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CITIZINE NEWS
Alberto
Gonzales Nominated to be Attorney General
by Thom White
LOS ANGELES -- November 15, 2004 -- The Bush Administration
has nominated Alberto R. Gonzales to be the next U.S Attorney
General.
Gonzales was born in San Antonio, Texas, received
his undergraduate degree from Rice University, and then graduated
from Harvard Law School. When George W. Bush (M.B.A., Harvard) became
Governor of Texas in 1994, Gonzales became his general counsel.
With Gonzales legal aid, Bush avoided jury
duty on a DUI case in 1996. According to a USA Today story
from March 2002, Gonzales argued that if Bush served, he would
not, as governor, be able to pardon the defendant in the future.
The memo did the trick, and Gov. Bush was relieved of his civic
duty. Jury service could have forced Gov. Bush to disclose the number
of times he has been arrested, and the fact that he had pled guilty
to drunk driving in 1976, a revelation that later surfaced mysteriously
days before the 2000 election.
Alberto Gonzales was soon appointed by Gov. Bush
to the Texas Supreme Court (and named by Hispanic Business
magazine as one of the 100 Most Influential Hispanics of 1999).
He won re-election to the Court in 2000, with more than $34,000
in contributions from groups the New York Daily News referred
to as Enrons lawyers.
Once it was decided in December 2000 that George
W. Bush would be President, Alberto Gonzales was named Bushs
general counsel. The White House counsel advises the president on
all legal issues, such as policy, ethics, and whether to approve
or veto legislation.
Legal memos Gonzales has authored since September
11, 2001, have caused a bit of controversy. This year, Gonzales
has been at the center of the scandal in which Pentagon officials
in 2002 approved Abu Ghraib-style abuse of prisoners being interrogated.
The Daily
Telegraph (UK) reported on June 13, 2004, the following:
A string of leaked government memos over the
past few days have revealed that President George W. Bush was advised
by Justice Department officials and White House lawyer Alberto Gonzales,
that Geneva Conventions on torture did not apply to unlawful combatants
[captured during the war on terror].
In a January 22, 2002, memo, Gonzales advised President Bush that
the nature of the war on terror renders obsolete Genevas
strict limitations on questioning of enemy prisoners and renders
quaint some of its provisions.
A legal advisor to the Pentagon told the Telegraph
that Gonzales memo made it clear to everyone that there
was a debate in the administration about how far interrogations
could go, and the answer [Gonzales] came up with was pretty
far.
Alberto Gonzales himself helped invent the term
enemy combatant to circumvent standing rules in the
treatment of prisoners of war.
According to Human
Rights Watch, Gonzales drafted the original military commission
order signed by President Bush on November 14, 2001, which
allowed suspected terrorists to be secretly charged, tried,
and executed without the most basic due process protections.
Bush officially announced on February 7, 2002, that
Geneva Conventions on torture of prisoners of war would not apply
to Taliban and al-Qaeda detainees at Guantanamo and elsewhere. His
new policy was based on a legal memo by John Yoo (author of much
of the PATRIOT Act), and Gonzales memo from January simply
confirmed the correctness of the new policy to be unveiled.
Other U.S. government attorneys argued the decision
would undermine the U.S. military culture, which is based
on a strict adherence to the law of war, but Gonzales dismissed
these objections, saying U.S. personnel would abide by a minimum
standard of conduct, and that executives directing the war
would still abide by the principle of the Geneva Conventions.
The war on terror would need to be waged in part by covert
and secret operations and out-dated international agreements
would only endanger security.
In late August 2003, Maj. Gen. Geoffrey Miller,
supervisor of intelligence gathering operations on prisoners
at Guantanamo, was sent to Iraq where he would advise how to rapidly
exploit internees for actionable intelligence, using his experiences
and Geneva Convention-free methodology being developed at Guantanamo.
According to Counterpunch
magazine, Millers recommendations have not been publicly released.
However, in a memo entitled Intelligence Rules of Engagement
dated October 9, 2003, Gen. Richard Sanchez, supreme U.S. military
commander in Iraq, approved the use of dogs, temperature extremes,
reversed sleep patterns, and sensory deprivation of prisoners,
according to a June 2004 Washington Post report.
On December 2, 2003, Secretary of War Donald Rumsfeld
approved the following interrogation tortures (or enhanced interrogation
methods to induce stress): Yelling at detainees, use of stress
positions, use of isolation, deprivation of light and auditory stimuli
[blindfolding and covering ears], use of hoods, use of twenty-four
hour interrogation, removal of clothing, use of mild physical contact,
and use of detainees individual phobias [such as prisoners
fear of dogs or homosexuality, as in the Abu Ghraib abuses].
Alberto Gonzales has been nominated to be Attorney
General, an officer who is supposed to uphold the law. However,
it appears that most of Alberto Gonzales briefings have simply
been about circumventing law to give Team Bush/Cheney the authority
to act within a new legal realm beyond the scope of accepted international
agreements and existing U.S. laws, and ven paving the way to legalize
abuse of prisoners of the war on terror. Will Alberto Gonzales,
Attorney General, make for good law or a new era of lawlessness
cloaked in executive privilege?
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TECH NEWS
VeriChip
Receives FDA Approval for Humans
by Thom White
LOS ANGELES -- November 15, 2004 -- The Food and
Drug Administration on October 13, 2004, approved the use of the
VeriChip on humans. The VeriChip is an implantable identification
microchip that could soon eliminate credit and ATM cards, but is
first being introduced for medical identification.
Already the technology is being tested abroad. Australias
The Age reports: In Amsterdam and Barcelona, patrons
of exclusive bars can opt to have a microchip implanted under their
skin. The chip allows them to enter the clubs unimpeded while also
allowing management to keep a running record of their tab
The technology is the same as that used to track animals in the
wild or pets in the cities.
CSI-Miami (produced by Jerry Bruckheimer)
has been the first to inject the VeriChip into T.V. culture. In
one episode, a scantily-clad clubgoer in South Beach has her
credit card number embedded on a VeriChip, which is then injected
beneath her skin. Her reasoning: she has no place else to put her
card.
VeriChip is manufactured and developed by Applied
Digital Systems (ADS) of Delray Beach, Florida. The VeriChip
Corporation, a subsidiary of ADS, strives to produce miniaturized,
implantable identification technology with multiple medical, security,
and emergency applications.
ADS first announced VeriChip on December 19, 2001.
The company has sold 30 million virtually identical injectable identification
chips for pets and livestock in the past fifteen years.
CBSs Michael Baron described the FDA-approved
medical system: The VeriChip Health Information Microtransponder
System is an implantable RFID microtransponder, an inserter, a hand-held
scanner, and a secure database containing patient-approved health
care information.
CBN
News reported on the Jacobs family of Coral Springs, Fla., which
wants to be the first family to receive the VeriChip.
I was watching the news with Derrick and
there was a segment on the VeriChip, and he was so intrigued with
the VeriChip. After it was over he stood up and said, I want
to be the first kid to have the chip implanted in me, said
Leslie Jacobs.
Everybody uses computers in their everyday
life, and as people get more and more close to computers, people
cant even live without computers for one day, Derrick
said. So I think its just another step closer in the
evolution of man and technology.
But for Derricks dad, Jeff, who suffers
from a number of medical challenges, the VeriChip could be a lifesaver
I cant wait to get it because it will make me feel so
much more secure, Jeff said.
The Mercury News Mike Langberg reported
on further uses of the VeriChip: A VeriChip implanted for
medical reasons could be used in other ways, such as tracking movement
in a building through scanners built into doorways. Applied Digital
is interested in expanding to non-medical uses, including credit
card verification.
ADS has already announced its newest subdermal RFID solution
called VeriPay
that can be used in a variety of security,
financial, emergency identification, and other applications.
Applied Digital CEO Scott Silverman pointed
out how VeriPay could replace the use of plastic credit cards, and
eliminate present concerns over identity theft. At a
conference in Paris, Silverman invited banking and credit
companies to partner with the VeriChip Corporation in developing
specific commercial applications beginning with pilot programs and
other market tests.
Adrian Mello of Electronic
Business described possible consequences down the road for those
who refuse to get chipped despite widespread use of
the VeriChip. It could reach a point where life became difficult
for ordinary citizens without a chip implant
At the moment,
the decision to have a chip implant is entirely up to the individual,
but there is a danger that health insurance companies, hospitals,
and governments might require individuals to get the implants or
face higher costs or reduced services.
According to CBN News, Still more advanced
versions of the microchip someday might be able to track a persons
location through global positioning satellites (GPS). Right now,
ADS sells a separate system for tracking and monitoring called Digital
Angel
A GPS tracking device is currently too large to
fit into the tiny VeriChip, but miniaturization is probably only
a matter of time.
So far, Digital Angel had only been produced as
an external wristwatch receiver, but in November 2004, VeriChip
Corp. acquired eXI Wireless, a leading provider of
wireless technology and asset tracking / location systems
to assist with the tracking capabilities of the chip.
Katherine Albrecht of CASPIAN (www.spychips.com),
which campaigns against the use of RFID technology, commented that,
In the post-9/11 world, we are already racing down the path
to total surveillance. The only thing missing to clinch the deal
has been the technology. This may fill that gap.
Getting chipped costs $150-200 at the
moment. The first 100,000 to register to get chipped received $50.00
off at the time of their chipping procedure.
VeriChip Corp. has confirmed orders of over $300
million from a Latin American marketer. In July 2004, Mexicos
Attorney General under Vicente Fox announced that he and 160
top officials had received VeriChip injections for gaining access
to top-secret offices and more than a thousand patients in
Mexico have had a scannable chip implanted.
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