to pursue public health goals in "trade agreements" rather than undermining the ability of governments to pursue public health goals.

    And regardless of anything else, that fact alone should be a national scandal. When, at long last, you nail acknowledgement of a fundamental human right to the wall, it should stay nailed there. We shouldn't have to fight USTR on access to essential medicines every time they negotiate a new "trade deal." USTR should cry uncle on this for all time, no matter how much money brand-name drug companies spend on lobbying and political campaigns.

    In August 2012, Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders noted that the 19th International AIDS Conference "illuminated the profound contradiction" between the U.S. government's goal of "an AIDS-free generation" and "some of the U.S. government's trade policies." MSF noted the need to make antiretroviral therapy available to "more than 7 million people still in need of urgent treatment." To achieve this, MSF said, "antiretroviral drugs need to be available at affordable prices." But, MSF said, USTR is "promoting restrictive trade policies that would make it much harder for patients, governments and treatment providers like MSF to access price-lowering generic drugs."

    Leaked drafts of the TPP agreement, MSF said, "outline U.S. aggressive intellectual property demands that that could severely restrict access to affordable, life-saving medicines for millions of people... [T]he U.S. is asking countries to create new, enhanced and longer patent and data monopoly protections for multinational pharmaceutical companies so they can keep competitors out of the market and charge higher prices for longer."

    Affordable generic medicines have played a crucial role in expanding access to treatment, MSF noted. But:
    demand for newer HIV treatments is growing fast... Access to these ARV drugs will largely be contingent on the same price-busting generic competition responsible for the first wave of AIDS treatment scale up. The TPP's provisions, aimed at creating stronger and longer monopolies and making it more difficult to use legal tools to promote access to generics, could cut off access to these lifesaving medicines for millions.
    Do you think that "public comment" and "congressional review" of an agreement that "could cut off access to these lifesaving medicines for millions" should wait until after the agreement is signed, when, in practical terms, the prospects for changing the agreement would be near zero? Do you think it's intrinsically offensive that USTR (public employees whose salaries you pay through your taxes, and who are using as their negotiating leverage access to U.S. markets, including your consumer dollars) would press other countries to agree to such policies, regardless of whether the other countries resist or cave? Do you think that USTR should cry uncle on the issue of access to essential medicines for all time?

    If you think you might have an opinion on this at some point, the time to make some noise is now. Later may be too late. One place you can make some noise is here.

    Follow Robert Naiman on Twitter: www.twitter.com/naiman

    Robert Naiman: Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement: Drone Strikes on People With AIDS?
    NO AMNESTY

    Don't reward the criminal actions of millions of illegal aliens by giving them citizenship.


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  3. #3
    Senior Member HAPPY2BME's Avatar
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    Moved article to

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  4. #4
    Super Moderator Newmexican's Avatar
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    Congress Rubber Stamps Obama's Secret CyberSecurity Plan

    11 Sep 2012,
    byMike Flynn


    Congress released the continuing resolution to fund the government into next year late yesterday. One provision in the bill should send shivers down the collective spines of those who treasure freedom of the Internet and the right to privacy. It appears that the Continuing Resolution (CR) pending in Congress will allow average American’s privacy rights to be violated.

    Congress has struggled to pass legislation dealing with cybersecurity threats to the power grid and financial institutions termed “critical infrastructure.” The Senate has tentatively scheduled votes on legislation to deal with this issue, yet the Senate, and Congress as a whole, has yet to pass legislation dealing with this issue. The reason for the impasse is that there is a deep concern that if too much power is granted to the federal government in the name of protecting critical infrastructure, this new authority may allow the federal government to monitor activities with little or no relation to cybersecurity threats.

    The Administration has chosen to ignore the legislative process to implement their own secret plan. The Obama Administration has secretly prepared an executive order to implement an executive order dealing with cybersecurity. Language in the CR appears to rubber stamp this secret (from the public) cybersecurity plan. The fact that his plan has yet to receive a full vetting by the American people is outrageous.

    This past weekend, a draft cybersecurity executive order was leaked by the Obama Administration to members of the press. According to Federal News Radio “the draft EO includes eight sections, including the requirement to develop a way for industry to submit threat and vulnerability data to the government. The draft EO, which Federal News Radio viewed a draft copy of, closely follows the second version of comprehensive cyber legislation introduced by Sens. Joseph Lieberman (I-Conn.) and Susan Collins (R- Maine) in July. The draft order gives agencies several deadlines to meet, either by writing reports or creating and implementing frameworks.” This is legislation that has never passed the Senate.

    The Lieberman/Collins approach is something that many defenders of a free Internet oppose. The Center for Democracy and Technology circulated a letter that states in part that the Lieberman/Collins approach “undermines privacy and cybersecurity by expanding without justification the authority for companies to monitor their clients' and customers' Internet usage for broadly defined ‘cybersecurity threats,’ by authorizing ill-defined ‘countermeasures’ against such ‘cybersecurity threats,’ and by immunizing companies against liability for monitoring activities that violate their own contractual obligations.”

    The letter also argues that Lieberman/Collins “creates an exemption from all existing privacy laws to allow companies to share communications and records with the government, even if those personal records are not necessary to describe a cybersecutiry threat.” They are not the only ones upset about the potential danger to freedom that the Obama cybersecurity approach portends for Americans.

    Senator John McCain (R-Arizona) wrote to Gen. Keith Alexander, Director of the National Security Agency, on May 9, 2012 that 90 percent of critical cyber infrastructure is owned and operated by the private sector. McCain wrote “the authorities that would be granted to the Secretary in the Cybersecurity Act (Lieberman/Collins) are in fact, too burdensome. I am unaware of the Congress ever creating a regulatory regime in which it does not say what entities would be regulated, and simultaneously authorizes a government agency, an agency with few if any regulatory successes, to determine what needs to be regulated and how to regulate it.” In short, McCain argues that the Lieberman/Collins approach grants too much authority with little in the manner of constrains on government authority.

    Freedom loving Americans should be concerned by the secrecy in which this executive order is being drafted and the fact that it closely resembles the Lieberman/Collins approach. From what we know, this idea would grant the federal government way too much authority over monitoring the activities of average citizens.

    Opposition is not limited to libertarian minded organizations and Senator John McCain. Steven Bucci of The Heritage Foundation has written that “cybersecurity executive fiat is a very bad idea.” Bucci argues that “the reason the (Lieberman/Collins) bill did not pass was because there are reasonable and serious policy differences regarding how the nation should approach the growing challenge of cybersecurity. These differing camps are not at opposite ends of the political spectrum, but are spread throughout the American ideological landscape.”

    Furthermore, Bucci argues that “the main complaint with the bill was that it was based on aregulatory framework. Even though the staffs made some of the major provisions ‘voluntary,’ individual agencies could have promulgated regulations that would have been binding in specific industry sectors. The bottom line is that a significant number of relevant players think regulation is the wrong way to foster cybersecurity.” These are serious objections that deserve the input of the American people.

    The Obama Administration leaked one nugget that their executive order is “voluntary.” Federal News Radio reports that “one subsection would ask industry to voluntarily submit cyber threat information to the government. The draft order says this data wouldn't be used for regulatory purposes or used against companies. Sources say there aren't any liability protections in the EO because that could only come from Congress.” If the federal government comes to private companies to request this information, it is hard to imagine that these companies will treat these requests as a voluntary request. One merely needs to refer to what happened during the TARP negotiations in 2008 when then Secretary of the Treasury Hank Paulson ordered banks to “voluntarily” take bailout monies or be subject to pressure and intimidation.

    According the New York Times, based on documents acquired by Judicial Watch, “although ithas long been known that Henry M. Paulson Jr., the Treasury secretary at the time, had insisted that the banks’ top executives accept the government money, the documents provide details of the government’s full-court press at Mr. Paulson’s meeting with them on Oct. 13 and how the bankers had no choice.”

    The same may happen with this cybersecurity executive order.

    Information obtained from Capitol Hill indicates that the Obama Administration requested language in the CR that may serve to grant President Obama the authority to implement his scheme without the explicit consent of Congress. The CR contains language that seems to grant authority to the Obama Administration to move forward with this secretly drafted Executive Order in the next few weeks.

    Section 137 of the CR appropriates new monies for “’Department of Homeland Security—National Protection and Programs Directorate—Infrastructure Protection and Information Security’ at a rate for operations of $1,170,243,000, of which $328,000,000 is for Network Security Deployment, and $218,000,000 is for Federal Network Security that may be obligated at a rate for operations necessary to establish and sustain essential cybersecurity activities, including procurement and operations of continuous monitoring and diagnostics systems and intrusion detection systems for civilian Federal computer networks.” This section provides money to fund a new cybersecurity initiative, even though Congress has yet to pass any legislation authorizing the use of the money. As many Congress watchers understand, once monies are appropriated for a specific activity, the Congress is deemed to have approved. It is arguable that this language could be interpreted to grant authorization for the Obama Administration to implement their executive order mirroring many provisions of the failed Lieberman/Collins cybersecurity legislation.

    The CR has a second provision states “(b) Not later than 15 days after the date of the enactment of this joint resolution, the Secretary of Homeland Security shall submit to the Committees on Appropriations of the House of Representatives and the Senate an expenditure plan for essential cybersecurity activities described in subsection (a) of this section for the period through the date specified in section 106(3) of this joint resolution.” This seems to grant the Obama Administration authority to implement the plan, as long as they provide a report to Congress before the expiration of the CR in six months.

    It is very difficult to asses the true danger this idea poses to freedom, because of the secretive nature of the negotiations and the fact that this executive order is not public. But it is safe to say that the manner in which this plan is being drafted and implemented runs afoul of the traditional means to make very important decisions that impact privacy rights and the proper role of the federal government in monitoring the activities of private citizens.

    Congress Rubber Stamps Obama's Secret CyberSecurity Plan


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