Marcus Aurelius: Majority Staff Report on the National Network of Fusion Centers

Corruption, Government, Idiocy, Ineptitude
Marcus Aurelius
Marcus Aurelius

Seriously suspect.

2013-07-30 House Majority Staff Report on Fusion Centers

Click on Image to Enlarge
Click on Image to Enlarge

Phi Beta Iota:  This staff report avoids all the negatives and fluffs up many dubious positives.  The Joint Fusion Centers are a failure — and were called a failure before they were ever built.  There is no connection between what can be produced at the national level using a legacy system built for other purposes, and the needs of state and local authorities.  Similarly there is no connection between what state and local authorities can produce, and national needs.  An Open Source Agency and the redirection of this program to create a Smart Nation with Community Intelligence Networks in each state would go a long way toward helping achieve the worthwhile objectives.  What is being now is not working, will never work, and is not worth funding.

See Also:

Open Source Agency Executive Access Point

 

Marcus Aurelius: CIA Talent Gap Blamed on Management

Corruption, Government, Idiocy, Ineptitude
Marcus Aurelius
Marcus Aurelius

Bad management drives talent from CIA, internal reports suggest

Frustration with poor managers is costing the CIA some of its most talented staff, internal surveys and former officers say.

Los Angeles Times, July 29, 2013

WASHINGTON — For the Central Intelligence Agency, he was a catch: an American citizen who had grown up overseas, was fluent in Mandarin and had a master's degree in his field. He was working in Silicon Valley, but after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, he wanted to serve his country.

The analyst, who declined to be named to shield his association with the CIA, was hired in 2005 into the agency's Directorate of Intelligence, where he was assigned to dig into Chinese politics. He said he was dismayed to discover that unimpressive managers wielded incredible power and suffered no consequences for mistakes. Departments were run like fiefdoms, he said, and “very nasty internecine battles” were a fixture.

By 2009, he had left the CIA. He now does a similar job for the U.S. military.

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SchwartzReport: How Big Finance Has Killed US Economy Including Innovation

03 Economy, Commerce, Commercial Intelligence, Corruption, Ineptitude

This is a really good take on what is happening financially, and why it has a deadening effect on technological development. When immediate profit is your only priority, there are no correcting forces, and you slowly go off course in terms of wellness. Until you crash. We ask the wrong questions so we get the wrong answers. Author’s note: This post is based on papers presented and remarks made during a *conference panel I moderated featuring William Lazonick of U Mass-Lowell, Jan Kregel of the Levy Institute and Damon Silvers of the AFL-CIO.

Big Finance Is Strangling Innovation
LYNN STUART PARRAMORE, Senior Editor – Salon/AlterNet (U.S.)

 

Ray McGovern: General Hayden’s Glass House

07 Other Atrocities, Corruption, Government, Idiocy, Ineptitude, Military
Ray McGovern
Ray McGovern

Gen. Hayden’s Glass House

By Ray McGovern

July 21, 2013

Editor Note: Official Washington’s national security/mainstream media incest was on scandalous display when ex-NSA chief Michael Hayden posed as a CNN analyst to denounce Edward Snowden for exposing surveillance excesses that Hayden had a hand in creating.

Mike Hayden
Mike Hayden

Former National Security Agency Director Michael Hayden should not throw any more stones, lest his own glass house be shattered. His barrage Friday against truth-teller Edward Snowden and London Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald invited a return rain of boulders for Hayden committing the same violations of constitutional protections that he is now excusing.

Writing as “CNN Terrorism Analyst,” Hayden read from the unctuous script previously used by “Meet the Press” host David Gregory on June 23 when he questioned Greenwald’s status as a journalist. Hayden claimed Greenwald deserves “the Justice Department’s characterization of a co-conspirator.”

But the principal target of Hayden’s ire was Snowden. After lumping him together with despicable characters like CIA’s Aldrich Ames, Robert Hanssen of the FBI, and others who spied for the U.S.S.R. – and then disparaging “leakers” like Bradley Manning – Hayden wrote, “Snowden is in a class by himself.”

But it is Michael Hayden who is in a class by himself. He was the first NSA director to betray the country’s trust by ordering wholesale violation of what was once the First Commandment at NSA: “Thou Shalt Not Eavesdrop on Americans Without a Court Warrant.” Not to mention playing fast and loose with the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978 and the Fourth Amendment to the Constitution.

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Marcus Aurelius: Nation Needs Leadership, Not Gimmicks

Corruption, Government, Idiocy, Ineptitude, Military

 

Marcus Aurelius
Marcus Aurelius

From a relatively local yokel paper, among the best issue summaries I've seen.  From my foxhole in the Pentagon, things are bad now and appear to be getting worse fast.

Fayetteville (NC) Observer
July 19, 2013

Nation Needs Leadership, Not Gimmicks

At Fort Bragg, a name almost synonymous with “readiness,” Congress is idly flirting with unreadiness.

Says who? Said Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel in a Monday visit appropriately set at the Green Ramp: “We have planes not flying, ships not sailing and soldiers not training. We are doing damage to our readiness, to our future readiness.”

Thus far, casual onlookers have found it easy to dismiss the blind, automatic budget cuts called the sequester as political theater. No Independence Day fireworks display this year; maybe something goes unpainted a while longer. Big deal.

That's ending.

For 8,500 civilian workers caught in a furlough (worldwide, the number is well over half a million) it has already ended. They'll lose about 20 percent of their pay for five months – a loss that will be hardest on them, but one that will also affect counties surrounding the fort.

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SchwartzReport: Parents Struggle to Afford Food in USA

01 Poverty, 07 Other Atrocities, Civil Society, Commerce, Corruption, Government, Ineptitude

schwartz reportI find the food trend in the U.S. utterly shameful. It says something really sad about us as a culture.  Click through to see the charts which are very helpful.

In U.S., Single-Parent Households Struggle More to Buy Food
JESSICA STUTZMAN and ELIZABETH MENDES – The Gallup Organization

WASHINGTON, D.C. — In the U.S., 31% of single-parent households report times in the past 12 months when they struggled to afford food, much more than the 19% of two-parent households who say the same, according to an analysis of adults aged 18 to 50. Single-parent households also report greater difficulty affording food than do unmarried and single adults who do not have children. But, in households with two adults, the percentage who struggled at times to afford food is the same — 19% — regardless of the presence of children in the home.

Chuck Spinney: Boeing Implosion a Case Study in Integrity Lost — Specific Decisions Leading to Plastic Flammable Planes with Explosive Batteries

Commerce, Corruption, Government, Idiocy, Ineptitude
Two and one-half years ago, on 11 February 2011, Pierre Sprey and I posted a blog entry on the Blaster, Why is Boing Imploding?.  This post is still the fourth most popular since I began the website in 2008.  It describes how the corrosive practices of the Military – Industrial – Congressional Complex (MICC) spill over to weaken manufacturing competitiveness in the private sector.   Included in this blog entry was a link to a very revealing internal 2001 Boeing report documenting perils of outsourcing production as a means of increasing profitability to Boeing.  Increased outsourcing was and remains a central tenant of the plan for production of the Boeing 787 program.

The spillover of MICC’s dysfunctional manufacturing practices into  the private manufacturing sector has a lot to do with America's economic stagnation.  The uncompetitiveness of the defense sector and the dangers of spillover are themes I have addressed repeatedly — for example, here or here, esp. beginning with 2nd paragraph of pg. 58.

That the MICC's disfunctional practices would contribute to deindustrialization and the eventual loss of high paying manufacturing jobs was first foreseen and written about in late 1950s by Professor Seymour Melman of Columbia University.  In his prescient book, Profits Without Production (Knopf, 1983), Melman explained why the growing militarization of our economy was one of the central causes of the decline in America’s manufacturing competitiveness and the loss of high wage manufacturing jobs.  This decline started in  the 1970s, but Melman showed how it grew out of seeds planted by the permanent military mobilization of a huge defense industry in the 1950s.  The introduction “How The Yankees Lost Their Knowhow” is worth the price of book.

Fast forward to July 2013:  My good friend Andrew Cockburn has brilliantly updated the sorry story of Boeing's implosion in an important Harpers essay “How Boeing’s adoption of defense-related contracting practices led to the flawed Dreamliner 787”  (also attached below).

Read it carefully, because without saying so, Andrew's case study reminds us of the prescient but ignored warnings in Melman’s pathbreaking work in identifying some of the real causes of America’s industrial decline, the loss of high paying manufacturing jobs (plotted in Figures 1 and 2 here), and the rise of inequality — and now the opportunity costs incurred when a manufacturing company uses DoD outsourcing practices to maximize profits by reducing its own production, while passing the increased risks of air travel onto the customer.

Chuck Spinney

Marina di Camp, Elba

Heart of Empire

Boeing’s Plastic Planes

How Boeing’s adoption of defense-contracting practices led to the flawed Dreamliner 787

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