(Insider Info) NYTimes' Secret Police

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kathleen

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Aug 14, 2007, 8:41:35 PM8/14/07
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Subject: (Insider Info) NYTimes' Secret Police

Date: Aug 8, 2007 11:44 PM

(ARTICLE BELOW)

I have been told by an associate with CIA contacts that nutcase
actions like these
(spying on no-body know-nothing groups, who, to even a 4 year old
would be perceived
as no threat), is because each group, each task, each actionitem, is
CHARGABLE.
You know, like a work order.

Like DCF.

If DCF "workers" can't keep taking X+n numbers of children away each
year, there could be employee cutbacks. Here (below NYTimes
editorial), CIA and
the FBI and Homeland Security is a simple meatgrinder just like all of
Corrupticut.

Now, another thing everyone should know about cops, is that they think
everyone
is stupid except for themselves, and their cop-banter is always about
how stupid
the public is. On the other hand, the CT State Police was in serious
danger of
having their high-priced high tech forensic lab shut down and de-
contracted by the
FBI because they did not have anyone qualified to run it. They still
don't,
in fact.

So, this is indeed the higher order secret moron clique (CIA, FBI) and
there is
no real threat from the American public, especially since Bush did 911
and even
the 1993 WTC bombing was an FBI sting operation. Once in a while we
get a Cho or
a Kaszynski or a McVeigh, but that's a culture effect and no matter
how many
cops you have, you will have evil, and when you have ever-more evil
cops and evil
DCF, you get ever-more public disrespect for them, and the downstream
disregard
for the laws that these cops and the DCF never respect themselves.

The Republican Party used to be the party of class- that is, Old World
Money, or
the Mannered World. But we all know the rich have now simply become
the Nouveau
Riche without the manners, and the Old World respect for the common
man, as demonstrated
by the good manners Old World Money people used to teach their
children, no longer
exists. There's no model.

***There's no guilt or shame over the lack of social graces or at not
being
taught manners.***

The reason I know this is because both of my grandparents were Old
World Money people
from Europe: In Kells, the family estate now belongs to the Church
and is a convent
school since the property was donated. In Siedlce, Poland, the family
mill and horse
farm was left behind for the Bolsheviks, since it was first left for
the White Russian
Army (calvary) who wanted to draft my grandfather to fight the
Bolsheviks. And
we, as kids, had this Old World Manners business shoved down our
throats.

We were *PETRIFIED* of doing something illegal manner-wise, at the
dinner table
down or anywhere else in Greenwich (and where everything is fine china
and very
breakable). That's how rich people used to instruct their children,
because
they did not want their children to appear to be ignorant of
*standards* of social
interaction. The goal of it all could be compared to *NOT* ROAD RAGE
driving.
Anyone whoever tries NOT ROAD RAGE DRIVING knows a habit of polite
driving has a
snowball effect.

People appreciate courtesy, and it lightens their day.


Such concepts are apparently not shared in cop-training. Intelligence
is too complicated
for them all, as we have seen too many times. Even Yale professors
claim intelligence
or the brain is too complicated:
http://www.actionlyme.org/dictionary_of_connecticutisms.htm

Still we have to pay for this abuse because there are no real jobs any
more, contrary
to what the psychopath in the White House thinks he can not say about
the economy
by saying he knows nothing about it. (Today Bushie is having a gut
feeling day.)
As is becoming more and more apparent, the Bushies seemed to have
captured all the
Tinklebell fairy dust before they attempted to capture all the oil.

The Bush Family is not Old World Money, as if everyone did not know
that. They
do not have the background of the landed gentry in Europe, where you
had to be polite
to your workers because it made sense to treat them with respect,
since then they'd
bear no resentment. Such was the Harmony of Community back in the old
days when
humans were smarter.


KMDickson

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/08/opinion/08wed2.html?_r=1&hp=&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print


The New York Times
Printer Friendly Format Sponsored By

August 8, 2007
Editorial
Secrets of the Police

The city of New York is waging a losing and ill-conceived battle for
overzealous
secrecy surrounding nearly 2,000 arrests during the 2004 Republican
National Convention.
Yesterday, for the second time in three months, a federal judge
ordered the release
of hundreds of pages of documents that detail the Police Department's
covert surveillance
leading to the convention. People who were detained, some for days and
without explanation,
may finally begin to get some answers.

If the decision by Magistrate Judge James C. Francis IV stands, the
documents may
figure in scores of lawsuits challenging police tactics that included
the heavy-handed:
rounding up suspects on the streets, fingerprinting them and putting
them in holding
pens until the convention was all but over. That such a police action
happened in
New York, and during the large, democratic show of a political
nominating convention,
was troubling.

Police Commissioner Ray Kelly seemed to cast an awfully wide and
indiscriminate
net in seeking out potential troublemakers. For more than a year
before the convention,
members of a police spy unit headed by a former official of the
Central Intelligence
Agency infiltrated a wide range of groups. As Jim Dwyer has reported
in The Times,
many of the targets - including environmental and church groups and
even a satirical
troupe called Billionaires for Bush - posed no danger or credible
threat. Tracking
them was, at the least, a waste of resources that could have been
better used elsewhere.

The Police Department surely has good reasons for needing to keep
parts of their
covert activities under wraps, particularly where operations against
potential terrorism
are concerned. The judge - and even the New York Civil Liberties
Union, which represented
the plaintiffs - correctly acknowledged a need for limited
nondisclosure. The names
of undercover agents and other potentially compromising information in
the documents
have been redacted. We hope that's enough to let them see daylight.
(The Times was
a party to the lawsuit that released more than 600 pages of documents
in May.)

New Yorkers have been tremendously patient with the demands of living
in a city
scarred from the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and now made secure in
ways, large and
small, that can often interrupt their lives. They accept that the
police have a
job to do in keeping everyone safe, and they are overwhelmingly
cooperative. But
the overarching police strategy that culminated in the arrests three
years ago this
month did not feel like it was done with just safety in mind.

Along with Mayor Michael Bloomberg's denial of permits for protests on
Central Park's
Great Lawn, the police action helped to all but eliminate dissent from
New York
City during the Republican delegates' visit. If that was the goal,
then mission
accomplished. And civil rights denied.

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