Monday, October 19, 2009

Espionage

A scientist who worked for the Defense Department, a White House space council and other agencies was arrested Monday on charges of attempting to pass along classified information to an FBI agent posing as an Israeli intelligence officer.


Stewart David Nozette, 52, of Chevy Chase, Md., was charged in a criminal complaint with attempting to communicate, deliver and transmit classified information, the Justice Department said. The complaint does not allege that the government of Israel or anyone acting on its behalf violated U.S. law.

This is one of the worse forms of treason that can be done to the American people. Giving the precious secrets away that our government uses for the defense of its people is an utter shame.
Nozette had plenty of clearances that enabled him to access several databases that kept the nuclear capabilities of the United States. While Nozette tried to pass these secrets to a friendly government with the United States that is still no excuse on Nozette’s part or the Israeli government’s part. With a world that is forever changing, friends can be enemies very quickly.

The Russians, Chinese, the British, Cuba and Germany have all engaged is some type of espionage activity in the United States. Do not get me wrong the United States has returned the favor several times as well. Being proactive is one thing, but doing it and using the secrets gained has been around since the Roman days. The individuals that perpetrate these high crimes are nothing more than criminals regardless of which country they live in.

Following is a chronology of recent major espionage cases in the United States:

2000
GEORGE TROFIMOFF, a retired Army Reserve colonel, was accused of spying for the Soviet Union and Russia for a quarter of a century. He is the highest- ranking American military officer ever charged with espionage. He allegedly photographed documents and passed the film to KGB agents, and was later recruited into the KGB.

1997
EARL PITTS, who was stationed at the F.B.I. Academy in Quantico, Va., was sentenced to 27 years in prison after admitting he spied for Moscow.

1996
HAROLD JAMES NICHOLSON, a C.I.A. officer, was charged with committing espionage on behalf of Russia. At the time of his arrest at a Washington airport, he was carrying rolls of exposed film which contained Secret and Top Secret information. He pleaded guilty to the charges in 1997 and was sentenced to 23 years in prison.

1994
ALDRICH H. AMES, a CIA counterintelligence official, and his wife, Rosario, pleaded guilty to spying for the Soviet Union in what was characterized as the most damaging espionage case in the nation's history. He passed information to the Soviets from 1985 to 1994, including the identities of American agents. He is blamed for the deaths of at least nine United States agents in the Soviet Union, and for disclosing American counterintelligence techniques.

1989
FELIX BLOCH, Foreign Service officer, was suspended by the State Department after reportedly being monitored by video camera passing a suitcase to a Soviet agent in Paris. Mr. Bloch, who was once charge d'affaires at the Embassy in Vienna, was not charged with espionage, but was fired in 1990 on the grounds that he lied to investigators.

1986
JONATHAN JAY POLLARD, a civilian Navy intelligence analyst, pleaded guilty to spying for Israel. He is serving a life sentence, which President Clinton refused to commute despite pleas from the Israeli government.

1986
RONALD W. PELTON, a former National Security Agency employee, was convicted of selling top-secret signals intelligence information to the Soviet Union.

1985
LARRY WU-TAI CHIN, a retired C.I.A. analyst, was charged with selling American secrets to China for more than 30 years. He killed himself in his jail cell in 1986, two weeks after being convicted of espionage and tax violations.

EDWARD LEE HOWARD, a former C.I.A. officer, fled the country as the F.B.I. was investigating him for spying for the Soviet Union. He turned up in the Soviet Union in 1986, where he still lives.

A retired Navy warrant officer, JOHN A. WALKER JR., pleaded guilty along with his son, Seaman MICHAEL L. WALKER of the Navy, to charges of spying for the Soviet Union. The elder Walker admitted passing secrets to the Soviets while he was a shipboard communications officer and after his retirement by recruiting his son, brother and a friend to provide fresh information.

1984
RICHARD W. MILLER, an F.B.I. agent in Los Angeles, was arrested on spying charges and sentenced to 20 years in prison. The sentence was reduced to 13 years, and he was released in 1994.

1980
DAVID H. BARNETT, a former C.I.A. agent, pleaded guilty to spying for the Soviet Union between 1976 and 1979 while based in Indonesia. He admitted exposing the identities of 30 agents.

There can never be enough security around the DoD, CIA, or the National Security Agencies top secret information. As someone who has worked in this industry, I believe the government has not spent the monies needed to secure the information most vital to its defense. Until proper change control is put in place, our national secrets are at risk.

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Sunday, October 18, 2009

Weekly thought Bonanza Oct 19th


On Sunday, I produce a column called “The Weekly Thought Bonanza”. The column is based on all of the random thoughts that run through my head all week, and trust me there are a plethora of them. I will try to share as many of these thoughts as I can, so each one of my readers can think just a little bit extra over the coming week.


How is it that a boy could make the nation’s heart stop, only to have everyone in America now feeling like they were scammed? Reality television star or not, stop making your children do things that will give them permanent scares for life.

When it snows during the American Championship series, then you know the season is too long and Al Gore is full of it.

Is there anything better than a Klondike bar?

I actually found a beer that is absolutely delightful. Harpoon’s Munich Fest is awesome.

I am so tired of hearing about the Rush Limbaugh not being able to buy the St. Louis Rams. He is what he is and to stop him from buying a business because of his political views is un-American.

Saturday Night Live has lost its fastball many years ago. It still is a huge money maker for NBC, but it is not what it once was.

People all over the world now use the information superhighway; i.e., the internet, to get their news. Newspaper circulation has dwindled because of this almost fifty percent, when you can read your newspaper on the internet so easily you can understand why. There is something still special to me about getting my paper home delivered, however. I will never ever give that up.

I keep seeing Viagra commercials over and over again on television. The thing that always sticks on my mind when the announcer states, ‘If you get an erection that lasts four hours contact your doctor immediately.” I would think that that would be a dream until I did a little research, only to find out that a four hour erection can cause gangrene. Ouch.

Thai food is so much better than greasy Chinese food. Try it if you get a chance.

Americans consume far too much junk food that is a given. Why the government has decided to ban trans fats is probably a good thing health wise, but realistically it is one more thing the government decides to take control of our lives. If I want trans fats in my diet, who are they to tell me differently?

As someone who is watching the healthcare debate with extreme interest because of my family I think this bill is being fast tracked because the Democrats believe their numbers will dwindle in the next election. When real life and politics mix, it is a recipe for disaster.

I have over two hundred channels on Direct Television and I still can never find anything to watch on it. Crappy television is now the norm.

The special I watched on Dateline about concussions in the National Football league was down right scary. While I am concerned about the pro players, what is being done for the college and high school football players? I know because of football my knees are shot and I know I had a concussion or two, but that was a choice I made and I would not change a thing. The question here is, if the medical community thinks there is something that could prevent the injuries, why are we not doing more?

And “The Weekly Thought Bonanza’ thought of the week is; A woman in New Jersey is trying to sue to find out the identity of the sperm donor who donated their sperm to a sperm bank so she could conceive. Listen dear, you knew what you were doing and do not cry about spilled milk now.

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Friday, October 16, 2009

Making Laughter Count


When was the last time someone made you laugh so hard you still remember everything about the experience? I got a message from an old friend last night telling me that I was the guy who used to make him laugh that way when we were in school. He then proceeds to tell me that I have been keeping that side of me hidden as I have used this column to get others to know about the things I think about most.


Of course, knowing how I over think things tenfold I decided to find out what was so funny about me. I was hoping it was not my looks, as I think I have held up pretty well over the test of time. Fundamentally, the only thing wrong with me right now is I have to watch my sugar intake, my knees are a mess, and my left testicle is just a little lower than my right. Other than those two things, I feel pretty good about how I look. My hair is real with the Grecian Formula that I have used since I was twenty. I just lost some weight and my eyes are getting a wee bit worse, but I feel pretty good about the overall package. If I could get the hair to stay on my head and stop growing where it is not supposed to I will be alright.

I know I cannot tell a joke to save my life. With all the thoughts that go on in my head I cannot for the life of me remember the punch line of jokes that I hear. The only one I remember easily is one that my grandfather told me. He told me once that there were three guys that went into a bar….oh geez, I forgot that one too. It is not the joke telling I guess.

Maybe I tell good stories when I am at a party. Everyone loves to hear a funny story now and then. The way I tell a story at times can be a bit funny and intriguing. Most of the time my stories turn to heated debates about politics, life, science, or current events, so I can pretty much rule this out too.

I am a bit baffled then here and I am really trying to figure this out. Am I more concerned that I am not living up to my potential as a standup comedian as my friends says or have I just not put a finger on it yet?

I know one of my best traits is that I have a lot of passion for making people feel good about themselves. I love to make people laugh and I certainly love to listen to others even though I am a bit long winded at times. I am a good listener and I do like to inject an opinion as I listen to someone now and then. Even though I do realize opinions are like buttholes and everyone has one. (Hey I used butthole because their might be someone eighteen or younger reading this).

It is a bit heart wrenching to me that someone needs me to brighten their day. Why in the world would anyone need little ole me to give them the only real laugh that they will have in a day? Is it that people are too afraid to not be politically correct. I know I am a huge proponent of locker room humor. I find the shock factor in a dialogue with someone to be embarrassing at first, but a guaranteed winner when it comes to making a person laugh. When you shock someone it opens up even the most straight arrow person. Comments like, “How are your onions today”, to your mom (onions are boobies people) always gets the biggest laugh out of my mom. I said it was shock factor that makes it funny, didn’t I? Telling a person who is a bit on the older side that they look “hot today” is another surefire way to crack a smile out of someone. It works and it is so worth saying it when it has the right result.

I have never been afraid to go the extra mile to make someone laugh. Children have always been comfortable around me because I can get down to their level. My philosophy is if you out silly the child and you will get a smile. Children just want to see an adult act a bit “goofy” once in awhile to see that adults know how to have fun too.

I guess that I make my friend laugh because I am who I am. I do not deviate from being the person I am. I grew up with a smile on my face, I tend to be a bit immature at times in a good way, and most importantly I stay true to my beliefs in that I do not take myself seriously. Maybe I just have a naturally funny vibe about me that reaches out to people or maybe people laugh at me instead of with me. Either way, I will take making someone laugh every time.

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Wednesday, October 14, 2009

End Degrading Mascots


I put on a Florida State hat last night as I headed to the gym and I started to think a bit about the Florida state Mascot, the Seminole. The NCAA, fed up with what it considers "hostile" and "abusive" American Indian nicknames, the NCAA shut those words and images out of postseason tournaments, a move that left some school officials angry and threatening legal action. American colleges threatening legal action over a Mascot.


The NCAA has stated, any school with a nickname or logo considered racially or ethnically "hostile" or "abusive" by the NCAA would be prohibited from using them in postseason events. Mascots will not be allowed to perform at tournament games, and band members and cheerleaders will also be barred from using American Indians on their uniforms. The ban began in 2008. Major college football teams are not subject to the ban because there is no official NCAA tournament.

The only way newcomers tend to notice American Indians is from the growth of casinos on tribal lands. I don't list gambling among the top thousand admirable human activities, but I won't demand American Indians stop running gambling joints until Trump and Bally and municipalities do.

My real question is, what do we do about these demeaning nicknames that College and Pro Sports Teams use these days? I cannot twist my sentences enough to refer to "the team from Cleveland called the Indians" and "the team from Atlanta called the Braves" I do not respect the the owners, the league, or the fans for allowing these teams to degrade a race of people.

I should ask “all persons of color," as Americans call anybody not totally Caucasian, what they think about when they go to a game with offensive Mascots.

Instead, I ask: How do we feel? We the fans. We the consumers. In Atlanta, not only do they trot out the cartoon image of the Braves, but the fans perform a chant with a chopping motion, which would be idiotic even if it did not have racist implications.

When I see Atlanta fans performing the chop, I want to ask an old liberal from the 1960s what she thinks of stereotypes of American Indians. But Jane Fonda was married to old Ted Turner, and she doesn't do protest anymore.

If you stop to think about it, it really is offensive to take a people whose religion, whose love of the land, whose suffering, is intrinsically mixed with race, and turn them into mascots. These conditions go back to earlier times, like the 1948 World Series, when white people didn't have to think about this stuff. But now we do.

Middle-of-the-road America (code phrase for white America) wakes up one morning and discovers, gee, jurors may have been in-fluenced by their own racial identity in the O.J. Simpson trial. How disturbing. Or Middle America discovers, gee, nearly half a million black American men are convening in Washington, and a man named Farrakhan, why, he sounds angry. How disturbing. Then anybody who can afford a ticket goes to the ball park and performs some stupid chop and wears a ball cap with a grinning American Indian on it. The choppers don't get it.

Is it reasonable to ask these two ball clubs to change their names? Universities like Stanford and St. John's actually did, and others have agonized over it. But at Florida State University, Chief Seminole -- bare-chested warrior on horseback, wielding a spear -- leads the football team onto the field. That college always trots out some real Seminoles who say they are not offended by the use of a warrior as a mascot for smash-mouth, roid-rage, beefed-up alleged student-athletes.

Plus, Daniel Synder who currently owns the professional football team in the American capital isn't about to give up the trappings and income of the Washington Redskins.

There is a glorious heritage in these teams -- Sammy Baugh, Bobby Mitchell, Henry Aaron, Mike Garcia. We won't see these nicknames changed in the short run. But I suggest that fans refrain from buying any souvenir with those degrading symbols. Some marketing executive just might get it.
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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Stop the Madness


Burglary is one of the biggest violations done to a family. The feeling that your own private home can have someone in your underwear draw gives me the creeps. I hear the excuses all of the time, it is the economy that is causing the upswing in break-ins. Maybe that is true, but I don’t see in the paper that there are not any break-ins when the economy is good. Going into another person’s home and taking their possessions is vile, nothing more or nothing less.


Look what happened last week in the state of New Hampshire. Four teenagers were charged in connection with the a murder of a young mother and slicing the throat of her ten year old daughter, early last Sunday morning along an isolated dirt road in Mont Vernon, a town of about 2,000.

The New Hampshire Department of Justice identified the victim as 42-year-old Kimberly Cates. The medical examiner determined that she died from multiple sharp injuries to the head, torso, left arm, and left leg. The victim's 10-year-old daughter sustained serious knife injuries that required hours of surgery.

Four teenagers went on a killing spree for fun apparently like a Wes Craven horror movie. What for? I ask myself every minute since I heard of this gruesome display of inhumanity. Why would another human being do that to a mother and her child for fun? These boys were raised middle class and were in Boy Scouts, school plays, and one was a handyman at a Mormon Church, who was about to go on a Mormon Mission. Four boys led astray by something or someone. Will we ever know the real reason this happened? I doubt it and with that said, there is nothing we can do to stop people from turning to the dark side of life, and that is a very sad reminder of just how fragile we all are.

I started asking myself besides Obama’s healthcare and Nobel award, what has dominated the news as of late? Kidnappings of children, parents locking their children in closets, it is a world that has gone astray. I am not one to think life is like the Miracle on 34th Street all the time, but I am a firm believer that one must not just appreciate each other, we protect each other and each other’s children and families

How did we get to a point where people do not respect a human life? When did we start adding metal detectors to middle schools? Think back to the Wyatt Earp days, guns were more plentiful and school age children did not go into schools and start shooting up the school house. I would like to blame this on television and video games, but I do not see it. I used to see the broken down home as the problem, however NH got rid of that.

As an educator I have seen the eyes of the younger generation and I do not like what I see. I do not see the love and respect I once did even ten years ago. I remember as a child looking up to my parents, my teachers, the clergy and just about everyone who was an authority figure. Authority figures were just that authority figures. They made us feel safe and I believe that is where the disconnect is right now. I do not believe for one second that our families feel safe anymore. Authority figures have lost their way as tough love and tough discipline is a thing of the past.

We can not yell at a student anymore or we can not get tough on the ball field without worrying about losing our jobs. Mind you I am not condoning harming a child with discipline, but I feel discipline breeds safety and we need to get that back, the sooner the better.

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Monday, October 12, 2009

Cooking for Relaxation


I love to cook almost as much as I enjoy watching football, and well folks that is a lot. I even bought a house that has five ovens in it, as a matter a fact, because cooking is not just a big passion of mine it is an event.


When I cook, I get a great sense of relaxation as I create my masterpieces. Well they are masterpieces to me. Every meal I make is done with a certain purpose. Cooking for family and friends is one of the most important things in life to me. It is just not about the food, it is about pleasing my family and friends. I want people to be pleased to come over to my home and taste a great meal.

I am an individual who like to please. Pleasing people is one thing, but pleasing people with cooking is another. When I was a child my family had our best times at the dinner table. Whether it was my father or mother cooking each meal was always a thing of beauty. Great meals made happy children.

Some of the recipes I have made over the last year were hits and some were huge misses, but I will try and try again to get it right. As long as you try, half of the battle has been won.

Cooking doesn't have to be a scary endeavor, that it can actually serve as a means of alleviating stress or anxiety, two things I'm feeling a lot of these days. I can understand why people are scared to cook, especially if they haven't spent much time doing anything in the kitchen other than eating or cleaning up after a meal. Thinking back, I can remember the questions that would run through my head as I was learning how to read and break down recipes How much is a pinch? How do you know when to turn something over? How do organize yourself so all of the food finishes cooking at the same time? Over time, I became more comfortable in the kitchen, and now, I use cooking as a way to relax and unwind.

We've all been there. We get excited about a recipe that sounds delicious on paper (or on the screen), but after attempting to make it in our own kitchens, the dish falls flat and we're left with something that disappointingly did not meet our expectations. However, just because a recipe doesn't work out the first time doesn't mean it's a lost cause. The first time I attempted to make Beef Stew, the wrong ingredients were part of the recipe. Sure, the stew tasted okay, but it didn't turn out the way I wanted. So, I tried it again, tweaking the ingredients a bit here and a bit there and wound up with a dish that I loved. In fact, I loved it so much that I recommended it to friends and they enjoyed it, as well. Not every dish is going to be a winner the first time out of the gate, but if you persevere and try again after taking some time to think about how you can change the recipe to make it better, you might surprise yourself.

I have always wondered if my meals were worth the time I spent cooking it. Time after time I feel that I have done a great job, but I get so nervous that the meal is not any good, I study the faces of the people I cook for to see if I have gotten it right. When people go for seconds and thirds I feel like I have done a good job, Mission accomplished.

So, the next time you're feeling overwhelmed or stressed out, get in the kitchen and cook something! Better yet, get in the kitchen with family or friends and share the experience with them. Turn the preparation of the meal into a social occasion and enjoy the food together. Good food tastes even better when you share it with good company.

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