How A Leaked Clip Shows The Real Donald Trump
Michael Knowles reacts to President Donald Trump's interview with George Stephanopoulos and explains how Trump uses his experience as an entertainer to address the media.
You type: | You see: |
---|---|
*italics* | italics |
**bold** | bold |
While we're very happy to have you in the Gulch and appreciate your wanting to fully engage, some things in the Gulch (e.g. voting, links in comments) are a privilege, not a right. To get you up to speed as quickly as possible, we've provided two options for earning these privileges.
As for them living here it depends on how many and what they are as individuals. People who are willing to support themselves and respect the rights of the individual can be tolerated no matter what their (inconsistent) religious dogmas. But beyond a certain point, the influx of an anti-reason, anti-individualist alien philosophy and culture in volume can only destroy a country built on their opposite, and they are being helped by the results of the counter Enlightenment already spread here.
Attempts to reform the intelligence agencies in accordance with the Constitution seem doomed to fail. Revelations from Binney to Snowden should have created a national common sense revolt, which is what they were counting on, but it didn't happen. Instead the agencies captured their civilian leaders and the problems worse.
If I were you I wouldn't be broadcasting what kind of access you had.
The Iranian dictators know they can't win a "Pearl Harbor" attack against the US. But they may be irrational enough to think they can enlist the aid of China or Russia and wind up doing something really stupid whose destruction no one would win. It's very important to keep Iran definitely and militarily confined to keep them under control until they go under before they can obtain their own nuclear weapons.
Pushing a dictatorship that doesn’t care about its own people against the wall means their only option would be military.
That said, maybe war with Iran is inevitable, and like with hitler, better to do it now before they get nuclear weapons.
I can tell you that once the military advises their civilian counterparts on what could be done, the decision to act passes to that civilian leadership, and they don't always follow the military strategy. As one illustration, President Carter did not follow the military advice on the attempt to rescue the Iranian held hostages, being more concerned with creating a multiservice team than executing the best strategy. As a result, the attempt met with disaster, from using the wrong equipment and a team that had never worked together before.
An experience I can pass along is that the creation of a National Intelligence Agency that supposedly leads all the subordinate intelligence agencies did not solve the problem of agencies not sharing information. It did, however, make the misuse of assets easier, as the extra layer of administration further clouds the view of what exactly each agency is up to. It also allowed the "leak" of missions from one agency to another, with NSA and CIA working in areas they aren't supposed to. Part of this mission leak is because the NSA has the most powerful supercomputers of any agency, and it's inevitable that when they let any other agency make use of their systems, they control what their own people see.
Then there's the new Cyber Command in the Pentagon. The Defense Intelligence Agency is heavily involved, and has a burr under its saddle about the encroachment of the civilian intelligence agencies cyber activities. Naturally, the civilian intelligence agencies are irritated by the "new kid on the block" working in a field they previously acted alone, passing tidbits to the military when it suited them.
If I was a White House Intelligence Czar, I'd advise the President to form a team of experienced intelligence people from across the spectrum of agencies and the DoD to probe flaws in the national intelligence system. The team would be charged with recommending actions to clarify the rules of engagement between the agencies, and to prevent abuses such as we've witnessed over the past few decades.
I haven’t seen in Christian or Mormon religions that all infidels must be killed
Load more comments...