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     GRASP THIS, BARACK!


Global terror 'happened' and change came to America? Historic pre-inauguration failures are obviously already locked-in by addicted and abusive authority under aggressive market pressure. A recovery plan 'equal to the task?' Your patient badly needs a blood transfusion - global energy transition, that is. Talk to your European friends first! Don't miss the opportunity for real sustainable change. The 2008 circumstances of the 'unexpected' situation boom still trail the global 1963 energy agenda. Not the other way around!


 DON'T LET BONDS BUBBLE!










EXXON-SHELL global crime & cheap-oil dollar crash



Why governments, including their judicial systems, won't really support sustainable development of the international community.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=p0TCdX2tQqQ


GLOBALENERGYTRANSITION FOR NATIONAL BUSINESS-CLIMATE SECURITY.....!! 


                   www.fixthisBarack.com  


       http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SnW6tFX5Gzw



                            



ALL  PEOPLES'  PRESIDENT?


OBAMARAHMA



                     O B A M A R A H M A


           Barack and Michelle Obama leave the stage in Chicago%27s Grant Park after Obama was declared the winner of the 2008 presidential election. http://change.gov/page/-/wrapper/img/administration_barack3.png http://www.creators.com/editorial_cartoons/1/5684_image.gif obama-victory1


                 Built With Hope Chicago Tribune final edition / robbmonty With Great Humility... by *pluckylump on deviantART A Message for Obama / Badgurl


                 Obama Wins! http://fc48.deviantart.com/fs34/f/2008/310/1/e/Change____by_drakosha.jpg gumelection Le Soleil / robbmonty


What Obama Has to Look Forward To



Washington Dispatch: A new GAO report says he inherits a federal government rife with waste, fraud, and mismanagement.



December 8, 2008


The Department of Homeland Security and Department of Agriculture have no plan to work together in the event of a food-borne disease outbreak or terrorist attack. The Department of Defense's security clearance process takes so long it jeopardizes classified information. The EPA's chemical risk assessment program is improperly influenced by private industry.


When Sen. George Voinovich (R-Ohio) requested a report from the Government Accountability Office (GAO) listing questions his fellow senators might ask President-elect Barack Obama's political nominees at their upcoming confirmation hearings, he probably didn't expect a 150-page list of Bush administration screwups. But that's what he got.


The GAO, the investigative arm of Congress that frequently exposes waste, incompetence, and corruption in the federal government, supplemented its proposed questions with summaries of problems in the executive branch. The result is a catalogue of hundreds of unresolved issues that the Bush administration is leaving behind for Obama and his administration.


The report, which is divided by department, is strictly limited to what the GAO calls "basic management capabilities," which means it raises questions about personnel, resource distribution, IT, and "results-oriented decision making." Problems like the politicization of the Justice Department are not mentioned. But this report serves as a peephole into the myriad internal problems of the executive branch, depicting a federal bureaucracy that is rife with mismanagement, inefficiency, and faulty communication practices—all of this combining to jeopardize both the nation's health and security.


Department of Homeland Security
The section on
DHS begins with the big picture: "The department lacks not only a comprehensive strategy with overall goals and a timeline, but also a dedicated management integration team to support its management integration efforts." In other words, the agency that's supposed to protect American citizens is really screwed up—spinning wheels and wasting money.


But problems exist at the granular level, too. The department has largely failed to define the Transportation Security Agency's role in securing such vital (and vulnerable) infrastructure as rail systems, highways, and pipelines. DHS and FEMA have not clarified "how prepared they expect first responders to be." Immigration paperwork is ending up in "long-standing backlogs." A program costing hundreds of millions of dollars that aims to collect and share information on selected foreign nationals who enter and exit the United States "still does not have an operational exit tracking capability." The Coast Guard suffers from a shortage of personnel and other resources, and the GAO reports that it is concerned it is "just reducing operations arbitrarily to meet budget constraints."


Department of Defense
The Pentagon is singled out for fierce criticism in the GAO study. It is cited for a lack of strategic thinking in its "investment decision making" and for using "overly optimistic planning assumptions" that regularly leaves the agency
lacking funds for its projects. It has done little to address long-standing weaknesses in its billion-dollar business operations that result in "substantial" waste and inefficiency.


The GAO is dubious that the DOD can rebuild its operational readiness, which has been badly hampered by the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and simultaneously pursue initiatives to modernize and reshape the armed forces. The department's weapons systems acquisition program is in such disarray that the GAO has put it on its high-risk list.


Department of Agriculture
GAO investigators found that information technology security is so poor at the Department of Agriculture that its operations are "seriously" jeopardized. They also found that the
federal farm programs the agency administers are handing out money to people who are not actively engaged in farming. Perhaps most distressing, the agency is not doing enough to secure "high-consequence biological pathogens" at laboratories carrying out agency-funded work. That means labs studying potential biological weapons agents are not handling these materials adequately and pose their own security risk.


Department of Veterans Affairs
The VA is portrayed in the report as mismanaged and out of date. Criticizing both the VA and the DOD for their inability to meet the
health care needs of troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, the GAO says the VA has huge inventories of pending disability claims and takes far too long to process them. It knocks the department's eligibility criteria for receiving benefits, and notes that its system for assessing the severity of disabilities is outmoded.


Environmental Protection Agency
The EPA lacks the
air and water quality data needed "to evaluate the success of its policies and programs," according to the GAO. The EPA's chemical-risk-assessment process should be a scientific one, but instead, the report says, it's influenced by industry groups, the Department of Defense, and others. The report notes that the EPA's attempts to keep Americans safe from toxic chemicals are so subpar that a number of states have introduced their own legislation to fill the regulatory void. One particular problem is that the EPA rarely forces chemical manufacturers to provide data on the safety of their products, instead allowing companies to voluntarily supply information.


Department of Commerce
One division of Commerce is blasted in the report: the Census Bureau. In March 2008, the GAO placed the 2010 census project on its high-risk list, citing "long-standing weaknesses" in the Census Bureau's IT department, problems with the handheld computers used to log census information, uncertainties over cost, and other potential problems. "There have been performance deficiencies and uncertain, escalating costs," writes the GAO.


Department of Energy
The department is planning an $80 billion modernization of the nation's
nuclear weapons complex. But the modernization, including the construction of major new facilities, is being planned without "clear requirements from the Department of Defense about its weapons and stockpiling needs," says the GAO. Consequently, the department may be building nuclear complexes that are potentially not needed or properly designed. The department's nonproliferation efforts "need to be reviewed for relevance and effectiveness" and its contract management has been on the high-risk list since 1990 for "fraud, waste, abuse, and mismanagement." Fixing all of these problems may be tough. According to the GAO, the department lacks staff with project management experience.


Department of Health and Human Services
Incoming HHS chief Tom Daschle has his work cut out for him: The department appears to have problems executing its core functions. According to the report, HHS efforts to boost preparedness for a public health emergency have been stymied by "shortages in the public health workforce" and "difficulties in intergovernmental coordination." Due to "weaknesses in agency capacity and data," the FDA has difficulty overseeing the
safety and efficacy of medical products and it cannot effectively ensure food safety because of a lack of "strategic planning."


Department of Transportation
The GAO offers an observation that to most Americans is a no-brainer: "Despite large increases in expenditures in real terms for transportation, the investment has not commensurately improved the performance of the nation's surface transportation system as congestion continues to grow." Translation? We've been spending tons of money and traffic is just as bad.


General Services Administration
The
GSA, which provides support services for federal agencies, has a multibillion-dollar repair backlog and owns property that is not needed. The GAO notes that it has been harping since the late 1980s about the GSA's leasing practices, which the GAO says has cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of dollars.


Photo by flickr user Barack Obama used under a Creative Commons license.



 


 


Speculation swirls about Obama's EPA and FDA heads: Scientific ...


The science community is abuzz with speculation about who President-elect Barack Obama's picks will be to run two key agencies that consumer groups charge ...
www.sciam.com/blog/60-second-science/post.cfm?id=speculation-swirls-about-obamas-epa-2008-11-07  - 68k - Cached - Similar pages



Bloomberg.com: U.S.


Nov 5, 2008 ... Obama may push to elevate the EPA administrator to ``cabinet-level status as the nation considers the regulation of greenhouse gases,'' ...
www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601103&sid=aF4rMH8K4iDQ&refer=us  - Similar pages



Who Will Run Obama's E.P.A.? - News Blog - Daily Brief - Portfolio.com


Nov 6, 2008 ... The incoming Environmental Protection Agency head -- the nation's premier science official -- will confront a host of environmental ...
www.portfolio.com/views/blogs/daily-brief/2008/11/06/who-will-run-obamas-epa  - 134k - Cached - Similar pages



Obama's EPA Head: Robert Sussman?


Oct 24, 2008 ... Obama's EPA Head: Robert Sussman? - The Huffington Post.
www.huffingtonpost.com/2008/10/24/robert-sussman-obamas-sec_n_137686.html  - 82k - Cached - Similar pages



Latest EPA Obama News - Examiner.com


Latest EPA Obama news stories at Examiner.com. ... Obama may be dipping into his own environmental team for an EPA administrator. ...
www.examiner.com/Subject-EPA_Obama.html  - 54k - Cached - Similar pages



Robert F Kennedy Jr to Head EPA? and 4 Runners Up : TreeHugger


I personally think that the head position of the EPA needs to be elevated to the cabinet. Obama promises us some strong change, so let's see some of the ...
www.treehugger.com/files/2008/11/robert-f-kennedy-jr-to-head-epa-and-4-runners-up.php  - 102k - Cached - Similar pages



3 possibilities for Obama's EPA chief | Philadelphia Inquirer | 11 ...


Nov 22, 2008 ... 3 possibilities for Obama's EPA chief. By John Shiffman and Jonathan Tamari. Inquirer Staff Writers. WASHINGTON - Three women who held ...
www.philly.com/inquirer/health_science/daily/20081122_3_possibilities_for_Obama_s_EPA_chief.html   - 117k - Cached - Similar pages



Transition: Who will lead Obama's EPA? -- 11/06/2008 -- www.eenews.net


Nov 6, 2008 ... The scramble is on to fill key environmental positions in the Obama administration. A day after winning the presidential election, ...
www.eenews.net/public/Greenwire/2008/11/06/1  - 17k - Cached - Similar pages



Environmental Capital - WSJ.com : Team Obama: RFK Jr ...


Nov 6, 2008 ... Obama’s EPA transition. Ms. Jackson champions tough greenhouse-gas reductions— New Jersey also has a goal of cutting emissions by 80% by ...
www.blogs.wsj.com/environmentalcapital/2008/11/06/team-obama-rfk-jr-californias-nichols-bandied-as-possible-epa-chiefs/  - 139k - Cached - Similar pages



Obama EPA Administrator Short List - Seth Fisher - Pollution ...


Key to the direction of the EPA for the next four years will be the administrator that Obama will choose to head it. Here are a few possible faces that ...
www.pollutionengineering.com/Articles/Blog_Fisher/BNP_GUID_9-5-2006_A_10000000000000462161  - Similar pages


              


Liar, Liar!! Barack Obama's Secretary of War








American Empire - The Imperial Military
Tuesday, 02 December 2008


montage113

 by BAR managing editor Bruce Dixon

 

Some Obama supporters are wringing their hands over the selection of Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State.  Hillary was, after all, a consistent supporter of the disastrous wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and much more.  But Barack Obama's selection of Reaganite and Bush family operative Robert Gates to continue as Secretary of War speaks volumes about the new administration's willingness to continue pulling the same wool over the public eyes as Democratic and Republican administrations past have done.  Is this the "change" tens of millions voted for?


Liar, Liar!! Barack Obama's Secretary of War


by BAR managing editor Bruce Dixon


"with less than 5% of the world's population, the US outspends the other 95% of the planet combined on things military"


Until 1947, the United States habitually told the truth about at least one thing. The job title of the Pentagon's highest ranking civilian was the Secretary of War. But the recent slaughter of tens of millions in the Second World War had given the Pentagon's real function a bad name. So Democrat Harry Truman rebranded the Department of War, naming it the Department of Defense.  From that day, the Secretary of War became the Secretary of Defense. War plants, war expenditures and bloodthirsty war industries became more benign-sounding defense plants, the defense expenditures and the patriotic defense industry.


Today, with less than 5% of the world's population, the US outspends the other 95% of the planet combined on things military, including a network of more than 725 bases in a hundred foreign countries. The bucks that pay for US Marines in Somalia, for B-52s in the Indian Ocean, nuclear-armed fleets in the Persian Gulf and much more don't come out of any imperial war budget. They're part of the national defense budget.


In that spirit, the president-elect has named what the media are calling his “national defense team”. The new Secretary of War is the same as the old one. He'll be Robert Gates, a Reaganite and Bush family operative who has headed the Department of War since 2006.


If this were a just society, rather than looking at another year or two in the president's cabinet, Robert Gates would be well into serving a long stretch for war crimes and lying to Congress. It's really that serious. When officials in the CIA and other intelligence agencies, or high ranking military and civilian suits at the Pentagon lie to us, it's not in the same league as a big city mayorfibbing about text messages on his cell phone or how some contract was awarded. When War Department and intelligence officials in and out of uniform lie, it's about who and how many are, have been, or will be killed. They lie about why they died or will die, and at whose hands. They aren't above lying about contracts either.


Robert Gates has been lying about matters of life, death and empire for a long time. A National Security Administration staffer in the Carter administration, Gates appears to have been involved in the October Surprise, helping delay the release of US hostages by Iran in order to damage the re-election chances of Jimmy Carter in 1980. When Reagan's campaign manager William Casey was tapped to head the CIA, Robert Gates was part of the new team. Casey promoted Gates to head of CIA's analytical division and later to deputy CIA director because of his willingness to embellish and fabricate intelligence saying what policymakers wanted to hear. In a recent Baltimore Sun article worth reading in its entirety, Robert Parry quotes former CIA analyst Melvin Goodman as saying


Gates consistently told his analysts to make sure never to ‘stick your finger in the eye of the policymaker.


It didn’t take long for the winds of politicization to blow through the halls of CIA headquarters at Langley, Virginia.


Bill Casey and Bob Gates guided the first institutionalized ‘cooking of the books’ at the CIA in the 1980s, with a particular emphasis on tailoring intelligence dealing with the Soviet Union, Central America, and Southwest Asia,' Goodman wrote.


Casey’s first NIE [National Intelligence Estimate] as CIA director, dealing with the Soviet Union and international terrorism, became an exercise in politicization. Casey and Gates pushed this line in order to justify more U.S. covert action in the Third World.


In 1985, they ordered an intelligence assessment of a supposed Soviet plot against the Pope, hoping to produce a document that would undermine Secretary of State [George] Shultz’s efforts to improve relations with Moscow. The CIA also produced an NIE in 1985 that was designed to produce an intelligence rationale for arms sales to Iran.”


"When congressional Democrats in 1993 refused to pursue investigations of Iran-contra and other off-the-books intelligence operations Gates must have breathed a sigh of relief"


It's pretty certain that Robert Gates has lied each and every time he has been sworn in before Congress. His lies have cost the lives of many tens of thousands, and obscured the reasons for their deaths. When Ronald Reagan declared that Nicaragua, a country with the population of Philadelphia (minus the suburbs) and fewer than two functioning elevators constituted a military threat to the US, this was the work of Robert Gates. The US intervention in Central America cost at least 30,000 lives in Nicaragua alone. Gates was also at the center of US provision of arms and intelligence to both Iraq and Iran as they fought a seven year war that killed two million people. He orchestrated intelligence reports that deliberately exaggerated Soviet military expenditures and threat posture to justify Reagan's rant about meeting the menace of the “Evil Empire” and his unheard of increase in US War Department spending. After serving as CIA director under the first president Bush in 1991 where he remained well into the Clinton administration.


When congressional Democrats in 1993 refused to pursue investigations of Iran-contra and other off-the-books intelligence operations Gates must have breathed a sigh of relief. He remained at CIA until well into Clinton's first year, and eventually sought the help of the Bush family in getting named president of Texas A&M.


The second Bush administration asked Gates to serve on its Iraq Study Commission, which advocated permanent bases, the privatization of Iraqi oil, and the maintenance of tens of thousands of US troops in-country for the foreseeable future. From there, Gates was named deputy, and eventually successor to Donald Rumsfeld as Secretary of War. As late as last year, when Alan Greenspan admitted what everybody has always known, that the Iraq war was about the oil, stupid, Gates ran to the press to say:


I know the same allegation was made about the Gulf War in 1991, and I just don't believe it's true."


"I think that it's really about stability in the Gulf. It's about rogue regimes trying to develop weapons of mass destruction. It's about aggressive dictators," Gates said.


"After all, Saddam Hussein launched wars against several of his neighbors," Gates said. "He was trying to develop weapons of mass destruction."


Sure he's lying. But it's supposed to be OK. Robert Gates is, after all, a lifetime member of the nation's bipartisan foreign policy elite. He could have been just following orders, and his orders at the time were to protect his boss George Bush. Although he took sides against his boss Jimmy Carter back in the day, maybe Gates has learned his lesson. Maybe now the Secretary of War will lie to us with his old Reagan-era enthusiasm on behalf of his new boss Barack Obama. Or maybe not. The question is, whether Robert Gates is lying for his current, his past or his future bosses, as long as his lips are moving in public, who's the winner? Not peace, not democracy. Not change, and certainly not the legacy of Dr. King, whose mantle Barack Obama dons at every opportune moment.


Not a few Obama supporters are wringing their hands at the selection of Hillary Clinton as Secretary of State. The Secretary of State, according to its own web site, has fewer than 5,000 employees. But the Department of War employs more than two million uniformed personnel, hundreds of thousands of civilians, an undisclosed six figure number of armed mercenaries, and thousands of contractors with millions more employees. The Pentagon disposes of tens or hundreds of billions in secret budgets which are accountable to nobody, not even Congress, and it fields at least half a dozen intelligence agencies, along with a far-flung network of secret prisons and torturers to staff them. It's not hard to see where the real power is, and where it will remain despite the new administration's promise of “change”. The only question remaining is how this vast, unaccountable and fundamentally anti-democratic machinery will be employed by the new administration. Here's a clue.


"Journalist I.F. Stone reminded us half a century ago that 'all governments lie.'"


Millions of Barack Obama's voters are under the impression that he will speedily withdraw US troops from Iraq. For them, the appointment of Robert Gates is not a good sign, but it is consistent with the gap between what Obama's most ardent supporters persuade themselves that they hear, and what the president-elect and his advisors have actually said all along. As the New York Times admitted last week.


...While Mr. Obama’s most heartfelt supporters in the antiwar movement may have heard “end the war” as a promise to end the American troop presence in Iraq in 16 months, the president-elect has spoken only of a timeline for withdrawing combat troops, not all American forces.


Fifteen American combat brigades are in Iraq, but the total number of American troops there amounts to the equivalent of more than 50 brigades, including forces there on missions to support, supply, transport, protect and care for the combat forces, and train and support the Iraqi security forces, which would be expected to continue at least through 2011...


Some Army planners predict that 30,000 to 50,000 — and as many as 70,000 — American troops will remain in support and training missions well into late 2011, and beyond, should the Iraqis invite them.


Pegging the US force in Iraq at 50 brigades leaves out a nearly equivalent number of mercenaries. If their number is only half that of US uniformed troops, we're looking at the equivalent of 75 brigades. President-elect Obama pledges to withdraw 15 of these, and only if conditions permit, if the Iraqis “step up”, if commanders on the ground think it's wise, and so on.


Clearly there will have to be a lot more lies told before this is over. Perhaps the president-elect believes he needs a brazen and proficient lying bureaucrat at the War Department. But is this what the American people need? Is this what they voted for?


Journalist I.F. Stone reminded us a half century ago that “all governments lie”. But chances are, he didn't mean this the way some of the president-elect's supporters will, as a reason to excuse rather than oppose whatever lies our First Black President and his appointees are inclined to tell us --- for our own good, of course. If we still have principles, souls and backbones of our own, we must always question and we can never excuse lies told us for the sake of empire, no matter who tells them.


If any glimmer of an independent movement for peace and justice still exists, it's time for us to engage in our own rebranding exercise. Activists who aim to carry on the work of Dr. King and the movement he led must take the lead in de-legitimizing the institutions that exist to lie and deceive us along with their functionaries. It'll be easy. All we have to do is tell the truth, and demand the truth from our government. As a beginning, we should insist on calling Mr. Robert Gates exactly what he is in all our conversations, our articles, emails and blogs, our ordinary public and private discourse. He is the Secretary of War. And a career liar.


Atlanta-based Bruce Dixon is managing editor at Black Agenda Report and can be reached at bruce.dixon(at)blackagendareport.com. 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


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