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Tech Lobbyist Named to DHS Top Security Post

An anonymous reader writes "Greg Garcia, a lobbyist for the high-tech industry, has been appointed to fill the new assistant secretary post for cyber security and telecommunications at the Department of Homeland Security. Garcia, a VP with the Information Technology Association of America, will try to resuscitate DHS's flagging efforts to formulate a response plan should the nation's key digital assets come under concerted attack or crumble due to some catastrophic failure. DHS is a little late in filling this post: Congress created it 14 months ago after getting fed up with the agency's lack of progress on cyber issues."

4 of 107 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Flagging?!?! by Quince+alPillan · · Score: 3, Informative

    That's because you're using the wrong dictionary.

    Miriam-Webster says:

    Main Entry: flagging
    Function: adjective
    1 : LANGUID, WEAK
    2 : becoming progressively less : DWINDLING
    - flaggingly adverb
    and American Heritage says:
    SYLLABICATION: flagging
    PRONUNCIATION: flgng
    ADJECTIVE: 1. Declining; weakening: flagging strength. 2. Languid; drooping.
    OTHER FORMS: flaggingly --ADVERB
  2. Re:crumble? resuscitate? by AllahsAvatar · · Score: 3, Informative

    a President who has never vetoed anything..

    He has vetoed one thing. H.R. 810, which is also known as the "Stem Cell Research Enhancement Act of 2005."

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  3. Re:crumble? resuscitate? by ericspinder · · Score: 4, Informative
    what are you talking about? what tubes are there to get clogged?
    Series of Tubes is becoming a meme. Senator Ted Stephens gave a speech where for the benefit of his audience (well, presumably) he created an analogy for the Internet as a Series of Tubes
    They want to deliver vast amounts of information over the Internet. And again, the Internet is not something you just dump something on. It's not a big truck.

    It's a series of tubes.

    And if you don't understand those tubes can be filled and if they are filled, when you put your message in, it gets in line and it's going to be delayed by anyone that puts into that tube enormous amounts of material, enormous amounts of material.
    Personally I believe it the "Tim Taylor trap", where someone who has a conversation with someone who presents a good analogy, or complicated explanation of fact. Then completely bungles an attempt to retell the story to another audience. The TV show "Home Improvement" had it as a running gag where 'Tim Taylor' would embarrass himself every time he tried to retell his neighbor's sagely advice.
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  4. Re:By the corporations, for the corporations. by tbone1 · · Score: 4, Informative
    This really took off with The New Deal, actually. Back then, the lobbyists were professional do-gooders and charity-beggars who were eager for their place at the trough and saw a government pension as preferable to having to deal with the expectations and egos of the less intelligent children of the wealthy (who, often, were the financial backers of charities back then). I suspect this had always been around, even Lincoln had to deal with it, but FDR allowed it to go from cottage industry to major economic factor practically overnight.

    H.L. Mencken, always a good voice for dissent, wrote some profiles of the people that became major power players under The New Deal. Mencken was many things, not all of them comfortable to modern sensibilities, but empiricist was one of them. Check some of his writings on it, such as the collection compiled by Alistair Cook, for some things they don't teach you in history class.

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