Your tax dollars at work....

Dead Money

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Oh, that makes sense...

Oh, that makes sense...

U.S. counter-terror officials have launched an investigation into how ISIS got so many of those identical Toyota pickup trucks which they use in their convoys.

They don?t have to look very far ?

The Spectator reported last year:

The [Toyota] Hilux [pics] is light, fast, manoeuvrable and all but indestructible (?bomb-proof? might not, in this instance, be a happy usage). The weapons experts Jane?s claimed for the Hilux a similar significance to the longbows of Agincourt or the Huey choppers of Nam. A US Army Ranger said the Toyota sure ?kicks the hell out of a Humvee? (referring to the clumsy and over-sized High Mobility Multipurpose Wheeled Vehicle made by AM General).

***

The fact is the Toyotas were supplied by the US government to the Al Nusra Front as ?non-lethal aid? then ?acquired? by ISIS.
Al Nusra Front is literally Al Qaeda.

Public Radio International ? an American public radio outlet ? also documented a specific shipment of Toyotas by the U.S. State Department in 2014:

Recently, when the US State Department resumed sending non-lethal aid to Syrian rebels, the delivery list included 43 Toyota trucks.

Hiluxes were on the Free Syrian Army?s wish list. Oubai Shahbander, a Washington-based advisor to the Syrian National Coalition, is a fan of the truck.

?Specific equipment like the Toyota Hiluxes are what we refer to as force enablers for the moderate opposition forces on the ground,? he adds. Shahbander says the US-supplied pickups will be delivering troops and supplies into battle. Some of the fleet will even become battlefield weapons.
That?s exactly what happened ?
 

kneifl

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Jan 12, 2001
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www.tradewithjon.com
I got this email the other day, appropriate for topic at hand....

I got this email the other day, appropriate for topic at hand....

THE 2015-2016 USA WELFARE PLAN

For a guy and his girlfriend with two kids



Follow these legal and proven steps:



1. Don't get married to her.

2. Always use your mom's address to get mail.

3. The guy buys a house.

4. Guy rents out house to his girlfriend who has 2 of his kids.

5. Section 8 will pay $900 a month for a 3 bedroom home.

6. Girlfriend signs up for Obamacare so guy doesn't have to pay for family

insurance.

7. Girlfriend gets to go to college for free being a single mother

8. Girlfriend gets $600 a month for food stamps

9. Girlfriend gets free cell phone

10. Girlfriend get free utilities.

11. Guy moves into home but continues to use moms house to get mail.

12. Girlfriend claims one kid and guy claims one kid on taxes. Now you each get to

claim head of house hold at $1,800 credit.

13. Girlfriend gets disability for being "crazy" or having a "bad back" at $1,800 a month and never has to work again.

This plan is perfectly legal and is being executed now by millions of people.

A married couple with a stay at home mom yields $0 dollars.

An unmarried couple with stay at home mom nets:

$21,600 disability +

$10,800 free housing +

$6,000 free obamacare +

$6,000 free food +

$4,800 free utilities +

$6,000 pell grant money to spend +

$12,000 a year in college tuition free from pell grant +

$8,800 tax benefit for being a single mother =

$75,000 a year in benefits ??.

Any idea why our country is $18 + trillion in debt?

Now you know.

kneifl
 

Dead Money

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$500 Billion...hard number to visualize

$500 Billion...hard number to visualize

A Billion Dollars looks like this

http://sneakhype.com/news/2012/08/what-122-1-trillion-dollars-looks-like.html

That's a lot of mulched pine trees...




The Fog of Intelligence

By Tom Engelhardt

1,500.

That figure stunned me. I found it in the 12th paragraph of a front-page New York Times story about ?senior commanders? at U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) playing fast and loose with intelligence reports to give their air war against ISIS an unjustified sheen of success: ?CENTCOM?s mammoth intelligence operation, with some 1,500 civilian, military, and contract analysts, is housed at MacDill Air Force Base in Tampa, in a bay front building that has the look of a sterile government facility posing as a Spanish hacienda.?

Think about that. CENTCOM, one of six U.S. military commands that divide the planet up like a pie, has at least 1,500 intelligence analysts (military, civilian, and private contractors) all to itself. Let me repeat that: 1,500 of them. CENTCOM is essentially the country?s war command, responsible for most of the Greater Middle East, that expanse of now-chaotic territory filled with strife-torn and failing states that runs from Pakistan?s border to Egypt. That?s no small task and about it there is much to be known. Still, that figure should act like a flash of lightning, illuminating for a second an otherwise dark and stormy landscape.

And mind you, that?s just the analysts, not the full CENTCOM intelligence roster for which we have no figure at all. In other words, even if that 1,500 represents a full count of the command?s intelligence analysts, not just the ones at its Tampa headquarters but in the field at places like its enormous operation at al-Udeid Air Base in Qatar, CENTCOM still has almost half as many of them as military personnel on the ground in Iraq (3,500 at latest count). Now, try to imagine what those 1,500 analysts are doing, even for a command deep in a ?quagmire? in Syria and Iraq, as President Obama recently dubbed it (though he was admittedly speaking about the Russians), as well as what looks like a failing war, 14 years later, in Afghanistan, and another in Yemen led by the Saudis but backed by Washington. Even given all of that, what in the world could they possibly be ?analyzing?? Who at CENTCOM, in the Defense Intelligence Agency, or elsewhere has the time to attend to the reports and data flows that must be generated by 1,500 analysts?

Of course, in the gargantuan beast that is the American military and intelligence universe, streams of raw intelligence beyond compare are undoubtedly flooding into CENTCOM?s headquarters, possibly overwhelming even 1,500 analysts. There?s ?human intelligence,? or HUMINT, from sources and agents on the ground; there?s imagery and satellite intelligence, or GEOINT, by the bushelful. Given the size and scope of American global surveillance activities, there must be untold tons of signals intelligence, or SIGINT; and with all those drones flying over battlefields and prospective battlefields across the Greater Middle East, there?s undoubtedly a river of full motion video, or FMV, flowing into CENTCOM headquarters and various command posts; and don?t forget the information being shared with the command by allied intelligence services, including those of the ?five eyes? nations, and various Middle Eastern countries; and of course, some of the command?s analysts must be handling humdrum, everyday open-source material, or OSINT, as well -- local radio and TV broadcasts, the press, the Internet, scholarly journals, and god knows what else.

And while you?re thinking about all this, keep in mind that those 1,500 analysts feed into, and assumedly draw on, an intelligence system of a size surely unmatched even by the totalitarian regimes of the twentieth century. Think of it: the U.S. Intelligence Community has -- count ?em -- 17 agencies and outfits, eating close to $70 billion annually, more than $500 billion between 2001 and 2013. And if that doesn?t stagger you, think about the 500,000 private contractors hooked into the system in one way or another, the 1.4 million people (34% of them private contractors) with access to ?top secret? information, and the 5.1 million -- larger than Norway?s population -- with access to ?confidential and secret? information.



REST HERE http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/176056/
 
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