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7/24/2004

U.S. Army Works with Boston Police to Create "Free Speech Zone" :.

Beg the cops to let you wave your sign. Pack into a cage like rats and have your protest:

The area, with a small stage, is surrounded on three sides by a wire fence with razor wire on top. A dozen U.S. Army troops joined Boston police inspecting the space Saturday.


7/22/2004

Bigger Breasts Offered as Perk to U.S. Soldiers :.

BE ALL THAT YOU CAN BE, with fake tits:

The US army has long lured recruits with the slogan "Be All You Can Be", but now soldiers and their families can receive plastic surgery, including breast enlargements, on the taxpayers' dime.

The New Yorker magazine reports in its July 26th edition that members of all four branches of the US military can get face-lifts, breast enlargements, liposuction and nose jobs for free – something the military says helps surgeons practice their skills.

"Anyone wearing a uniform is eligible," Bob Lyons, chief of plastic surgery at Brooke Army Medical Center in San Antonio told the magazine, which said soldiers needed the approval of their commanding officers to get the time off.



Code 46 :.

Code 46 is a love story set in an eerily possible near-future where cities are heavily controlled and only accessible through checkpoints. People cannot travel unless they have "papelles," a special travel insurance. Outside cities, the desert has taken over and shanty towns are jammed with non-citizens – people without papelles whose lives are severely restricted.

Related: The Manchurian Candidate



Sickening ABC News Piece Lauds Implantable Microchips :.

I can't believe this is an actual news piece. HAHA! You won't believe this. They're announcing it on network television. Who needs Cryptogon when stuff like this in on the nightly news!?

Hint: All is lost.


7/20/2004

Terrorist's Handbook :.

A SECRET dossier of police plans to prevent terror attacks at Heathrow has been handed to The Sun.

But the plans intended to PROTECT Heathrow actually give terrorists a step-by-step guide to ATTACKING it.

The plans — recovered by The Sun after an appalling security blunder — reveal details of sites best suited to launching strikes against aircraft.

They also give away confidential information about police measures including the times of patrols, deployment of rooftop snipers and use of dog units.

And they include key facts about attackers’ potential escape routes, evacuation plans and road closures.

The secret files handed to The Sun were drafted by security chiefs only last month to guard the airport from attack.


7/19/2004

Bush: U.S. Probes Possible Iran Links to 9/11 :.

Believe it or not:

U.S. President George W. Bush says Washington is investigating whether Tehran played a role in the September 11 attacks, and has accused Iran of harboring members of al Qaeda.

The U.S. commission investigating the attacks is expected to charge in its final report that several of the hijackers passed through Iran ahead of the attacks.

"As to direct connections to September 11, we're digging into the facts to determine if there was one," Bush said on Monday.



Illegal Dildos in Texas :.

To most people they are marital aids or sex toys, but in prudish Texas police take a less relaxed view.

Officers posing as a couple arrested a businesswoman for selling two "obscene devices", accusing her of violating the state's obscenity laws.

The police said Joanne Webb was breaking the code, which defines an obscene device as "a simulated sexual organ or an item designed to stimulate the genitals".

Adult stores in Texas get around the law with signs saying "sold only as novelties".

Had Ms Webb been convicted she could have spent a year in jail. But a judge dismissed the charges after nationwide attention and claims by her lawyers that they were a waste of court time.


7/18/2004

CIA Visits Cryptogon, Again...

A user at CIA conducted the following Google search: Seisint Reed Elsevier.

198.81.129.194 - - [14/Jul/2004:14:10:59 -0600] "GET /2003_11_23_blogarchive.html HTTP/1.0" 200 52928 "http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&q=Seisint+Reed+Elsevier&btnG=Search" "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 4.0)

That is all.



U.S. Department of Homeland Security Visits Cryptogon

Well, I knew that would happen, eventually. When I checked the logs, though, I was surprised to see what They were looking at.

Remember the weird story about the booklet that was dropped in front of my house? Apparently, Kevin Harris dropped his little publication on the wrong doorstep (or doorsteps), and someone (or someones) freaked out and called the Feds:

63.162.143.21 - - [16/Jul/2004:14:26:07 -0600] "GET /2004_05_02_blogarchive.html HTTP/1.1" 200 89961 "http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=UTF-8&q=the+pricker+kevin+harris" "Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; MSIE 6.0; Windows NT 5.0; DHSI60SP1001)"

To those of you who don't read raw Apache log entries, the DHS user conducted the following Google search: the pricker kevin harris.

Guess who has the top result on Google? That's right. * bow *



1984: Boston :.

An unprecedented number of video cameras will be trained on Boston during the Democratic National Convention, with Boston police installing some 30 cameras near the FleetCenter, the Coast Guard using infrared devices and night-vision cameras in the harbor, and dozens of pieces of surveillance equipment mounted on downtown buildings to monitor crowds for terrorists, unruly demonstrators, and ordinary street crime.

For the first time, 75 high-tech video cameras operated by the federal government will be linked into a surveillance network to monitor the Central Artery, City Hall Plaza, the FleetCenter, and other sensitive sites. Their feeds from cameras mounted on various downtown buildings will be piped to monitoring stations in the Boston area and in Washington, D.C., and officials will be able to zoom in from their work stations to gather details of facial descriptions or read license plates.

With Boston Harbor just a few steps from the arena, the Coast Guard will be using its new "hawkeye system" -- in place in one other port in the nation -- to watch area waterways. The network of infrared imaging, radar, and cameras that operate in both day and night conditions will give security officials a real-time picture of the harbor, and provide agencies an early warning if an unexpected ship enters area waters.

An unspecified number of State Police cameras are also being installed, and more than 100 previously existing MBTA cameras will be used to monitor area subway and bus stations. Law enforcement officials will have as-needed access to as many as 900 cameras that have been operated for months or years by the Massachusetts Port Authority, the state Highway Department, and the Big Dig.

Civil libertarians warn that the latest technology will be used to scare away protesters and others exercising their rights under the First Amendment. The critics complain that there are few state and federal laws regulating the use of video surveillance in public places.

"What this demonstrates is that '1984' is now technologically possible," said Barry Steinhardt, director of the American Civil Liberties Union's Technology and Liberty Program, referring to George Orwell's vision of an all-seeing totalitarian state. "This is really a situation where we are really being asked to blindly trust the government. There is no oversight of this. There are no safeguards."



Hourly Pay in U.S. Not Keeping Pace with Price Rises :.

The amount of money workers receive in their paychecks is failing to keep up with inflation. Though wages should recover if businesses continue to hire, three years of job losses have left a large worker surplus.



Satellites Will Track 5,000 Criminals in Britain :.

Satellite technology will be used to track 5,000 career criminals who are responsible for one in every 10 crimes in Britain, the Home Secretary David Blunkett will announce tomorrow.

The radical new technology, which has been developed in the US, will enable law enforcement officers to pinpoint the exact location of criminals who have been released early from prison and fitted with electronic tags.

It will feature among a series of measures in a five-year plan to tackle burgeoning violent crime and antisocial behaviour. Home Office figures released next week will show police forces recording rises as high as 25 per cent.

A Home Office source said: "We are the largest users of tagging outside the US and we will continue to do this. We will introduce satellite tracing for prolific offenders as well as for domestic violence and sex offenders."




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