Obama Didn't Get His Way... Senate Voted Down Cybersecurity Act, Obama's Likely Reaction?... Another Executive Order!
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While a compromised version of the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 was
introduced to the Senate in July, the false claim of “...foreign
governments, criminal syndicates and lone individuals are probing our
financial, energy and public safety systems every day. It would be the
height of irresponsibility to leave a digital backdoor wide open to our
cyber adversaries” was perpetuated by Obama. ~
Susanne Posel - Videos - Related article
Shawn Henry, a veteran of the cyber security division in the FBI, stated
in a CBS interview that although he has no proof, Russia and China are
behind infiltration and damage to computers in America, while also
claiming that he feels it is “very, very likely” that a massive
cyber-attack is due to occur.
According to Jay Carney, White House Press Secretary, Obama may just write an executive order to ensure his cybersecurity agenda is implemented.
“In the wake of Congressional inaction and Republican
stall tactics, unfortunately, we will continue to be hamstrung by
outdated and inadequate statutory authorities that the legislation would
have fixed.
Moving forward, the President is determined to do absolutely everything we can to better protect our nation against today’s cyber threats and we will do that.”
Carney emphasized that Obama is focused on “protecting vital computer systems”. Since Obama’s coercion did not work on Congress, he could bypass Congress (as he has done several times before in this administration).
Claiming “we can’t wait”, Obama could enact any or all
of the provisions in the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 by EO. This would
enable federal agencies to regulate any authorities needed to take-over
the free flow of information on the Internet in the name of protecting
the private corporate sector.
An EO would be an illegal power grab in the vein of any would-be dictator.
The National Security Agency (NSA) has begun scouting colleges and universities for the next generation of American-grown hackers.
The NSA wants an elite team of “computer geniuses” that are trained in
hacking before they obtain their college degree.
The students selected
to train under this program will not be privy to the impact their work
will have on cyber intelligence, military capabilities and law
enforcement’s expansion of spying on Americans.
Neal Zing, technical director for the Information Assurance Directorate within the NSA, said:
We’re trying to create more of these, and yes they have to know some of the things that hackers know, they have to know a lot of other things too, which is why you really want a good university to create these people for you.
Back in 2011, Senator Joseph Lieberman wrote to Internet giant and NSA cooperative Google to gain their aid in censoring what he called jihadist content from blogger Jose Pimentel. Lieberman wrote:
Pimentel allegedly used the Internet to access instructions to make bombs and share his support for violent Islamic extremism. [Pimental's] site is just one of the many examples of homegrown terrorists Google-hosted sites to propagate their violent ideology.
Censorship and control of the Internet has been a favorite of the Obama administration. They have claimed that the infrastructure of the nation is susceptible to hacker infiltration.
In the agenda to lockdown the
Internet, the hackers have been quite useful. They have created the
perfect nameless, faceless bogeyman. Lieberman has also been behind the Protecting Cyberspace as a National Asset Act, from 2010.
In its current incarnation, the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 has been blocked by a Senate vote of 52 to 46 which stopped the legislation dead in its tracks.
Senator John McCain, co-author of the NDAA, asserts that this bill
greatly restricts and burdens corporations. Included in the bill were
optional standards for computer systems that oversee American
infrastructure such as power grids, dams and transportation.
In March of this year, members of the Senate met behind closed doors to
attend a briefing by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), where a staged cyber-attack was
performed with the intent “to provide all senators with an appreciation
for new legislative authorities that would help the US government
prevent and more quickly respond to cyber-attacks.”
The focus of the attacks were US banks, power grids and telecommunications systems.
However these systems are not connected to
the Internet and therefore that argument is moot. In fact, the power
grid and public water systems “are rarely connected directly to the
public internet. That makes gaining access to grid-controlling
networks a challenge for all but the most dedicated, motivated and
skilled — nation-states, in other words.”
The most curious recent hacker threat comes from CIA-controlled groups like Anonymous who mysteriously infiltrated the
main database of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the collection
agency for the privately-owned Federal Reserve Bank.
They retrieved Mitt
Romney’s tax returns, dating back 25 years to expose his lack of
payment to the IRS, which covertly is a pro-Obama move to make Romney
look bad in the public perspective.
Back in April, Anonymous was used to scare the Congress into supporting the Cybersecurity Act of 2012 when at the annual RSA conference,
CEOs from major corporations came together to voice their concerns over
hackers and admonish the US government for better security when it
comes to “cyber-attacks by spies, criminals and activists.”
Anonymous and LulzSec (a pseudonym of the hacker group) were named at the conference.
The purpose of any and all cybersecurity legislation is to not only
combine the US government’s ability through various agencies to collect
data on unsuspecting Americans and decide who or what a threat is and
have the legal-backing to “act accordingly”.
The broad definitions of terrorism under the Cybersecurity Act of 2012, and the fact that the NSA recruits hackers points to the entire issue being a false flag with one mission: restrict the free-flow of information on the Internet.
Susanne Posel - August 6, 2012 - ActivistPost
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- SadInAmerica's blog
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