Thursday, April 05, 2012

No passport if you owe back taxes - the US senate says...

 


 


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Keeping the Slaves on the Plantation: Senate Says No Passport if You Owe Taxes

Dees Illustration
Eric Blair
Acknowledgements: Activist Post

CBS is reporting that Senate Bill 1813 that would "suspend passport rights for delinquent taxpayers" passed the Senate 74-22 on March 14th.
A bill authored by a Southland lawmaker that could potentially allow the federal government to prevent any Americans who owe back taxes from traveling outside the U.S. is one step closer to becoming law.
...The 'Moving Ahead for Progress in the 21st Century Act' or 'MAP-21' includes a provision that would allow for the 'revocation or denial' of a passport for anyone with 'certain unpaid taxes' or 'tax delinquencies'.
This is the most recent example of the U.S. government treating rights as privileges that they can remove through legislation. This bill should be renamed "Keeping the Slaves on the Plantation Act."

Unfortunately, it's understandable why this type of bill would draw majority support. Since more than 70% of Americans don't have passports, the law doesn't affect them. Additionally, many would equate this as a justified loss of freedom for wealthy people who seek to evade taxes by moving themselves and money offshore.

Indeed, Section 40304 of the 1679-page bill seems to only target well-off individuals; "that any individual has a seriously delinquent tax debt in an amount in excess of $50,000, the Secretary shall transmit such certification to the Secretary of State for action with respect to denial, revocation, or limitation of a passport".


Of course, these figures are generated by the IRS which places the burden of proof on the individuals to prove that they don't owe what the IRS says they owe. Consequently, they can arbitrarily determine any figure they wish to impose on a citizen without much recourse for the accused.

However, those described as having "seriously delinquent tax debt" must have "an outstanding debt under this title for which a notice of lien has been filed in public records". Which means that the amount has to be agreed upon in court and levied against the property or wages of the citizen.

This new "revocation authorization", created as an amendment to the Passport Act of 1926, gives the Secretary of State the authority not only to deny passport applications, but also to revoke current passports even if the citizen resides abroad.

The bill states that the Secretary of State, before revocation, "may limit a previously issued passport or passport card only for return travel to the United States; or issue a limited passport or passport card that only permits return travel to the United States." In other words, it also allows them to extradite citizens back to the United States if they're considered seriously tax delinquent.

Most significantly, as the CBS article points out, these citizens would be losing their travel rights not because they are accused or convicted of a crime such as tax evasion, rather simply because they have a lien of debt:
However, there does not appear to be any specific language requiring a taxpayer to be charged with tax evasion or any other crime in order to have their passport revoked or limited — only that a notice of lien or levy has been filed by the IRS.
Removing rights from individuals who violate the countless laws in the land of the free is one thing, but because they are accused of owing money is quite another thing. Law abiding citizens should never have their rights revoked because they owe a financial debt. That is why this bill should be called "Keeping the Slaves on the Plantation Act". The masters want to keep their property producing for them.

Read other articles by Eric Blair here.

You can support this information by voting on Reddit: http://www.reddit.com/r/conspiracy/comments/ruo11/keeping_the_slaves_on_the_plantation_senate_says/
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Monday, April 02, 2012

The Whitehats and Lord James of Blackheath deliver a death blow - and Divine Cosmos


:DDThe Whitehats and Lord James of Blackheath deliver a death blow -  and Divine Cosmos...
1bag_of_money
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Map2wVJmDg
36649_1447047170734_1069807283_1318194_6861157_n
http://dailycaller.com/2012/02/25/british-lord-fell-for-15-trillion-federal-reserve-scam/
A video worth watching!
Divine Cosmos: Some more resource material:You will need a free afternoon to read this in one session
http://divinecosmos.com/start-here/davids-blog/1026-financial-tyranny-final
http://divinecosmos.com/start-here/davids-blog/1035-divineintervention1
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Sunday, April 01, 2012

Super snoops updating Big Brother in the UK...

LONDON - NOVEMBER 01:  Foreign Secretary Willi...
LONDON - NOVEMBER 01: Foreign Secretary William Hague attends the opening session at the London Cyberspace Conference on November 01, 2011 in London, England. The conference, which is being attended by representatives of 60 nations, is due to address rising levels of cybercrime and comes in the wake of a warning from the UK Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) that such attacks are at 'disturbing' levels. (Image credit: Getty Images via @daylife)


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    :no:Human rights groups on Sunday slammed British government plans to expand its powers to monitor email exchanges and website visits.
    Under the new legislation, internet companies would be instructed to install hardware to allow the Government Communications Headquarters (GCHQ) -- Britain's electronic "listening" agency" -- to go through "on demand" every text message and email sent, websites accessed and phone calls made "in real time, the Sunday Times reported.
    The plans are expected to be unveiled next month.
    Nick Pickles, director of the Big Brother Watch campaign group, called the plans "an unprecedented step that will see Britain adopt the same kind of surveillance seen in China and Iran"
    Read more: http://nz.news.yahoo.com/a/-/technology/13317736/rights-groups-attack-britains-snooping-plans/
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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

MegaUpload claims the feds impeding its defence against charges of piracy and racketeering...

Image representing Megaupload Limited as depic...
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MegaUpload lawyers claim the feds are impeding its defence.megaUpload wants access to its servers against US charges of piracy and and racketeering.But its lawyer says officials won't release $1 million necessary to get the information.



by  CNet

The U.S. government has refused to allow the MegaUpload defendants access to information on their servers, which in turn is impeding their ability to defend themselves, the company's lawyer told CNET.

MegaUpload founder Kim DotCom.
Ira Rothken, the U.S. attorney overseeing MegaUpload's international defense team, said the U.S. has refused to release funds that would enable MegaUpload to preserve and gather materials from company servers vital to its defense. Rothken said that he fears U.S. officials are withholding the money in an attempt to unfairly hobble MegaUpload's defense.
"It's hard to reconcile the chain of events in this matter with any other conclusion," Rothken said. "MegaUpload is frustrated and wants to preserve the data for litigation and to defend itself and ultimately -- with the approval of the court -- to provide consumers access to their data."
In January, the U.S. issued an indictment against MegaUpload, founder Kim DotCom and six other managers of the cyberlocker service, where users could store e-files and then share the contents with others. MegaUpload's leadership is accused of conspiring to commit Internet piracy, racketeering and wire fraud. DotCom's home in Auckland was raided by New Zealand police, his assets seized and the service shut down.
The U.S. wants to try DotCom in this country and an extradition hearing is scheduled for August. Rothken said there is no criminal secondary copyright infringement in the United States and said MegaUpload will prevail.
The case is important because until now, copyright infringement was largely a civil, not a criminal matter. For the most part, the worst thing that could happen to a service accused of helping customers infringe intellectual property was that someone might sue it.
Not any more.
U.S. officials seem intent on making some types of copyright infringement a criminal offense. U.S. authorities say MegaUpload was responsible for $500 million in damages to copyright owners, and the feds appear to have dedicated some serious resources to prosecuting the company. To defend itself against the U.S. government, MegaUpload will need all the material to which it is entitled, said Rothken.

Read more:http://news.cnet.com/8301-31001_3-57406010-261/megaupload-lawyer-claims-the-feds-are-impeding-its-defense/?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

 

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Saturday, March 17, 2012

Mega coalmining threatens Australia's Great Barrier Reef...

The Great Barrier Reef lies off the coast of Q...
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    Mega coalmining threatens Great Barrier Reef - Greenpeace claim...
    logologo
    © Tom Jefferson/Greenpeace:
    In our campaign to stop dangerous climate change, Greenpeace is taking on one of the most urgent issues: the enormous expansion of coal mining and coal exports from Australia. Not only does coal expansion spell disaster for our global climate but it threatens one of the world’s most precious treasures, the Great Barrier Reef.
    The Galilee Basin, located in the heart of Queensland, is the site of a series of proposed mega mines that could see Australia’s coal exports more than double within a decade. Enormous coal mines mean enormous amounts of carbon pollution and supporting infrastructure – including at least one rail line and multiple massive port terminals. Australia is on the brink of turning the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area into an industrial estate.
    Greenpeace documented the impacts of the coal expansion plans in ‘Boom goes the Reef,’ a report released March 1, 2012. Impacts include:
    ◦Six times more coal ships travelling through the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.
    ◦Six-fold increase in coal port capacity along the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.
    This includes the development of Abbott Point port, which would become three times larger than any other coal port in the world. The Australian Government is set to approve this port within weeks.
    ◦113 million cubic meters of dredging in the World Heritage Area due to industrial expansion. This proposed dredging would destroy vital marine habitat, including habitat for endangered Loggerhead and Olive Ridley turtles.
    The report was released, and supported by a creative action, to coincide with the visit of the World Heritage custodians from UNESCO who are concerned about the impacts of development on the reef. Under pressure, the Australian and Queensland Governments announced a ‘strategic assessment’ to understand the impacts on the reef. We’re urging these governments to not approve any major coastal developments while this strategic assessment is being done.
    Our campaign has clearly hit a nerve. On the eve of UNESCO’s visit, a confidential draft of a campaign proposal to challenge the increasingly reckless expansion of the coal industry found its way into the hands of the coal industry and two national newspapers and received widespread coverage. Three days of front-page stories in the national press followed.
    We have faced a massive and hysterical backlash from the mining industry and several Australian politicians (including the Prime Minister, the Trade Minister, the Energy Minister and the Environment Minister) who made absurd claims in their attacks on our campaign. Rio Tinto is calling us ‘economic vandals', the Minerals Council of Australia claim we are attacking Australia's 'national interest', the Treasurer declared that we were "irrational", "deeply irresponsible" and "destructive’ and the Minister for Trade has accused us of driving ‘mass starvation’.
    Read more:
    http://www.greenpeace.org/new-zealand/en/news/blog/mega-coal-mines-threaten-great-barrier-reef/blog/39518/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+gpnzblog+%28Greenpeace+New+Zealand+Weblog%29
    http://worldofcae.blogspot.com The Green Planet blog
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CIA to spy on people through household items...

News In America, TV watches you: CIA to spy on people through household items
MORE ON THE STORY
Six soldiers killed in Afghanistan (top row left to right) Sergeant Nigel Coupe, Corporal Jake Hartley and Private Anthony Frampton, with (bottom row left to right) Private Christopher Kershaw, Private Daniel Wade and Private Daniel Wilford (AFP Photo / Iain Hamer / British Ministry of defence / Handout) 13.03, 13:2385 comments

Facebooked: UK Teen arrested for Afghan war post

A British teenager will appear in court on charges of racially aggravated offense after posting Facebook comments about six British soldiers killed in Afghanistan last week.
Snapshot of NATO commander James Stavridis's genuine page on Facebook (Image from facebook.com) 11.03, 22:169 comments

Fakebook: Bogus NATO chief spies on his top-level friends

NATO commander James Stavridis has fallen victim to spies who created a fake profile on his behalf on Facebook and sent numerous “friend requests” to UK military chiefs. UK media suspect reams of acquired personal data have flown to China.
Afghan men walk past by US soldiers in Ghazni province on February 2, 2012 (AFP Photo / Aref Yaqubi) 05.03, 01:018 comments

US may use CIA cloak to hide Afghan presence

The Pentagon is reportedly deliberating over putting elite troops and Special Forces in Afghanistan under CIA control. The move would reduce official US presence with a view to meeting Obama’s promise of total withdrawal from the country by 2014.
The  Suspicious Activity Reporting Mobile application 08.03, 03:4610 comments

Shutter, then shudder. Spy-app sends smartphone pics to police

Snitching has eventually entered the digital age thanks to a new smartphone app that lets anyone, anywhere tell the police: “Hey! That’s kind of weird!”
Overview of Camp Williams site before the construction works began. UDC will be located on the west side of the highway, on what was previously an airfield (Image from www.publicintelligence.net)Today: 05:0910 comments

NSA Utah ‘Data Center’: Biggest-ever domestic spying lab?

The biggest-ever data complex, to be completed in Utah in 2013, may take American citizens into a completely new reality where their emails, phone calls, online shopping lists and virtually entire lives will be stored and reviewed.

In America, TV watches you: CIA to spy on people through household items

Published: 17 March, 2012, 08:04
In America, TV watches you: CIA to spy on people through household items. (Reuters / Thomas Peter)
In America, TV watches you: CIA to spy on people through household items. (Reuters / Thomas Peter)


With a growing number of ‘smart gadgets,’ spying on homes may start to become much easier. In fact, CIA Chief David Petraeus admitted that Americans were effectively bugging themselves and making it easy for spy agencies to peek in on their lives.
­Speaking at a summit for In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital firm, Petraeus noted that new devices that link ‘dumb’ home appliances such as refrigerators, ovens and lighting systems to the Internet could “change our notion of secrecy.”
“‘Transformational’ is an overused word, but I do believe it properly applies to these technologies, particularly to their effect on clandestine tradecraft,” Petraeus noted.
Items of interest will be located, identified, monitored, and remotely controlled through technologies such as radio-frequency identification, sensor networks, tiny embedded servers, and energy harvesters — all connected to the next-generation Internet using abundant, low-cost, and high-power computing,” Petraeus explained. “The latter now going to cloud computing, in many areas greater and greater supercomputing, and, ultimately, heading to quantum computing.”
In the meantime, the biggest microchip company in the world, ARM, presented new processors that can be implanted into nearly any household appliance and connect it to the Internet so that the appliance could be remotely controlled in tandem with other applications. The company described the concept as the “Internet of things.”
And the National Security Agency is already building a gigantic supercomputer to process this gigantic amount of information. It’s a $2 billion Utah-based facility that can process yottabytes (a quadrillion gigabytes) of data, according to the Gizmondo technology blog. It will be the centerpiece for the Global Information Grid and is set to go live in September 2013.
These latest announcements paint a somewhat Orwellian picture of the future, with TV’s spying on their viewers and beds recording the dreams of those sleeping in them. Perhaps this data would then be sent to the Utah supercomputer, which would assess the person’s pros and cons. And what if the computer uses statistics to decipher the likelihood that that person will commit a crime? A score could land you in jail – for a crime that had not yet happened.
But even now we see how people are being arrested for posting online or clicking the wrong button in the privacy of their own home. A British teenager is set to appear in court on charges of racially aggravated assault after posting comments about six British soldiers killed in Afghanistan.
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Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Facebooked: UK Teen arrested for Afghan war post...

Facebooked: UK Teen arrested for Afghan war post

Six soldiers killed in Afghanistan (top row left to right) Sergeant Nigel Coupe, Corporal Jake Hartley and Private Anthony Frampton, with (bottom row left to right) Private Christopher Kershaw, Private Daniel Wade and Private Daniel Wilford (AFP Photo / Iain Hamer / British Ministry of defence / Handout)
Six soldiers killed in Afghanistan (top row left to right) Sergeant Nigel Coupe, Corporal Jake Hartley and Private Anthony Frampton, with (bottom row left to right) Private Christopher Kershaw, Private Daniel Wade and Private Daniel Wilford (AFP Photo / Iain Hamer / British Ministry of defence / Handout)

A British teenager will appear in court on charges of racially aggravated offense after posting Facebook comments about six British soldiers killed in Afghanistan last week.
In his Facebook comments Azhar Ahmed, 19, reportedly criticized the amount of attention the deaths of the six soldiers received as compared to the civilians losses Afghanistan has sustained in the NATO-led war.
A police spokesperson said that the teen "didn't make his point very well and that is why he has landed himself in bother."
Ahmed, who will appear before court on March 20, was detained last Friday and charged over the weekend. He has since been released on bail.
The six British troops were killed last week after their Warrior armored vehicle was struck by a roadside bomb in southern Afghanistan. Most of the soldiers were between 19 and 21 years of age. The incident is considered the biggest single loss of life for British forces since 2006.

This story is ongoing.


Wednesday, March 07, 2012

The US seeks the extradition of MegaUpload founder Kim Dotcom...

United States of America has extradition treat...
Image via Wikipedia
Image representing Megaupload Limited as depic...
Image via CrunchBase


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Monday, March 05, 2012

Has the rule of law been lost in Fiji - yes says undercover mission...

 
BREAKING NEWS
Auckland Council puts brakes on port expansion into harbour..
 
A secret fact-finding mission to Fiji has found citizens have no legal way of challenging any of the Government's decisions, and the rule of law and independence of the judiciary has all but vanished.
A return to the rule of law is hamstrung by the benefits members of the ruling regime enjoy, and by state-sanctioned intimidation of dissenters.
In November members of the Law Society of England and Wales visited Fiji on an undercover mission and interviewed past and present lawyers, judges, diplomats and people in non-government organisations.
Their report Fiji: The Rule of Law Lost found a system of governing that was not "transparent, certain, predictable, accountable or democratic".
Foreign Minister Murray McCully said the report was "not very encouraging" but pointed to steps Fiji was taking towards holding elections.
These included a commitment to a public consultation process and a voter registration programme.
"This is a pivotal point in time," he said. "The acid test in the eyes of the international community would be what steps take place now, both in terms of freedom of assembly and media freedom, but also in terms of the public consultation process and whether it will engage all stakeholders.
Mr McCully said the jury was out and he wanted to keep an open mind.
Fiji has been under military rule since 2006, when Frank Bainimarama seized power. He has promised elections in 2014.
The report found that judges and prosecutors had been fired without reason, the state had censored the media and the regime abused its power to intimidate its critics.
"The judges dismissed in April 2009 were given no reasons, no notice and no compensation for loss of office," the report said. "It is apparent that their sin was to comply with their oath of office and to act independently rather than any misconduct. It is difficult to conceive of a more obvious attack on judicial independence."
Many of the state's prosecutors were also replaced with lawyers from Sri Lanka on short-term contracts, the report said.
The report called all national law societies and bars to lobby governments to press for measures to be taken by the Fiji Government to ensure a return to the rule of law.
Labour's foreign affairs spokesman Phil Goff said the report was damning, but he did not think harsher sanctions on Fiji were the answer.
Economic sanctions hurt ordinary people without necessarily having the desired impact on the regime.
INTIMIDATION
* Dorsami Naidu, president of the Fiji Law Society and vocal critic of the Government, was detained by police for 24 hours after protesting peacefully outside a High Court building.
* Hemendra Nagin, a lawyer who led a petition against the forcible removal of the Chief Justice in 2007, was fined $15,000 for professional misconduct.
* Human rights lawyer Imrana Jalal was charged under a decree that did not come into force until two months after she was charged. She was eventually acquitted, but lives in exile.
* Graffiti artists have been charged with sedition.
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Sunday, March 04, 2012

A tearful Putin is president of Russia once more...

THE GRAND KREMLIN PALACE, MOSCOW. President Pu...
Image via Wikipedia
Opposition leaders denounce 'illegitimate, untransparent' polls in which former PM won more than half of votes. Whatever their opinions may be, whatever the claims are: Vladimir Putin is president of Russia once more...
MOSCOW - Mr Vladimir Putin triumphed in Russia's presidential election and, tears rolling down his cheeks, called his victory a turning point that had prevented the country falling into the hands of enemies.

Mr Putin's opponents complained of widespread fraud, refused to recognise the results and said they would press ahead today with the biggest protests since he rose to power 12 years ago.

But former KGB spy Putin said yesterday he had won a "clean" victory and was on course to return to the Kremlin after four years as Prime Minister with almost 65 per cent of votes, partial results showed.

"I promised you we would win. We have won. Glory to Russia," Mr Putin, dressed in an anorak and flanked by outgoing President Dmitry Medvedev, told tens of thousands of flag-waving supporters at a late-evening victory rally under the red walls of the Kremlin.

Denouncing attempts to "destroy Russia's statehood and usurp power," he said: "The Russian people have shown today that such scenarios will not succeed in our land ... They shall not pass!"

The crowd at one point chanted: "Putin! Putin! Putin!" Some danced to keep warm and drank vodka from plastic glasses, with empty bottles crunching underfoot.

A spokesman later said Mr Putin had wept real tears at the victory rally but said they were caused by the biting wind.

It was a defiant and angry speech which left Mr Putin, 59, on collision course with the mainly middle-class protesters in Moscow and other big cities who have staged huge rallies since a disputed parliamentary poll on Dec 4.

Two exit polls showed Mr Putin with 58 to 59 per cent of the votes and incomplete results showed him winning more than 64 per cent.

His nearest rival, Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov, had about 17 per cent of votes, and nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, former parliamentary speaker Sergei Mironov and billionaire Mikhail Prokhorov were all below 10 per cent.

Mr Zyuganov said his party would not recognise the result and called the election "illegitimate, dishonest and untransparent". Liberal leader Vladimir Ryzhkov also said it was not legitimate.

The protest organisers, who see Mr Putin as an autocratic leader whose return to power will stymie hope of economic and political reforms, said their demonstrations would now grow.

Said journalist Sergei Parkhomenko, one of the leaders of the opposition protest movement: "He is forcing things to breaking point. He is declaring war on us. As a result the base of aversion to him is growing."

Despite the opposition, mainly among well-educated and relatively well-off young professionals, Mr Putin's support remains strong in the provinces and his victory had not been in doubt.

He showed his gratitude in late-night video links with supporters around Russia, including workers at a tank factory in the Urals town of Nizhny Tagil who have denounced the protests.

"You put in their places those people who went one step too far and insulted the working man," Mr Putin told them. "You showed who the Russian people are, the Russian working man, the worker and the engineer. You showed that you are a head higher than any layabout, any old windbag. This was for me the biggest present."

Mr Putin's clear victory - he avoided a runoff election by receiving more than 50 per cent of the vote - will enable him to portray his return to the post he held from 2000 until 2008 as strong public backing against the protesters, whom he has portrayed as a destabilising minority and pawns of foreign governments.

He will be inaugurated in May. REUTERS
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