PDA

View Full Version : Big Sis' shockingly dirty secrets go public



Cebu_4_2
23rd July 2013, 02:51 PM
Big Sis' shockingly dirty secrets go public 'There's just something really weird that happened under Janet Napolitano' Published: 19 hours ago


Democrats and Republicans largely heaped praise upon Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano after she announced she would resign her post later in the year, but a longtime constitutional attorney says there is not much to applaud – especially for anyone concerned about preserving freedom and limiting government intrusion in their lives.


“What the Department of Homeland Security became under Janet Napolitano is this monstrous surveillance and very intimidating group,” said Rutherford Institute President John Whitehead, a constitutional attorney for the past 40 years and author of “A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State.”


“I think originally there were some good intentions with the Department of Homeland Security, but what happened under President Obama is that it accelerated rapidly,” Whitehead told WND. “I criticized George Bush’s policies. Under President Obama, we’re zooming.”


Whitehead said the Napolitano legacy of reducing freedom is evident across the board, starting in early 2009 when the department issued a report listing returning soldiers as one of the greatest threats to American security.


“Another program Napolitano set up is Operation Vigilant Eagle, which is a surveillance system done on all returning veterans from overseas, where they watch Facebook posts, text messages, emails of returning veterans to see if they’re going to be disgruntled,” Whitehead said. “There are quite a few disgruntled veterans. In fact, one that we helped just filed a major lawsuit against the Department of Homeland Security.”


“They arrived one day at his door, arrested him and actually put him in a mental institution for his Facebook posts criticizing the government. We got him out and then we sued the government,” Whitehead said.


Another outrage, according to Whitehead, is the harassment of Americans living on or somewhat near our national borders with Mexico and Canada. He said law-abiding citizens have been forced to hand over their laptops while the government officials download the information. The Rutherford Institute has also received reports of Americans being removed from their cars and searched without probable cause.


These allegations, and criticism of drone use near the borders, come as Congress hotly debate immigration reform legislation. Whitehead said the problems he’s talking about have nothing to do with border security.


“The people coming over from Mexico are not coming over at checkpoints. Incredibly stupid, and that’s where a lot of emphasis has been placed,” Whitehead said. “Obviously, they’re not focused in the right direction. They put drones on the border but the drones obviously have not been very effective. In fact, what we found our about those drones now, on the Canadian border, turned the drones in. They’re flying inland, photographing and watching what American citizens are doing and surveillance on American towns.”


Whitehead said that sort of activity will only get more common and more intrusive until the American people stand up and refuse to accept what he considers a major infringement on our constitutional liberties.


“Drones are coming in 2015. They’re going to be awesome. They’ll have scanning devices, rubber bullets, sound cannons. They can look through the walls of your home,” Whitehead said. “They’re just going to bypass the Fourth Amendment, and they already are doing that.”
A change at the top of DHS doesn’t give Whitehead any hope that the government will rein in its activities. He says potential replacements, like New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, will likely be no different from Napolitano.

gunDriller
23rd July 2013, 03:39 PM
" In fiscal year 2011, DHS was allocated a budget of $98.8 billion and spent, net, $66.4 billion."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Homeland_Security


that makes them one of the largest organizations in the world.

not many corporations have $66 billion in annual revenues. maybe Walmart & Exxon.

when a do-nothing parasitic organization like DHS is that big - it's like a cancer that has gotten very out of control.

General of Darkness
23rd July 2013, 05:16 PM
Here's the next in line. He's called Cuban-American, but he's a jew.

Name: Mayorkas, Alejandro
Current Position: Director
A former U.S. Attorney (http://www.allgov.com/agency/United_States_Attorneys) who was involved in a controversial clemency decision during the Clinton years, Alejandro “Ali” Mayorkas has served as director of the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (http://www.allgov.com/agency/U_S__Citizenship_and_Immigration_Services) since August 2009.

Born on November 24, 1959, in Havana, Cuba (http://www.allgov.com/nation/Cuba), Mayorkas was an infant when his family relocated to Beverly Hills. Both his parents were Jewish, his mother having fled from Romania to Cuba during World War II.


Mayorkas was co-captain of the Beverly Hills High School tennis team and president of his junior class. He earned his Bachelor of Arts in history from the University of California at Berkeley (1981), and his JD from Loyola Law School (1985).

Mayorkas spent a year as an assistant law librarian at a Beverly Hills law firm and then almost two years as a clerk at the law office of Dennis M. Harley. From February 1986 until April 1987, he was with the Los Angeles office of Patterson, Belknap, Webb & Taylor. He then joined Cooper, Epstein & Hurewitz, a Beverly Hills entertainment law firm. Mayorkas returned to Patterson, Belknap, Webb & Tyler (http://www.pbwt.com/) for a few months in 1989, before joining the U.S. Department of Justice (http://www.allgov.com/Agency/Department_of_Justice) as an assistant U.S. Attorney for the Central District of California, a position he held for seven years until 1998.

From 1996 until 1998, he served as chief of the office’s General Crimes Section, where he trained and mentored other assistant U.S. Attorney new hires. Among his more high-profile cases was the prosecution of Hollywood madam Heidi Fleiss for money laundering and tax evasion. While Fleiss was in prison, the E cable channel ran a show that claimed Fleiss had cooperated with federal narcotics agents as an informant, a revelation that, if true, would have put her in great danger with her fellow prisoners. After the show aired, Mayorkas called the prison and told the authorities there that the accusation was false, thus saving Fleiss.

In 1998, on the recommendation of Democratic Senator Diane Feinstein of California, President Bill Clinton appointed Mayorkas the U.S. Attorney for California’s central district, making him, at age 39, the youngest U.S. Attorney in the nation at that time. During his last year at this post, he received unfavorable media coverage for his role in the decision by Clinton to commute the prison sentence of high-level cocaine dealer Carlos Vignali. Vignali’s father, Horacio Vignali, was a campaign contributor to Democratic politicians.

When Clinton left the White House, Mayorkas left the Justice Department and in September 2001 he became a litigation partner at the Los Angeles-based law firm O’Melveny and Myers (http://www.omm.com/), where he represented large corporations and other clients in high-profile cases in the U.S. and overseas, until 2009.

Mayorkas has been an adjunct professor at Loyola Law School and a frequent lecturer around the country. He has served as a member of the California Council on Criminal Justice, a committee of the California state government, and the California Commission on the Fair Administration of Justice (http://www.ccfaj.org/). Mayorkas also has been a director of the Federal Bar Association’s Los Angeles Chapter (http://www.fbala.org/) and has served as a member of several committees of the American Bar Association. He’s served on the audit committee and the board of governors of Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, the board of trustees of Drew University and the board of directors of Bet Tzedek Legal Services (http://www.bettzedek.org/), which specializes in providing legal services for low-income seniors. He has also been a board member of United Friends of the Children (http://www.unitedfriends.org/), Planned Parenthood Los Angeles (http://www.plannedparenthood.org/los-angeles/) and the Anti-Defamation League (http://www.allgov.com/officials/Anti-Defamation%20League).

Mayorkas and his wife, Tanya, have two daughters, Giselle and Amelia.


Alejandro (Ali) Mayorkas, Director (http://www.uscis.gov/portal/site/uscis/menuitem.5af9bb95919f35e66f614176543f6d1a/?vgnextchannel=c0fbab0a43b5d010VgnVCM10000048f3d6a 1RCRD&vgnextoid=d0333282d9f03210VgnVCM100000082ca60aRCRD ) (U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services)
Answers to Senate Judiciary Questionaire (http://judiciary.senate.gov/nominations/111thCongressExecutiveNominations/upload/Mayorkas-Questionnaire-Public.pdf) (pdf)
Alejandro Mayorkas (http://www.whorunsgov.com/Profiles/Alejandro_Mayorkas) (WhoRunsGov, Washington Post)
Beg Your Pardongate (http://spectator.org/archives/2008/11/17/beg-your-pardongate) (by The Prowler, American Spectator)
The Enforcer (http://books.google.com/books?id=c18EAAAAMBAJ&pg=PA68&lpg=PA68&dq=%22the+enforcer%22+los+angeles+magazine+mayorka s&source=bl&ots=ReMC7UzjjG&sig=Lg7p_Nb7ids0p7K_Ub_zsAbnQYU&hl=en&ei=lD-XTOPEC434sAPW0OjACg&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CBoQ6AEw) (by Ross Johnson, Los Angeles Magazine)

ximmy
23rd July 2013, 05:51 PM
Big Sis' shockingly dirty secrets go public

http://farm2.staticflickr.com/1430/748586665_99f80cf3ea.jpg

Santa
23rd July 2013, 06:30 PM
Mayorkas has been an adjunct professor at Loyola Law School

a communist jew with jesuit connections. a shoe in for the post. :p