Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Acer Aspire S7-392 Ultrabook arrives in the US, starts at $1,450

DNP Acer S7 ultrabooks US pricing info and availability

We first met Acer's Aspire S7 at Computex in 2012, and since then it's gone through a major overhaul to become the Aspire S7-392 -- a Haswell-equipped Ultrabook that's now available in the US. You can choose between two models up for sale at retail outlets and on Acer's online store, with the cheaper $1,450 package toting a 1.6GHz Core i5 processor and a 128GB SSD. The $1,700 variant comes with a more powerful 1.8GHz Core i7 processor and double the storage space, but their other specs are identical. Both Windows 8 Ultrabooks boast a 13.3-inch 1,920 x 1,080 touchscreen display, an HD webcam, an 8GB of DDR3 RAM, and a bigger battery that promises up to 7 hours of power. It's too bad the European version's 2,560 x 1,440 screen didn't make it stateside, but at least the US incarnations are a bit easier on the wallet.

Update: We've revised the post to reflect that the higher-end model comes with a Core i7 processor, and not a Core i5.

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Source: Acer (1), (2)

Source: http://www.engadget.com/2013/07/23/acer-aspire-s7-392-ultrabook-us/?utm_medium=feed&utm_source=Feed_Classic&utm_campaign=Engadget

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Anthony Weiner Accused of Whipping It Out Again (Little green footballs)

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Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Marlborough council asks mayor to explore fire station on west

The City Council on Monday night voted to ask Mayor Arthur Vigeant to look into building a fire station on the west side or finding another way to more adequately provide emergency services to one of the fastest-growing parts of the city.

An order from Ward 3 Councilor Matt Elder and City Council President Patricia Pope asked Vigeant to look into the options for the west side, which is seeing a boom in new business accompanied by hundreds of new apartments expected there.

During a recent meeting on a proposal from AvalonBay, which is applying for permission to build 350 apartments in a mixed-use, campus-style development at the former Hewlett-Packard parcel on Forest Street, the police and fire chiefs said their departments will need additional resources to serve a growing population.

The need for a fire station on the west side has come up frequently in discussions around new projects like the Forest Street mixed-use development being considered and the 225-unit Brookview Village 40B development that was approved on Ames Street late last year.

"This is something that has been discussed sort of formally and informally for a long time," Elder said at Monday?s meeting. "I just want the Mayor to talk about the options out there and figure out the costs associated."

The order put forth by Elder and Pope asks Vigeant to explore options including building a new fire station on a parcel donated to the city years ago by MetLife, building a smaller "satellite" station for emergency services and forming a partnership with Northbrough. The order, approved by the council in a 10-0 vote, asked Vigeant to report back to the council within 90 days.

In other business, the council approved a special permit allowing the owners of Bolton Street Tavern to build an outdoor deck overlooking the Fort Meadow Reservoir. The special permit was granted with conditions that there be no smoking on the deck and that it not be open past 10 p.m. during the week and 11 p.m. on weekends.
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Source: http://www.wickedlocal.com/marlborough/news/x853693037/Marlborough-council-asks-mayor-to-explore-fire-station-on-west?rssfeed=true

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Dillon Francis Goes Off At 'Guy Code Honors:' Watch Now!

Dillon Francis wowed the crowd at the first 'Guy Code Honors,' live from Comic-Con.
By James Montgomery

Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1710999/dillon-francis-guy-code-honors-performance.jhtml

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Madrid president: Ronaldo to end career at club

Real Madrid president Florentino Perez says Cristiano Ronaldo will end his career with the Spanish giants and has denied receiving any bids for the Portugal forward.

Manchester United fans long for the return of Ronaldo, whom the English club sold to Madrid for a record 80 million pounds (then $131 million) in 2009.

Perez says in Tuesday's edition of French newspaper L'Equipe that "Real Madrid revolves around him," adding "I can assure you he will end his sports career here. We have not received any offers for him."

Despite scoring plenty of goals, Ronaldo has had off-field problems at Madrid and recently acknowledged he misses the Premier League.

There is a 1 billion euro ($1.5 billion) buy-out clause in Ronaldo's contract, which runs until 2015.

Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/07/23/3515721/madrid-president-ronaldo-to-end.html

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A Very Curious Website Has Posted a Tribute to Helen Thomas

The website of Hamas' military wing, the Ezzedine Al-Qassam Brigades, posted a prominent tribute to the late journalist Helen Thomas who died on Saturday. An image on the front page of the Al-Qassam website displayed a photo of "pioneer journalist Helen Thomas" next to the words, "Rest in peace, Helen Thomas. We respect you for taking a stand."

Below the Thomas photo and eulogy, the website prominently displays obituaries praising its "martyrs" who were engaged in the "long bright path of jihad" against Israel.

The Palestinian Islamist group that runs Gaza posted an article from Al Jazeera which detailed the accomplishments of the "trailblazing journalist who reported on every US president from John Kennedy to Barack Obama."

Hamas Terrorists Website Posts Tribute to Helen ThomasHelen-Thomas-Hamas

Front page of Hamas' Al-Qassam website featuring a prominently-displayed tribute to Helen Thomas (Screenshot)

The article about Thomas that Hamas posted included this sentence praising her independent spirit: "Her disdain for White House secrecy and dodging spanned five decades, back to President John F Kennedy."

While Thomas' past anti-Israel statements would explain Hamas touting her as a role model, the radical Palestinian group is no shining example of the press freedom it lauds in the Thomas context.

In fact, the Hamas leadership in Gaza has excelled in harassing journalists who dare to criticize its rule. The Middle East news website Al-Monitor reported in May:

Since Hamas' takeover of the Gaza Strip in the summer of 2007, freedom of opinion and expression have suffered numerous transgressions, which have been documented by human rights organizations. Furthermore, a number of journalists have been summoned for questioning and subsequently arrested or barred from travel. Earlier this month, a demonstration was forcibly dispersed during which journalists were targeted, despite Hamas' denial of these violations, which it considers "individual incidents" and not part of any government policy.

The pro-Israel blogger Elder of Ziyon who first reported on the Hamas tribute to Thomas writes, "They also proudly show the video where she recommends ethnically cleansing Jews from the Middle East. This is the 'stand' they are referring to."

In a highly publicized incident in 2010 - which TheBlaze recounted in the Helen Thomas obituary posted on Saturday - rabbi and independent filmmaker David Nesenoff asked Thomas to comment on camera about Israel. "Tell them to get the hell out of Palestine," the daughter of Lebanese immigrants replied.

"Remember, these people [the Palestinians] are occupied and it's their land. It's not Germany, it's not Poland," she said. The rabbi asked Thomas where Israelis should go to which she answered, "They should go home." Asked where home is, Thomas replied: "Poland, Germany and America and everywhere else."

(H/T: Elder of Ziyon)

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/hamas-terrorists-website-posts-tribute-helen-thomas-112412537.html

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Access Hollywood section

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Source: http://www.today.com/id/7358550/ns/today-entertainment/

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High School Popularity Effect On Income - Business Insider

Last year, researchers looking at a massive dataset following high?school seniors in Wisconsin found that high school popularity was correlated with higher income later on.

It turns out that the effect might not be from popularity after all, but from family.

When you compare siblings, even if they vary significantly in popularity, they end up in about the same place.

That's great?news for the less popular younger siblings of the world. ?

In an NBER working paper, Yale's Jason Fletcher ?reexamined the effect of high school popularity on earnings with a much broader dataset, they found about a 2% income boost for each additional friend by age 35. But when compare siblings and account for fixed family effects, that completely disappears.

The Wisconsin survey only allowed people to nominate 3 classmates as friends, so 60% of respondents didn't get any nominations. This dataset (from a national longitudinal survey) allows for up to 10, and includes a broader range of states and ages, making the result stronger.?

This suggests that some combination of family life, genetics, and parenting has more of an effect on future income than high school popularity.

The earlier paper suggested that popularity was a good proxy for well developed social skills that might help people adjust to the workplace later, and the sort of strong network that helps advance a career.?

What you learn at home and how you're raised turns out to mean more.?

Here's the table showing the results. In the right most columns, when family effects are accounted for, the effect of popularity (In Degree) vanishes:

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Source: http://www.businessinsider.com/high-school-popularity-effect-on-income-2013-7

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Monday, July 22, 2013

Police in London investigate case of woman who died after travelling from Dublin to UK for abortion


Police in the UK are investigating the case of a woman who travelled from Dublin to London for an abortion but died hours after the procedure had taken place.

The 32-year-old woman, who was a foreign national living in Ireland, underwent an abortion at a Marie Stopes clinic in west London. However, she died in a taxi hours after the procedure.

The woman, who was legally resident in Ireland, had sought an abortion at a maternity hospital in Dublin but had been told that it was not legally possible to provide one in this jurisdiction.

She is understood to have had a condition which raised the risk of miscarriage, although it was not believed to be in any way life-threatening.

The London Metropolitan Police has confirmed it was investigating the circumstances surrounding the case and preparing a file for the Crown Prosecution Services. It declined to comment further.

Marie Stopes yesterday declined to comment on the case on the basis of client-confidentiality.

The woman died in January 2012. An inquest has not yet been held into the woman?s death as the police investigation is continuing.

Anonymous
The woman?s husband, who wishes to remain anonymous, said he is still waiting for answers but is frustrated at the lack of progress.

?I think if this was an Irish or a British woman, we would know what happened to her. But I am still waiting for answers,? he told The Irish Times.

He also said he was frustrated at the lack of assistance from some Irish authorities in seeking an abortion for his wife.

He said his wife had a child in Ireland in 2010 but the pregnancy was painful and complicated by extensive fibroids.

The husband said the couple was told that treatment of the condition could involve a procedure that would leave her infertile.

?We were worried about what would happen when she became pregnant again,? he said.

?She was sick, but we were told that nothing could be done in Ireland.?


Twenty weeks pregnant
He said his wife was about 20 weeks pregnant when she travelled to Britain for an abortion. She might have had an abortion sooner, he added, but he and his wife had spent time exploring the various options available to them and raising money for the procedure.

?We were left on our own to deal with it. We didn?t get any help at all,? he said.

Both he and his wife were in Ireland on student visas at the time.

He is now 33 years of age and living in Ireland with his three-year-old daughter.


Maternal mortality
The woman?s case is likely to be examined by the UK?s Centre for Maternal and Child Enquiries, an organisation aimed at reducing the incidence of maternal mortality.

Maternal deaths are relatively rare in the UK. A recent report by the centre found that between 2006 and 2008 a total of 261 women in the UK died directly or indirectly related to pregnancy.

The overall maternal mortality rate was 11 per 100,000 maternities.

Thousands of Irish women travel to the UK for abortions every year. Latest figures show that almost 4,000 women from the Republic travelled to England or Wales for an abortion last year.

Source: http://www.irishtimes.com/news/health/police-in-london-investigate-case-of-woman-who-died-after-travelling-from-dublin-to-uk-for-abortion-1.1470902

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Monday, July 1, 2013

How Reagan Made Gay Marriage Possible (Taegan Goddard's Political Wire)

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Ailing Mandela still able to unite South Africans

PRETORIA, South Africa (AP) ? The spelling and grammar need work, but the message has its own eloquence.

A 10-year-old's note to Nelson Mandela, the prisoner who fought South African apartheid, or white racist rule, and became a global emblem of unity and humility, addresses him as "the greates president are land has ever had it is realy bad that you are in the hospital. But realy cool that you stopt apartit. you maid are land A beter place"

It is one of hundreds of messages that have been placed at two makeshift shrines by South Africans and others who are celebrating the life and legacy of Mandela, 94, even as some openly lament that his life may be approaching an end.

The South African government said Monday that Mandela remains in "critical but stable" condition in the hospital where he was admitted on June 8.

The hospital in downtown Pretoria is one of those pilgrimage sites; the other is his home in Houghton, a tree-lined neighborhood in Johannesburg where high walls ring expansive homes.

A swell of well-wishers has deposited letters, paintings, candles, stuffed bears and bouquets of flowers outside these spots, reflecting the cathartic mood of a nation whose identity is so closely linked to an ailing man who is out of public sight. It is a bittersweet time for South Africa, proud of its power to reconcile amid racial conflict but struggling to fulfill expectations of a better life two decades after the end of apartheid.

The former president is visited daily by his family, and on Monday the three other surviving defendants in the sabotage trial in which Mandela was sentenced to life in prison in 1964 visited the hospital.

Even in this most vulnerable moment, Mandela is again emerging as an enabler, this time for a new generation, across racial and gender lines.

"I am a 16 year old girl who wanted to meet you very much. Unfortunately I did not have the oppurtunity, but even in the early stages of my life I decided that I wanted to be a caring, loving person just like you," writes Carien Struwig, who left her telephone number on a note at the Mediclinic Heart Hospital entrance, perhaps hopeful that she might get summoned inside.

"Ps. I am Afrikaans, sorry for any incorrect spelling or grammar," she writes in English.

Mandela reached out to the Afrikaner community that devised apartheid and jailed him for 27 years, negotiating an end to white minority rule and allaying fears of widespread racial war. Freed in 1990, the anti-apartheid leader was elected president in an all-race vote in 1994, an event that electrified people around the world because of its sense of peaceful promise.

The mood at these impromptu shrines is partly festive and partly mournful, likely a harbinger of the outpouring that will accompany Mandela's inevitable demise. His protracted illness, the final struggle of a momentous life, has become a time for national introspection and a chance for people to be a part of something bigger than themselves.

People pray, hands pressed to faces. Choirs sing and sashay. On Saturday, a group of Pentecostal worshippers stood outside the hospital gates, wailing, shouting and gesturing. A wall of photographers recorded the emotional paroxysm.

An artist displayed a painting of a robust-looking Mandela with a finger on his lips, symbolizing his perceived desire for quiet as he battles a recurring lung infection and other ailments. When President Barack Obama was visiting South Africa this weekend, three men in dark suits and sunglasses, apparently members of the presidential security detail, soaked up the scene at the hospital entrance. One of the men politely declined to speak to an Associated Press reporter, saying he was off-duty and would get in trouble if he spoke to the media.

The sense of occasion is across the country, including Cape Town, where an exhibition about Mandela recently opened in a civic center; in coastal Durban, where a mass prayer session was held; in Qunu, the rural village where Mandela grew up and where he is expected to be buried; and Soweto, the area of Johannesburg where he once lived.

On Soweto's Vilakazi Street, a tourist hub where Mandela's old brick home has been turned into a museum, two rappers sang about Mandela, patting their chests for a beat. Impressionist Peter Bopape imitated Mandela's raspy, deliberately paced voice.

"I decided to come out of the hospital today, just to come and thank all the South Africans and the support that you're showing me," Bopape said in Mandela's stately tones.

Mandela often said many people played a role in making South Africa better. That it was not only his doing, that he made mistakes. But the written tributes to Mandela suggest there is no one like him in the country, and possibly in the world, who can connect with people of all walks at their core.

"Families like ours exist partly because of you!" reads a caption below a photo of two white women and two black children who are seated with a third woman in an apron who appears to be a housekeeper.

One message to Mandela comes from a day care center, another from a group of platinum mine workers.

One writer recalled seeing Mandela raise his fist after being released from prison in Paarl, the writer's hometown.

"My whole life, you'd been in prison, and now you were stepping out, surrounded by the very mountains that held me every day as I grew up," the handwritten note says.

"In 1994 I walked along Pretorius street to the Union Buildings to witness your inauguration. I raised my fist as the helicopters flew over with rainbow nation streaks of smoke trailing behind them. For the first time in my life I felt patriotism and pride in the leader of my country."

Source: http://news.yahoo.com/ailing-mandela-still-able-unite-south-africans-163132901.html

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Zoho Launches Mobile-Ready Survey Tool To Extend Online Business Platform

zohoZoho has released a new survey tool that allows customers to conduct surveys in customer satisfaction, education, human resources, marketing, marketing research and other areas using?custom or pre-built templates. Zoho Survey, available?for web and iOS and Android devices,?offers different question types, such as multiple choice, ratings and text boxes. After users create surveys using either the?web app or the native iPad Survey Builder, they?can preview their surveys to see how they display in a web browser or on mobile devices.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/Techcrunch/~3/pB6YIc4cu-U/

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Pentagon bracing for public dissent over economic and energy shocks

Top secret US National Security Agency (NSA) documents disclosed by the Guardian have shocked the world with revelations of a comprehensive US-based surveillance system with direct access to Facebook, Apple, Google, Microsoft and other tech giants. New Zealand court records suggest that data harvested by the NSA's Prism system has been fed into the Five Eyes intelligence alliance whose members also include the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.

But why have Western security agencies developed such an unprecedented capacity to spy on their own domestic populations? Since the 2008 economic crash, security agencies have increasingly spied on political activists, especially environmental groups, on behalf of corporate interests. This activity is linked to the last decade of US defence planning, which has been increasingly concerned by the risk of civil unrest at home triggered by catastrophic events linked to climate change, energy shocks or economic crisis - or all three.

Just last month, unilateral changes to US military laws formally granted the Pentagon extraordinary powers to intervene in a domestic "emergency" or "civil disturbance":

"Federal military commanders have the authority, in extraordinary emergency circumstances where prior authorization by the President is impossible and duly constituted local authorities are unable to control the situation, to engage temporarily in activities that are necessary to quell large-scale, unexpected civil disturbances."

Other documents show that the "extraordinary emergencies" the Pentagon is worried about include a range of environmental and related disasters.

In 2006, the US National Security Strategy warned that:

"Environmental destruction, whether caused by human behavior or cataclysmic mega-disasters such as floods, hurricanes, earthquakes, or tsunamis. Problems of this scope may overwhelm the capacity of local authorities to respond, and may even overtax national militaries, requiring a larger international response."

Two years later, the Department of Defense's (DoD) Army Modernisation Strategy described the arrival of a new "era of persistent conflict" due to competition for "depleting natural resources and overseas markets" fuelling "future resource wars over water, food and energy." The report predicted a resurgence of:

"... anti-government and radical ideologies that potentially threaten government stability."

In the same year, a report by the US Army's Strategic Studies Institute warned that a series of domestic crises could provoke large-scale civil unrest. The path to "disruptive domestic shock" could include traditional threats such as deployment of WMDs, alongside "catastrophic natural and human disasters" or "pervasive public health emergencies" coinciding with "unforeseen economic collapse." Such crises could lead to "loss of functioning political and legal order" leading to "purposeful domestic resistance or insurgency...

"DoD might be forced by circumstances to put its broad resources at the disposal of civil authorities to contain and reverse violent threats to domestic tranquility. Under the most extreme circumstances, this might include use of military force against hostile groups inside the United States. Further, DoD would be, by necessity, an essential enabling hub for the continuity of political authority in a multi-state or nationwide civil conflict or disturbance."

That year, the Pentagon had begun developing a 20,000 strong troop force who would be on-hand to respond to "domestic catastrophes" and civil unrest - the programme was reportedly based on a 2005 homeland security strategy which emphasised "preparing for multiple, simultaneous mass casualty incidents."

The following year, a US Army-funded RAND Corp study called for a US force presence specifically to deal with civil unrest.

Such fears were further solidified in a detailed 2010 study by the US Joint Forces Command - designed to inform "joint concept development and experimentation throughout the Department of Defense" - setting out the US military's definitive vision for future trends and potential global threats. Climate change, the study said, would lead to increased risk of:

"... tsunamis, typhoons, hurricanes, tornadoes, earthquakes and other natural catastrophes... Furthermore, if such a catastrophe occurs within the United States itself - particularly when the nation's economy is in a fragile state or where US military bases or key civilian infrastructure are broadly affected - the damage to US security could be considerable."

The study also warned of a possible shortfall in global oil output by 2015:
"A severe energy crunch is inevitable without a massive expansion of production and refining capacity. While it is difficult to predict precisely what economic, political, and strategic effects such a shortfall might produce, it surely would reduce the prospects for growth in both the developing and developed worlds. Such an economic slowdown would exacerbate other unresolved tensions."

That year the DoD's Quadrennial Defense Review seconded such concerns, while recognising that "climate change, energy security, and economic stability are inextricably linked."

Also in 2010, the Pentagon ran war games to explore the implications of "large scale economic breakdown" in the US impacting on food supplies and other essential services, as well as how to maintain "domestic order amid civil unrest."

Speaking about the group's conclusions at giant US defence contractor Booz Allen Hamilton's conference facility in Virginia, Lt Col. Mark Elfendahl - then chief of the Joint and Army Concepts Division - highlighted homeland operations as a way to legitimise the US military budget:
"An increased focus on domestic activities might be a way of justifying whatever Army force structure the country can still afford."

Two months earlier, Elfendahl explained in a DoD roundtable that future planning was needed:

"Because technology is changing so rapidly, because there's so much uncertainty in the world, both economically and politically, and because the threats are so adaptive and networked, because they live within the populations in many cases."

The 2010 exercises were part of the US Army's annual Unified Quest programme which more recently, based on expert input from across the Pentagon, has explored the prospect that "ecological disasters and a weak economy" (as the "recovery won't take root until 2020") will fuel migration to urban areas, ramping up social tensions in the US homeland as well as within and between "resource-starved nations."

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden was a computer systems administrator for Booz Allen Hamilton, where he directly handled the NSA's IT systems, including the Prism surveillance system. According to Booz Allen's 2011 Annual Report, the corporation has overseen Unified Quest "for more than a decade" to help "military and civilian leaders envision the future."

The latest war games, the report reveals, focused on "detailed, realistic scenarios with hypothetical 'roads to crisis'", including "homeland operations" resulting from "a high-magnitude natural disaster" among other scenarios, in the context of:

"... converging global trends [which] may change the current security landscape and future operating environment... At the end of the two-day event, senior leaders were better prepared to understand new required capabilities and force design requirements to make homeland operations more effective."

It is therefore not surprising that the increasing privatisation of intelligence has coincided with the proliferation of domestic surveillance operations against political activists, particularly those linked to environmental and social justice protest groups.

Department of Homeland Security documents released in April prove a "systematic effort" by the agency "to surveil and disrupt peaceful demonstrations" linked to Occupy Wall Street, according to the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund (PCJF).

Similarly, FBI documents confirmed "a strategic partnership between the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and the private sector" designed to produce intelligence on behalf of "the corporate security community." A PCJF spokesperson remarked that the documents show "federal agencies functioning as a de facto intelligence arm of Wall Street and Corporate America."

In particular, domestic surveillance has systematically targeted peaceful environment activists including anti-fracking activists across the US, such as the Gas Drilling Awareness Coalition, Rising Tide North America, the People's Oil & Gas Collaborative, and Greenpeace. Similar trends are at play in the UK, where the case of undercover policeman Mark Kennedy revealed the extent of the state's involvement in monitoring the environmental direct action movement.

A University of Bath study citing the Kennedy case, and based on confidential sources, found that a whole range of corporations - such as McDonald's, Nestle and the oil major Shell, "use covert methods to gather intelligence on activist groups, counter criticism of their strategies and practices, and evade accountability."

Indeed, Kennedy's case was just the tip of the iceberg - internal police documents obtained by the Guardian in 2009 revealed that environment activists had been routinely categorised as "domestic extremists" targeting "national infrastructure" as part of a wider strategy tracking protest groups and protestors.

Superintendent Steve Pearl, then head of the National Extremism Tactical Coordination Unit (Nectu), confirmed at that time how his unit worked with thousands of companies in the private sector. Nectu, according to Pearl, was set up by the Home Office because it was "getting really pressured by big business - pharmaceuticals in particular, and the banks." He added that environmental protestors were being brought "more on the radar." The programme continues today, despite police acknowledgements that environmentalists have not been involved in "violent acts."

The Pentagon knows that environmental, economic and other crises could provoke widespread public anger toward government and corporations in coming years. The revelations on the NSA's global surveillance programmes are just the latest indication that as business as usual creates instability at home and abroad, and as disillusionment with the status quo escalates, Western publics are being increasingly viewed as potential enemies that must be policed by the state.
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/earth-insight/2013/jun/14/climate-change-energy-shocks-nsa-prism

Source: http://ninetymilesfromtyranny.blogspot.com/2013/06/pentagon-bracing-for-public-dissent.html

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