Showing posts with label National. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National. Show all posts

Friday, April 19, 2013

Filmmaker Robert Greenwald on "War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State"



Transcript



This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.



AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González.


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We turn now to whistleblowers and the unprecedented attack they’ve come under during the Obama administration. Evoking the Espionage Act of 1917, the administration has pressed criminal charges against no fewer than six government employees, more than all previous presidential administrations combined.


AMY GOODMAN: A new film directed by Robert Greenwald looks at four whistleblowers who had their lives practically destroyed after they went to the press with evidence of government wrongdoing. They are Michael DeKort, Thomas Drake, Franz Gayl and Thomas Tamm. In the film, Greenwald also interviews government oversight experts and investigative journalists who warn about the chilling effect prosecutions may have on potential whistleblowers and the journalists who help them. This is the trailer of the film, War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State.


FRANZ GAYL: I had to do something. If not me, then who? I said, “This needs to be fixed.”



THOMAS DRAKE: I thought about various investigative reporters that I would try and contact.



THOMAS TAMM: Once I put the phone down, I was pretty confident that my life would never be quite the same.



MICHAEL DEKORT: I mean, at the end of the day, right, when you make a decision like this, if you’re not prepared to have the worst happen, then really don’t do it at all.



JANE MAYER: These people face a terrifying situation.



REPORTER: Thomas Drake, accused of leaking classified information. Agents raiding his home in Howard County.



THOMAS DRAKE: Eighteen agents, some of them in body armor, had been banging on our front door.



UNIDENTIFIED: Any time anyone takes a step like that, you know that they’ve probably got something important to say, because they are basically wiping away their career.



DANA PRIEST: There are close to a million people who have top-secret clearance.



MICHAEL DEKORT: The Obama administration had cracked down on whistleblowers.



WILLIAM KELLER: They have indicted more people for violating secrecy than all of the previous administrations put together.



UNIDENTIFIED: The number of people who indicated to us they wish they could talk, but they can’t, because they’re so afraid of what could happen to them, it’s a terrible thing for our democracy.



THOMAS DRAKE: So speaking truth to power is now a criminal act.



AMY GOODMAN: Some of those voices, Thomas Drake and William Keller of The New York Times, as well as Jane Mayer of The New Yorker. This is Democracy Now! The trailer of the new documentary, War on Whistleblowers is what you just watched. We’re joined now by its director, Robert Greenwald, and founder and president of Brave New Films, producer, director and activist.


Why did you make this film? You’ve looked at so many other issues. Why whistleblowers, Robert?


ROBERT GREENWALD: Well, there were a few things that came together. What we always try to do in our films is connect the dots and explore how the system is working. So we had the crackdown on whistleblowers, number one, but it wasn’t without reason. It’s very deeply connected to the growth and power of the national security state, which believes completely in secrets. So we had the whistleblowers. We had the national security state. And then we had some incredible investigative journalists being attacked, investigated, threatened, their careers at stake also. So we put all three of those together and made a film which allows people to understand what’s going on and how deeply threatening it is to us, in a kind of drip-drip way, where you don’t always see or understand what’s happening.


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, Bob, I want to turn to the case of Franz Gayl, a former marine. While working at the Pentagon as a science adviser for the Marine Corps, Gayl volunteered to deploy to Iraq. Upon his return, he alerted the office of the secretary of defense, and later the Congress and the media, to critical equipment shortages. These included mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles, or MRAPs. Gayl’s public outcry exposed the fact that the corps had failed to provide marines in Iraq with life-saving technologies. Yet Gayl has been the target of years of retaliatory investigations, workplace harassment, including the elimination of meaningful duties and extended suspension of his security clearances. In this clip, Gayl explains why he made the fateful decision to save lives by requesting MRAPs to replace Humvees in Iraq. Journalist Seymour Hersh is also in this clip.


FRANZ GAYL: I had to do something. If not me, then who? And if not now, then when? It was one of those situations. And I just said, “No, no, no, no. It doesn’t matter what the consequences are, personal or otherwise, right?” I said, “This needs to be fixed.”



SEYMOUR HERSH: Whistleblowers are just people who say there’s something more important here than my boss or the general or the admiral or the president.



FRANZ GAYL: The most common vehicle used was the Humvee. They were never built to withstand weapons that the insurgents were using, these IEDs.



UNIDENTIFIED: The estimates are that about a third of the casualties in Iraq were due to Humvees.



FRANZ GAYL: Hundreds of Marines were tragically lost, probably thousands maimed, unnecessarily. So I said, “Let’s replace the Humvees with what are called MRAPs, mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles.” The MRAP was bound to save lives.



JUAN GONZÁLEZ: That was Franz Gayl in the clip from War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State. Robert Greenwald, he was one of the few whistleblowers who actually was able to keep his job, where some of the others have had really terrible times after they did their exposés. Could you talk about that, as well?


ROBERT GREENWALD: Yeah. One of the things that was a common denominator with all the whistleblowers we interviewed is the terrible personal price they paid—even Franz. He was saving lives, literally saving hundreds of lives. He was fired initially. But this is where organizing makes such an incredible impact. Organizations, POGO/GAP got behind him. They worked. People called. They took action. And it really worked. It got him his job back. And it’s important to keep that in mind.


The other cases were horrific. And what is happening over and over again is the Obama administration and previous administrations are literally shooting the messengers—punishing the whistleblowers, trying to pass laws that make it harder for whistleblowers. And look, the only way we find out about the national security state is by these people coming forward.


AMY GOODMAN: Robert Greenwald, part two of this conversation, as we go through the whistleblowers, we’ll post online at democracynow.org. The new film is called War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State.


As we wrap up, Juan, you’re headed out after tomorrow’s show to Chicago and Detroit to speak about Harvest of Empire?


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Yes, the film is premiering there at the Gene Siskel Film Center on Friday night, and I’ll be there after the 8:15 showing for a Q&A with the audience, and then at Wayne State University at noon on Saturday.


AMY GOODMAN: And we’ll put all the details at our website at democracynow.org.




Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin WordPress | Android Forums | WordPress Tutorials

Democracy Now!

Filmmaker Robert Greenwald on "War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State"

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Filmmaker Robert Greenwald on "War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State"



Transcript



This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.



AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González.


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We turn now to whistleblowers and the unprecedented attack they’ve come under during the Obama administration. Evoking the Espionage Act of 1917, the administration has pressed criminal charges against no fewer than six government employees, more than all previous presidential administrations combined.


AMY GOODMAN: A new film directed by Robert Greenwald looks at four whistleblowers who had their lives practically destroyed after they went to the press with evidence of government wrongdoing. They are Michael DeKort, Thomas Drake, Franz Gayl and Thomas Tamm. In the film, Greenwald also interviews government oversight experts and investigative journalists who warn about the chilling effect prosecutions may have on potential whistleblowers and the journalists who help them. This is the trailer of the film, War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State.


FRANZ GAYL: I had to do something. If not me, then who? I said, “This needs to be fixed.”



THOMAS DRAKE: I thought about various investigative reporters that I would try and contact.



THOMAS TAMM: Once I put the phone down, I was pretty confident that my life would never be quite the same.



MICHAEL DEKORT: I mean, at the end of the day, right, when you make a decision like this, if you’re not prepared to have the worst happen, then really don’t do it at all.



JANE MAYER: These people face a terrifying situation.



REPORTER: Thomas Drake, accused of leaking classified information. Agents raiding his home in Howard County.



THOMAS DRAKE: Eighteen agents, some of them in body armor, had been banging on our front door.



UNIDENTIFIED: Any time anyone takes a step like that, you know that they’ve probably got something important to say, because they are basically wiping away their career.



DANA PRIEST: There are close to a million people who have top-secret clearance.



MICHAEL DEKORT: The Obama administration had cracked down on whistleblowers.



WILLIAM KELLER: They have indicted more people for violating secrecy than all of the previous administrations put together.



UNIDENTIFIED: The number of people who indicated to us they wish they could talk, but they can’t, because they’re so afraid of what could happen to them, it’s a terrible thing for our democracy.



THOMAS DRAKE: So speaking truth to power is now a criminal act.



AMY GOODMAN: Some of those voices, Thomas Drake and William Keller of The New York Times, as well as Jane Mayer of The New Yorker. This is Democracy Now! The trailer of the new documentary, War on Whistleblowers is what you just watched. We’re joined now by its director, Robert Greenwald, and founder and president of Brave New Films, producer, director and activist.


Why did you make this film? You’ve looked at so many other issues. Why whistleblowers, Robert?


ROBERT GREENWALD: Well, there were a few things that came together. What we always try to do in our films is connect the dots and explore how the system is working. So we had the crackdown on whistleblowers, number one, but it wasn’t without reason. It’s very deeply connected to the growth and power of the national security state, which believes completely in secrets. So we had the whistleblowers. We had the national security state. And then we had some incredible investigative journalists being attacked, investigated, threatened, their careers at stake also. So we put all three of those together and made a film which allows people to understand what’s going on and how deeply threatening it is to us, in a kind of drip-drip way, where you don’t always see or understand what’s happening.


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, Bob, I want to turn to the case of Franz Gayl, a former marine. While working at the Pentagon as a science adviser for the Marine Corps, Gayl volunteered to deploy to Iraq. Upon his return, he alerted the office of the secretary of defense, and later the Congress and the media, to critical equipment shortages. These included mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles, or MRAPs. Gayl’s public outcry exposed the fact that the corps had failed to provide marines in Iraq with life-saving technologies. Yet Gayl has been the target of years of retaliatory investigations, workplace harassment, including the elimination of meaningful duties and extended suspension of his security clearances. In this clip, Gayl explains why he made the fateful decision to save lives by requesting MRAPs to replace Humvees in Iraq. Journalist Seymour Hersh is also in this clip.


FRANZ GAYL: I had to do something. If not me, then who? And if not now, then when? It was one of those situations. And I just said, “No, no, no, no. It doesn’t matter what the consequences are, personal or otherwise, right?” I said, “This needs to be fixed.”



SEYMOUR HERSH: Whistleblowers are just people who say there’s something more important here than my boss or the general or the admiral or the president.



FRANZ GAYL: The most common vehicle used was the Humvee. They were never built to withstand weapons that the insurgents were using, these IEDs.



UNIDENTIFIED: The estimates are that about a third of the casualties in Iraq were due to Humvees.



FRANZ GAYL: Hundreds of Marines were tragically lost, probably thousands maimed, unnecessarily. So I said, “Let’s replace the Humvees with what are called MRAPs, mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles.” The MRAP was bound to save lives.



JUAN GONZÁLEZ: That was Franz Gayl in the clip from War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State. Robert Greenwald, he was one of the few whistleblowers who actually was able to keep his job, where some of the others have had really terrible times after they did their exposés. Could you talk about that, as well?


ROBERT GREENWALD: Yeah. One of the things that was a common denominator with all the whistleblowers we interviewed is the terrible personal price they paid—even Franz. He was saving lives, literally saving hundreds of lives. He was fired initially. But this is where organizing makes such an incredible impact. Organizations, POGO/GAP got behind him. They worked. People called. They took action. And it really worked. It got him his job back. And it’s important to keep that in mind.


The other cases were horrific. And what is happening over and over again is the Obama administration and previous administrations are literally shooting the messengers—punishing the whistleblowers, trying to pass laws that make it harder for whistleblowers. And look, the only way we find out about the national security state is by these people coming forward.


AMY GOODMAN: Robert Greenwald, part two of this conversation, as we go through the whistleblowers, we’ll post online at democracynow.org. The new film is called War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State.


As we wrap up, Juan, you’re headed out after tomorrow’s show to Chicago and Detroit to speak about Harvest of Empire?


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Yes, the film is premiering there at the Gene Siskel Film Center on Friday night, and I’ll be there after the 8:15 showing for a Q&A with the audience, and then at Wayne State University at noon on Saturday.


AMY GOODMAN: And we’ll put all the details at our website at democracynow.org.




Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin WordPress | Android Forums | WordPress Tutorials

Democracy Now!

Filmmaker Robert Greenwald on "War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State"

Filmmaker Robert Greenwald on "War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State"



Transcript



This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.



AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González.


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We turn now to whistleblowers and the unprecedented attack they’ve come under during the Obama administration. Evoking the Espionage Act of 1917, the administration has pressed criminal charges against no fewer than six government employees, more than all previous presidential administrations combined.


AMY GOODMAN: A new film directed by Robert Greenwald looks at four whistleblowers who had their lives practically destroyed after they went to the press with evidence of government wrongdoing. They are Michael DeKort, Thomas Drake, Franz Gayl and Thomas Tamm. In the film, Greenwald also interviews government oversight experts and investigative journalists who warn about the chilling effect prosecutions may have on potential whistleblowers and the journalists who help them. This is the trailer of the film, War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State.


FRANZ GAYL: I had to do something. If not me, then who? I said, “This needs to be fixed.”



THOMAS DRAKE: I thought about various investigative reporters that I would try and contact.



THOMAS TAMM: Once I put the phone down, I was pretty confident that my life would never be quite the same.



MICHAEL DEKORT: I mean, at the end of the day, right, when you make a decision like this, if you’re not prepared to have the worst happen, then really don’t do it at all.



JANE MAYER: These people face a terrifying situation.



REPORTER: Thomas Drake, accused of leaking classified information. Agents raiding his home in Howard County.



THOMAS DRAKE: Eighteen agents, some of them in body armor, had been banging on our front door.



UNIDENTIFIED: Any time anyone takes a step like that, you know that they’ve probably got something important to say, because they are basically wiping away their career.



DANA PRIEST: There are close to a million people who have top-secret clearance.



MICHAEL DEKORT: The Obama administration had cracked down on whistleblowers.



WILLIAM KELLER: They have indicted more people for violating secrecy than all of the previous administrations put together.



UNIDENTIFIED: The number of people who indicated to us they wish they could talk, but they can’t, because they’re so afraid of what could happen to them, it’s a terrible thing for our democracy.



THOMAS DRAKE: So speaking truth to power is now a criminal act.



AMY GOODMAN: Some of those voices, Thomas Drake and William Keller of The New York Times, as well as Jane Mayer of The New Yorker. This is Democracy Now! The trailer of the new documentary, War on Whistleblowers is what you just watched. We’re joined now by its director, Robert Greenwald, and founder and president of Brave New Films, producer, director and activist.


Why did you make this film? You’ve looked at so many other issues. Why whistleblowers, Robert?


ROBERT GREENWALD: Well, there were a few things that came together. What we always try to do in our films is connect the dots and explore how the system is working. So we had the crackdown on whistleblowers, number one, but it wasn’t without reason. It’s very deeply connected to the growth and power of the national security state, which believes completely in secrets. So we had the whistleblowers. We had the national security state. And then we had some incredible investigative journalists being attacked, investigated, threatened, their careers at stake also. So we put all three of those together and made a film which allows people to understand what’s going on and how deeply threatening it is to us, in a kind of drip-drip way, where you don’t always see or understand what’s happening.


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, Bob, I want to turn to the case of Franz Gayl, a former marine. While working at the Pentagon as a science adviser for the Marine Corps, Gayl volunteered to deploy to Iraq. Upon his return, he alerted the office of the secretary of defense, and later the Congress and the media, to critical equipment shortages. These included mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles, or MRAPs. Gayl’s public outcry exposed the fact that the corps had failed to provide marines in Iraq with life-saving technologies. Yet Gayl has been the target of years of retaliatory investigations, workplace harassment, including the elimination of meaningful duties and extended suspension of his security clearances. In this clip, Gayl explains why he made the fateful decision to save lives by requesting MRAPs to replace Humvees in Iraq. Journalist Seymour Hersh is also in this clip.


FRANZ GAYL: I had to do something. If not me, then who? And if not now, then when? It was one of those situations. And I just said, “No, no, no, no. It doesn’t matter what the consequences are, personal or otherwise, right?” I said, “This needs to be fixed.”



SEYMOUR HERSH: Whistleblowers are just people who say there’s something more important here than my boss or the general or the admiral or the president.



FRANZ GAYL: The most common vehicle used was the Humvee. They were never built to withstand weapons that the insurgents were using, these IEDs.



UNIDENTIFIED: The estimates are that about a third of the casualties in Iraq were due to Humvees.



FRANZ GAYL: Hundreds of Marines were tragically lost, probably thousands maimed, unnecessarily. So I said, “Let’s replace the Humvees with what are called MRAPs, mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles.” The MRAP was bound to save lives.



JUAN GONZÁLEZ: That was Franz Gayl in the clip from War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State. Robert Greenwald, he was one of the few whistleblowers who actually was able to keep his job, where some of the others have had really terrible times after they did their exposés. Could you talk about that, as well?


ROBERT GREENWALD: Yeah. One of the things that was a common denominator with all the whistleblowers we interviewed is the terrible personal price they paid—even Franz. He was saving lives, literally saving hundreds of lives. He was fired initially. But this is where organizing makes such an incredible impact. Organizations, POGO/GAP got behind him. They worked. People called. They took action. And it really worked. It got him his job back. And it’s important to keep that in mind.


The other cases were horrific. And what is happening over and over again is the Obama administration and previous administrations are literally shooting the messengers—punishing the whistleblowers, trying to pass laws that make it harder for whistleblowers. And look, the only way we find out about the national security state is by these people coming forward.


AMY GOODMAN: Robert Greenwald, part two of this conversation, as we go through the whistleblowers, we’ll post online at democracynow.org. The new film is called War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State.


As we wrap up, Juan, you’re headed out after tomorrow’s show to Chicago and Detroit to speak about Harvest of Empire?


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Yes, the film is premiering there at the Gene Siskel Film Center on Friday night, and I’ll be there after the 8:15 showing for a Q&A with the audience, and then at Wayne State University at noon on Saturday.


AMY GOODMAN: And we’ll put all the details at our website at democracynow.org.




Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin WordPress | Android Forums | WordPress Tutorials

Democracy Now!

Filmmaker Robert Greenwald on "War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State"

Filmmaker Robert Greenwald on "War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State"



Transcript



This is a rush transcript. Copy may not be in its final form.



AMY GOODMAN: This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. I’m Amy Goodman, with Juan González.


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: We turn now to whistleblowers and the unprecedented attack they’ve come under during the Obama administration. Evoking the Espionage Act of 1917, the administration has pressed criminal charges against no fewer than six government employees, more than all previous presidential administrations combined.


AMY GOODMAN: A new film directed by Robert Greenwald looks at four whistleblowers who had their lives practically destroyed after they went to the press with evidence of government wrongdoing. They are Michael DeKort, Thomas Drake, Franz Gayl and Thomas Tamm. In the film, Greenwald also interviews government oversight experts and investigative journalists who warn about the chilling effect prosecutions may have on potential whistleblowers and the journalists who help them. This is the trailer of the film, War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State.


FRANZ GAYL: I had to do something. If not me, then who? I said, “This needs to be fixed.”



THOMAS DRAKE: I thought about various investigative reporters that I would try and contact.



THOMAS TAMM: Once I put the phone down, I was pretty confident that my life would never be quite the same.



MICHAEL DEKORT: I mean, at the end of the day, right, when you make a decision like this, if you’re not prepared to have the worst happen, then really don’t do it at all.



JANE MAYER: These people face a terrifying situation.



REPORTER: Thomas Drake, accused of leaking classified information. Agents raiding his home in Howard County.



THOMAS DRAKE: Eighteen agents, some of them in body armor, had been banging on our front door.



UNIDENTIFIED: Any time anyone takes a step like that, you know that they’ve probably got something important to say, because they are basically wiping away their career.



DANA PRIEST: There are close to a million people who have top-secret clearance.



MICHAEL DEKORT: The Obama administration had cracked down on whistleblowers.



WILLIAM KELLER: They have indicted more people for violating secrecy than all of the previous administrations put together.



UNIDENTIFIED: The number of people who indicated to us they wish they could talk, but they can’t, because they’re so afraid of what could happen to them, it’s a terrible thing for our democracy.



THOMAS DRAKE: So speaking truth to power is now a criminal act.



AMY GOODMAN: Some of those voices, Thomas Drake and William Keller of The New York Times, as well as Jane Mayer of The New Yorker. This is Democracy Now! The trailer of the new documentary, War on Whistleblowers is what you just watched. We’re joined now by its director, Robert Greenwald, and founder and president of Brave New Films, producer, director and activist.


Why did you make this film? You’ve looked at so many other issues. Why whistleblowers, Robert?


ROBERT GREENWALD: Well, there were a few things that came together. What we always try to do in our films is connect the dots and explore how the system is working. So we had the crackdown on whistleblowers, number one, but it wasn’t without reason. It’s very deeply connected to the growth and power of the national security state, which believes completely in secrets. So we had the whistleblowers. We had the national security state. And then we had some incredible investigative journalists being attacked, investigated, threatened, their careers at stake also. So we put all three of those together and made a film which allows people to understand what’s going on and how deeply threatening it is to us, in a kind of drip-drip way, where you don’t always see or understand what’s happening.


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, Bob, I want to turn to the case of Franz Gayl, a former marine. While working at the Pentagon as a science adviser for the Marine Corps, Gayl volunteered to deploy to Iraq. Upon his return, he alerted the office of the secretary of defense, and later the Congress and the media, to critical equipment shortages. These included mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles, or MRAPs. Gayl’s public outcry exposed the fact that the corps had failed to provide marines in Iraq with life-saving technologies. Yet Gayl has been the target of years of retaliatory investigations, workplace harassment, including the elimination of meaningful duties and extended suspension of his security clearances. In this clip, Gayl explains why he made the fateful decision to save lives by requesting MRAPs to replace Humvees in Iraq. Journalist Seymour Hersh is also in this clip.


FRANZ GAYL: I had to do something. If not me, then who? And if not now, then when? It was one of those situations. And I just said, “No, no, no, no. It doesn’t matter what the consequences are, personal or otherwise, right?” I said, “This needs to be fixed.”



SEYMOUR HERSH: Whistleblowers are just people who say there’s something more important here than my boss or the general or the admiral or the president.



FRANZ GAYL: The most common vehicle used was the Humvee. They were never built to withstand weapons that the insurgents were using, these IEDs.



UNIDENTIFIED: The estimates are that about a third of the casualties in Iraq were due to Humvees.



FRANZ GAYL: Hundreds of Marines were tragically lost, probably thousands maimed, unnecessarily. So I said, “Let’s replace the Humvees with what are called MRAPs, mine-resistant, ambush-protected vehicles.” The MRAP was bound to save lives.



JUAN GONZÁLEZ: That was Franz Gayl in the clip from War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State. Robert Greenwald, he was one of the few whistleblowers who actually was able to keep his job, where some of the others have had really terrible times after they did their exposés. Could you talk about that, as well?


ROBERT GREENWALD: Yeah. One of the things that was a common denominator with all the whistleblowers we interviewed is the terrible personal price they paid—even Franz. He was saving lives, literally saving hundreds of lives. He was fired initially. But this is where organizing makes such an incredible impact. Organizations, POGO/GAP got behind him. They worked. People called. They took action. And it really worked. It got him his job back. And it’s important to keep that in mind.


The other cases were horrific. And what is happening over and over again is the Obama administration and previous administrations are literally shooting the messengers—punishing the whistleblowers, trying to pass laws that make it harder for whistleblowers. And look, the only way we find out about the national security state is by these people coming forward.


AMY GOODMAN: Robert Greenwald, part two of this conversation, as we go through the whistleblowers, we’ll post online at democracynow.org. The new film is called War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State.


As we wrap up, Juan, you’re headed out after tomorrow’s show to Chicago and Detroit to speak about Harvest of Empire?


JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Yes, the film is premiering there at the Gene Siskel Film Center on Friday night, and I’ll be there after the 8:15 showing for a Q&A with the audience, and then at Wayne State University at noon on Saturday.


AMY GOODMAN: And we’ll put all the details at our website at democracynow.org.




Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed | Amazon Plugin WordPress | Android Forums | WordPress Tutorials

Democracy Now!

Filmmaker Robert Greenwald on "War on Whistleblowers: Free Press and the National Security State"

Wednesday, April 17, 2013

OWS" first "National Gathering"



OWS

In America, Wednesday marks the country’s Independence Day, and while most Americans will hit the road to go on vacation the Occupy Wall Street movement will…



OWS" first "National Gathering"

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

OWS" first "National Gathering"



OWS

In America, Wednesday marks the country’s Independence Day, and while most Americans will hit the road to go on vacation the Occupy Wall Street movement will…



OWS" first "National Gathering"

**REAL TIME UPDATES: FBI Says “Currently No Clear Suspects” ; Reportedly Four Improvised Devices; National Guard Now on the Streets of Boston; Officials May Have Had Prior Knowledge; (Videos/Pics)

Updated 04-16-13 13:54 CST


‘The explosives used in the deadly Boston Marathon bombing were contained in 6-liter pressure cookers and hidden in black duffel bags on the ground, a person briefed on the investigation told The Associated Press on Tuesday.


One of the explosives contained shards of metal and ball bearings, and another contained nails, the person said.’ (source)


Updated 04-16-13 9:10CST:


FBI says “currently no clear suspects” in bombing (link)


Bill Hemmer of Fox News reported this morning: Revere, Mass. apartment search yielded no evidence of involvement in bomb plot; Saudi national cleared of wrong doing (no web-based source link available)


Anti-terrorism forces deployed worldwide in the aftermath of the bombing (link)


Still unclear: How many devices were there? Two detonated… two additional unexploded bombs found? (link)


Updated 04-15-13 22:30CST:


National Guard Deployed on Streets of Boston…


…460 Guard members providing security (link)


 Staging area:


National Guard Staging Area


Staging area video:



Military personnel and law enforcement tactical teams prepare to shut down 12 block area surrounding bombing (source):


National Guard Deployed in Boston
(click to view larger image)

…Police, DHS, FBI, ATF Reportedly serving search warrants in Revere, Mass… (link)


…Report that police have detonated a third device in Boston… video:



RAW FOOTAGE *Warning Graphic Content*:



The National Guard is now on the streets of Boston… Staging area video…


Homeland Security Cmte. Member claims it was a coordinated attack.


CNN Analyst Speculates ‘Right-Wing Extremists’ Could Be Behind Marathon Bombing – see video.


A woman holding several bags was telling runners Saturday (April 13) that they were going to die – read more.


UM Coach gives eye-witness report of bomb-sniffing dogs, told “just a drill” :


University of Mobile’s Cross Country Coach, who was near the finish line of the Boston Marathon when a series of explosions went off, said he thought it was odd there were bomb sniffing dogs at the start and finish lines.“They kept making announcements on the loud speaker that it was just a drill and there was nothing to worry about,” Coach Ali Stevenson told Local 15. “It seemed like there was some sort of threat, but they kept telling us it was just a drill.”


Report: No suspect in custody… (link)



CNN’s Wolf Blitzer Suggests Tax Protesters / Patriots Day May be to blame. VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJXo2UnMt14 



Boston PD Immediately Shut Down Cell Phone Network city-wide (link)



OFFICIALS MAY HAVE HAD PRIOR KNOWLEDGE:


A startling report from Paul Joseph Watson has revealed that officials may have had prior knowledge of an impending terror attack.


An eyewitness to the two explosions at the Boston Marathon today said that a “drill” was repeatedly announced before the bombs exploded and that he “thought it was odd” bomb sniffing dogs were in place before the blast.



University of Mobile’s Cross Country Coach Ali Stevenson told Local 15 News, ““They kept making announcements on the loud speaker that it was just a drill and there was nothing to worry about. “It seemed like there was some sort of threat, but they kept telling us it was just a drill.”


The news station also reports that Stevenson “thought it was odd there were bomb sniffing dogs at the start and finish lines.”


Stevenson then describes hearing the explosions as he ran away from the scene, having just completed the marathon.


If this report is accurate, it clearly suggests there could have been some degree of prior knowledge of the bombing, which killed two people and injured at least 23.



ORIGINAL REPORT:


Multiple explosions have rocked the Boston Marathon, causing at least two deaths and tearing apart numerous limbs.


A third explosion is now being reported at JFK Library with officials searching the city for any other previously placed bombs.


A report from CBS News documented those that have been confirmed dead:


Two bombs exploded near the finish of the Boston Marathon on Monday, killing two people, injuring 22 others and sending authorities rushing to aid wounded spectators at America’s oldest and most prestigous marathon, race organizers and police said.


One runner, a Rhode Island state police officer, said he saw at least two dozen people with very serious injuries, including missing limbs.


About two hours after the winners crossed the finish line, there was a loud explosion on the north side of Boylston Street, just before the photo bridge that marks the line. Another explosion could be heard a few seconds later.



During a news conference featuring Boston officials, it was confirmed that a third explosion had hit but that information was still trickling in that could confirm that.


The first two explosions occurred during the last mile of the race which had been dedicated to the Newtown victims families.


The last mile of the marathon was dedicated to the victims of the Newtown shooting. Family members were at the race near the finish line but no injuries to those families have been reported.



Fox News has also confirmed that there are reports that a suspect whom suffered shrapnel wounds is being guarded at a local Boston hospital.


Pictures at the scene: Warning Graphic Content


Images via The Atlantic

















Stay tuned as more details will be added as they come in.



Delivered by The Daily Sheeple



Contributed by The Daily Sheeple of www.TheDailySheeple.com.


This content may be freely reproduced in full or in part in digital form with full attribution to the author and a link to www.TheDailySheeple.com.


The Daily Sheeple



**REAL TIME UPDATES: FBI Says “Currently No Clear Suspects” ; Reportedly Four Improvised Devices; National Guard Now on the Streets of Boston; Officials May Have Had Prior Knowledge; (Videos/Pics)

**REAL TIME UPDATES: National Guard Now on the Streets of Boston; Officials May Have Had Prior Knowledge; CNN Suggests Patriots to Blame (Videos/Pics)

National Guard Deployed on Streets of Boston…


…460 Guard members providing security (link)


 Staging area:


National Guard Staging Area


Staging area video:



Military personnel and law enforcement tactical teams prepare to shut down 12 block area surrounding bombing:


National Guard Deployed in Boston
(click to view larger image)

…Police, DHS, FBI, ATF Reportedly serving search warrants in Revere, Mass… (link)


…Report that police have detonated a third device in Boston… video:



RAW FOOTAGE *Warning Graphic Content*:



The National Guard is now on the streets of Boston… Staging area video…


Homeland Security Cmte. Member claims it was a coordinated attack.


CNN Analyst Speculates ‘Right-Wing Extremists’ Could Be Behind Marathon Bombing – see video.


A woman holding several bags was telling runners Saturday (April 13) that they were going to die – read more.


UM Coach gives eye-witness report of bomb-sniffing dogs, told “just a drill” :


University of Mobile’s Cross Country Coach, who was near the finish line of the Boston Marathon when a series of explosions went off, said he thought it was odd there were bomb sniffing dogs at the start and finish lines.“They kept making announcements on the loud speaker that it was just a drill and there was nothing to worry about,” Coach Ali Stevenson told Local 15. “It seemed like there was some sort of threat, but they kept telling us it was just a drill.”


Report: No suspect in custody… (link)



CNN’s Wolf Blitzer Suggests Tax Protesters / Patriots Day May be to blame. VIDEO: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yJXo2UnMt14 



Boston PD Immediately Shut Down Cell Phone Network city-wide (link)



OFFICIALS MAY HAVE HAD PRIOR KNOWLEDGE:


A startling report from Paul Joseph Watson has revealed that officials may have had prior knowledge of an impending terror attack.


An eyewitness to the two explosions at the Boston Marathon today said that a “drill” was repeatedly announced before the bombs exploded and that he “thought it was odd” bomb sniffing dogs were in place before the blast.



University of Mobile’s Cross Country Coach Ali Stevenson told Local 15 News, ““They kept making announcements on the loud speaker that it was just a drill and there was nothing to worry about. “It seemed like there was some sort of threat, but they kept telling us it was just a drill.”


The news station also reports that Stevenson “thought it was odd there were bomb sniffing dogs at the start and finish lines.”


Stevenson then describes hearing the explosions as he ran away from the scene, having just completed the marathon.


If this report is accurate, it clearly suggests there could have been some degree of prior knowledge of the bombing, which killed two people and injured at least 23.



ORIGINAL REPORT:


Multiple explosions have rocked the Boston Marathon, causing at least two deaths and tearing apart numerous limbs.


A third explosion is now being reported at JFK Library with officials searching the city for any other previously placed bombs.


A report from CBS News documented those that have been confirmed dead:


Two bombs exploded near the finish of the Boston Marathon on Monday, killing two people, injuring 22 others and sending authorities rushing to aid wounded spectators at America’s oldest and most prestigous marathon, race organizers and police said.


One runner, a Rhode Island state police officer, said he saw at least two dozen people with very serious injuries, including missing limbs.


About two hours after the winners crossed the finish line, there was a loud explosion on the north side of Boylston Street, just before the photo bridge that marks the line. Another explosion could be heard a few seconds later.



During a news conference featuring Boston officials, it was confirmed that a third explosion had hit but that information was still trickling in that could confirm that.


The first two explosions occurred during the last mile of the race which had been dedicated to the Newtown victims families.


The last mile of the marathon was dedicated to the victims of the Newtown shooting. Family members were at the race near the finish line but no injuries to those families have been reported.



Fox News has also confirmed that there are reports that a suspect whom suffered shrapnel wounds is being guarded at a local Boston hospital.


Pictures at the scene: Warning Graphic Content


Images via The Atlantic

















Stay tuned as more details will be added as they come in.



Delivered by The Daily Sheeple



Contributed by The Daily Sheeple of www.TheDailySheeple.com.


This content may be freely reproduced in full or in part in digital form with full attribution to the author and a link to www.TheDailySheeple.com.


The Daily Sheeple



**REAL TIME UPDATES: National Guard Now on the Streets of Boston; Officials May Have Had Prior Knowledge; CNN Suggests Patriots to Blame (Videos/Pics)

Monday, April 15, 2013

WATCH LIVE COVERAGE: Boston Marathon Bombing -- 2 Confirmed Dead, 23 Injured; NY Post claims "Saudi National" ID"d







Update: 2:23 PM PST: The Boston Globe is reporting over 100 injured.


Update 2:03 PM PST: The New York Post claims "Saudi National" has been ID"d, is under custody.


Update 1:56 PM PST: CBS News reports that law enforcement official divulged that there is a  surveillance photo of potential suspect.


Update 1:33 PM: From the New York Post — “A federal law-enforcement source confirmed to The Post there are at least 12 dead and nearly 50 injured. Fox News reported that Massachusetts General Hospital was treating 10 people with amputated limbs and all operating rooms were on hold.


Authorities have a identified a suspect, who is currently being guarded in a Boston hospital with shrapnel wounds.”


Update 1:12 PM: According to the Boston Police Department, there are 23 injured and 2 dead.


BOSTON, Massachusetts — At least six people were wounded when two large explosions struck near the finish line of the Boston Marathon on Monday, sparking scenes of panic, witnesses and US media said.


Witnesses said the streets were littered with debris and blood and described paramedics racing off with stretchers. TV footage showed an explosion sending up a white plume of smoke along the sidelines of the race.


CNN reported that at least six people were wounded. Local radio said the first explosion took place near a sports store and the second went off near a viewing stand. Local officials could not immediately be reached.


There were no immediate reports of any deaths, and it was not immediately clear whether the explosions were accidental.


Zara Bielkus, a 30-year-old spectator from Boston, said she heard two explosions seconds apart. Police then locked down the area.


“When we heard them, everyone looked at each other and went very quiet, and within a minute police came,” she said.


The Boston Marathon is one of the biggest annual athletic events held in the United States, with nearly 27,000 racers who must qualify to compete and tens of thousands of spectators.


AlterNet Editor"s note: watch live coverage below, via NBC.com. 


 


Mon, 04/15/2013 – 12:51


 
AlterNet.org Main RSS Feed



WATCH LIVE COVERAGE: Boston Marathon Bombing -- 2 Confirmed Dead, 23 Injured; NY Post claims "Saudi National" ID"d

Sunday, April 14, 2013

OWS" first "National Gathering"



In America, Wednesday marks the country’s Independence Day, and while most Americans will hit the road to go on vacation the Occupy Wall Street movement will…
Video Rating: 4 / 5



OWS" first "National Gathering"