Republican Aide Tries to Hire Hackers
Noryungi writes "It seems as though a Republican Communications Director contacted Attrition.org, trying to hire hackers to improve his educational records. I don't know what is his dumbest move: (a) contacting Attrition in the first place, (b) using a real name Yahoo email address or (c) speaking at length about what he needed? Kudos to the Attrition crew for posting the whole email dialogue online! A sample from the conversation: 'Jericho: First, let's be clear. You are soliciting me to break the law and hack into a computer across state lines. That is a federal offense and multiple felonies. Obviously I can't trust anyone and everyone that mails such a request, you might be an FBI agent, right? So, I need three things to make this happen: 1. A picture of a squirrel or pigeon on your campus. One close-up, one with background that shows buildings, a sign, or something to indicate you are standing on the campus. 2. The information I mentioned so I can find the records once I get into the database. 3. Some idea of what I get for all my trouble.'"
"A picture of a squirrel or pigeon near where you live is fine. One close up, one from the distance enough so there are buildings or anything to help identify the location of where the pic was taken from."
Um, I'm sure I won't be the only one to ask this. But how in the hell does this prove that you are not the FBI, Secret Service, Police or whoever? Even if he was on campus at the time, I'm sure any authority that you'd want to fear could get to wherever they needed to be to take that picture in the same day that he asks for it.
O mighty hackers, please enlighten me and others here about this technique. Otherwise, I'm going to go on thinking that Jericho's methodology here is rather insane. Or is Attrition a joke hacker site or something to just expose people like Todd?
I did think that this part of the dialogue was pretty hillarious:
Jericho: And, are there pigeons on campus?
Todd: Forgive what I assume is dumb question, but what are pigeons? I know you're not talking about the bird.
Jericho: Actually I am.
Todd: Wow, I feel dumb now.
I'm sorry, I keeled over laughing from that part. They really had him strung along with the whole thing. Although, I think he started to catch on after the "bust":
Honestly, the more I see of this stuff, the more I wonder if it isn't time for a congress reform rather than any of the billion other little "reforms" that congress proposes. The original intent of the founding fathers was that regular people would run for office and represent the best interests of their constituents; in the tradition of Cincinnatus They certainly never intended for the "career" politicians we see today. Too much money, organized crime, and generally dispicable people getting into office.
The only question is, what is the best approach to encourage more honorable folks to run for office? Perhaps the terms of office should be limited? That would certainly help discourage careering. Limits on advertising budgets would be good, but difficult to police. Any other ideas?
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
Is he trying to improve his own records? Isn't this just a case of an idiot who tries to get people to hack their educational stuff for them? I mean, it probably will lead to a congressional scandal, but it doesn't really have much to do with the aide's aide-ness or republican-ness.
Ninjas and pirates. How piquant.
Why is Slashdot becoming involved in all this petty partisan tit for tat stuff? They are in danger of losing their already questionable reputation.
The more you regulate a company, the worse its products become.
It's like reading about the guy who tried to hire an undercover cop to kill his wife...The poor joker is so obviously clueless, but trying to play it down. Every time he starts asking real questions, they just bury him in bs, and he buys it...It's so obvious they're screwing with him. At one point they get him to send 'em some snapshots of local squirrels.
An entertaining read.
ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
I read the email correspondence before reading the network world article. They were just leading him on.
The real mystery is how somebody this sharp, informed and educated managed to do so badly in college. I mean, the guy's obviously got street smarts and book smarts.
These stories are free but worth money.
Am I the only one reminded of a very good independant british computer game?
:D
Of course, you'd have to bounce your connexion through InterNIC, hack into the International Academic Database, disable the proxy and clear your logs afterwards...
Lex
1)
Don't pay them 6-figure salaries, and require that they be in session as much as any other working person would have to be at his/her job.
Those guys even logged lyger's rot-26 hack!
I tell people all the time though that double rot-13 is much harder to detect than rot-26.
He offered to employ an American at above minimum wage. This guy must be a Dem.
Kudos to the Attrition crew for posting the whole email dialogue online!
Not really. It's great grounds for them getting sued. It was a private communication and one could (probably) argue he had a reasonable expectation of privacy. It may come as a shock to slashdotters, but you can't just forward any old email that drifts into your inbox.
Also, it would have been far more effective to have brought the emails to the attention of federal authorities. Now, the chances of a fair investigation (and trial) are pretty much blown to hell.
Instead of actually helping, they just grandstanded...
Please help metamoderate.
Try the Coral: http://www.attrition.org.nyud.net:8090/postal/z/03 3/0871.html
:)
For those interested in making your own Corals sometime when an article has already been slashdotted, head over to http://www.coralcdn.org/ and follow the instructions or just put the URL in the textbox.
It's just hilarious - this guy is supposed to be a Republican Communications Director?! A Communications Director didn't realise he was posting to a public site using his real name?! Yikes!
When they tell him that the Feds may have busted the operation by cracking their rot-26 encryption I nearly choked on my breakfast (cold pizza of course)! This is a classic.
On one of the linked sites, the guy is claiming that he was 'under the influence' for the whole exchange and is 'seeking treatment'. So he's claiming he was blind drunk for the entire two weeks? Wow - the Republicans either have better parties than I ever suspected - or they truly are drowning their sorrows after recent election defeats!
He needs to go to jail for a few years.
www.sjbaker.org
It would have been cooler if they'd sent this knucklehead screenshots of them doing the "hack" and it be from Uplink.
Then it would have been complete!
Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.
Please learn what Begging the Question means.
Technoli
I know that Sandy Berger (just so no one thinks I'm biased) is a real moron but come on, how much lack of intelligence does one have to have to think that they could get away with this?
We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
...are in it together, along with the aliens, the illuminati, the CIA, the Clintons and the Bushes. Having photos of the squirrels and pigeons would allow the hackers to identify which agents are on campus without a doubt. It's plainly obvious if you're in the know.
-"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
So this guy is a loser, and he felt that he could solicit the help of some hackers (look up the term) to hack into the computer systems of a university to jack up his grades - which he probably saw on Wargames or something - because he's such a loser he hates his grades?
It's just too unbelievable to be true, but then again, you couldn't make this up and he's a politician (and he's an aide that deals with the press - many such people seem to have serious personal esteem issues and wacky ideas of what's actually possible). So what else is new? So politicians, all over the world in fact, wonder why they're so hated and and treated as lying and cheating scum. Well, that's probably because they are, and the people around them are arguably even worse.
Sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, sad, very, very sad little man (and I probably should think of another word other than 'man' there).
To make up for that, I've created a mirror:
http://suso.suso.org/attrition1.html
http://suso.suso.org/attrition2.html (Page 2)
...I'm just proud my representative (or his aide) knew about the Interweb! ;)
This is so funny. You guys will believe anything posted on the Internet! :)
Companies want programmers who think "out of the box" only to put them in tightly controlled boxes after hiring. WHY?
Lifted from Digg. Get your own news slackers.
Yep, approval voting, so that voters can select the dark-horse candidate without feeling that their votes are going to waste.
-b.
Or just post the thing here since it can stand the load.
I just wish they'd work on getting those of us in the rural areas some decent broadband options.
This reminds me of a Hilarious West Wing scene:
[CJ is mad at Josh for posting to the message board of a Josh Lyman fansite]
C.J. Cregg: If you ever post anything on that website again, I will shove a motherboard so far up your ass... What?
Josh Lyman: You DO know I outrank you, right?
C.J. Cregg: SO FAR UP YOUR ASS...
"All great wisdom is contained in .signature files"
"Republican Aide Tries to Hire Hackers" strongly implies that there was some political motive involved. There was none. Such a clumsy swipe damages any credibility Slashdot had of appearing politically neutral. Zonk, you should be ashamed.
Are any of us surprised by this? He went to a Christian university - obviously he learned a great deal.
There's a classic comment that A people hire A people, but B people hire C people. Bush has not exactly been known for great job appointments. If you actually follow his appointments, it's embarrassing, even if you're a Republican. They're loyal, but often not very good. (It's not just that lightweight at FEMA, "Mr. Torture" at Justice, and the economic advisers from Enron; there's a long, painful list of bad high level hires.)
Once you get the institutional idea that each level hires dumber people below them, a few steps down the food chain, people like this turkey are getting jobs.
Here's an excerpt, after he "proves" he's "legit" to the "hackers", they do a test run to see if they have access to his college:
Shouldn't need anything else. Have had a chance to set up a couple of IDS/IPS evasion bots, perimeter scanning came up clean. Small SQL injection issue merged with XSS shows that the backend database may beeither 768-bit encrypted or a simple 3DES matter, but a little more time should take care of that issue. Once the tables are writable to sa, should be ready to jump in and jump out with no problem. One of their systems caught an early sniff, but was shut down with a smurf.
I just LMAO. Oh yeah, and when the media gets wind of this, guess what, he's republican... or at least the guy he works for is. Queue the media's leftist agenda in 3... 2... 1...
(My point is that it could have been anyone but you can bank on the fact that the media will drool all over this if it's legit, heck--sometimes they don't even do that. BTW I'm an independent.)
UNLESS.... it's all a clever ploy to see how easy it is to do such a thing, and the guy was going to expose this, but I think I'm giving him too much credit although maybe if he's smart he can spin it that way...
This is too funny.
There is simply too much glass..
Are you really afraid of a judicial system that barely works? You think someone who tries (unsuccessfully) to commit some retarded crime is going to sue over someone revealing it? Good luck with that.
If they had reported this promptly to the FBI, it would have had the same result.
The chances of an investigation: 0 (retarded things happen everyday)
The chances of a fair investigation: 0 (fairness is irrelevant)
The chances of a trial: 0 (no crime, no charges, no trial)
The chances of a fair trial: 0 (In the US, we don't have fair trials)
Since there wasn't anything that really could be done to "help", entertaining countless people while humiliating an idiot is worth something.
First, require all funds be donated by individuals. No more corporate slush funds. Next, make it illegal to donate to a candidate you can't vote for. No more buying off 51% of Congress. Finally, limit what can be donated by an individual to something the a person making the median income could afford (a couple of grand, adjust for inflation as needed). Toss in some really nasty penalties for violating these crimes. Problem solved.
Yeah, it'll never happen, but it's a nice though.
Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
Are you fighting the good fight? Did the 'Free Republic' wackos organize you?
I wonder why there aren't any good technology sites with a non-liberal bias....you'd think the free market would 'provide' one if there were enough no-liberal technical people...
Blar.
>
After all who would want anyone in government who was capable of getting a high paying job.
The government should only hire the stupid... OH wait...
Would the political party be an issue if it were a Democratic aide?
"Heckuva job, Schriby!"
Reality is defined by the maddest person in the room
No, not at all. Uplink was the most fun I've had in ages, and the more I read headlines about "Database breached: 300,000 customer records leaked" or "University computer hacked", I think of that game. And what is the ongoing battle between spam botnets and spam filters but a thinly-disguised play on Revelation vs. Faith?
LOL... that would have been funny. Man, now I need to install that game again. I havn't played it in a while (last time was when they added the patch to hack networks, not just systems).
We were all warned a long time ago that MS products sucked, remember the Magic 8 Ball said, "Outlook not so good"
Todd's punishment is going to be uniquely modern... or will it?
The punishment is that this is going to go viral. It's just too darn interesting seeing people doing something they shouldn't. For the rest of his life people will be reading about this. It's not yet mentioned in Denny Rehberg's Wikipedia page, but it will. Todd will probably get his own Wikipedia page [dead link as of this moment but we'll see how long that lasts]. There will probably be a Snopes article too.
In other words, Todd will be publicy humiliated. It'll be like having to wear a big red letter...
I've found that my posts don't format quite right w/o a sig.
The aide was pretty young. Prossibly saw a loty cheating in school and just carried it into work life. In the real world you get caught more of the time.
Any guesses as to what his login information is?
Anyway, I think it is hilarious he's trying to pay someone to hack into TCU. My guess is he wanted attrition to change the grade for his ethics course!
what a fool. just another family-friendly republican with all the answers on how to make your life better, I'm sure.
if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
I don't think your argument holds up as presented if you aren't cherry-picking your people. Basically, by presenting Bush's selections in the worst possibly light you are creating a Strawman Argument. (Though I agree that there have been many poor picks; just look Myers for the Supreme Court.) I'm not arguing with your conclusion so much as how you get there. Plus congresspersons select their own staff, so it isn't a true hierarchy down from the Oval Office.
what a fool. just another fucktard who's too dumb to admit that these kind of goings on happen on both sides of the political fense (that too many people are too dumb to see through in the first place!), i'm sure.
There are idiots on both sides of the aisle. Why would this moron's political alignment be relevant to anyone unless they felt the need to re-enforce their biased opinion of republicans?
Awww, are you still angry about losing both houses the last election, limpdick?
This guy should be arrested already, right? For solicitation to commit a felony? In fact, shouldnt the FBI have picked him up already?
Someone really needs to press this with the proper authorities. If this is a real solicitation then he should be worrying about bail money now. And if it IS a case of entrapment then Attrition.org should be considering civil action against the government for even TRYING such bullshit.
to be involved professionally in politics!
Rehberg fires communications director By SUSAN GALLAGHER Associated Press Writer Advertisement HELENA, Mont. (AP) -- The communications director for Rep. Denny Rehberg, R-Mont., has been fired for trying to have the director's college record inflated by people he believed were computer hackers, Rehberg's chief of staff said Friday. Todd Shriber was fired Thursday from the communications post that he held for about a year, Erik Iverson said. He said the dismissal came after Shriber informed Iverson of a pending article, on the Internet, detailing his attempts to hire men he believed were hackers. The men actually were not hackers, but Shriber's communications with them through more than 20 e-mails last summer reinforced his belief that they were available for hire to change grades he received at Texas Christian University, NetworkWorld.com reported Thursday. Shriber declined to comment when contacted by The Associated Press on Friday. Iverson said Shriber was concerned about his grades because he eventually wanted to study for a master's degree. © 2006 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Learn more about our Privacy Policy.
I never thought that there was a strong correlation between college grades and intelligence/job performance, but clearly I was wrong...
In Soviet Russia, ROT-33 uses YOU!
That way, if they want a raise, they have to improve the quality of life for all people.
I'd opine that if they want a raise, they can step down and find something that pays more. Serving our country as an elected representative used to be considered an honor, where one held office for a period of time and then exited gracefully at the end of their term. Now it's just another career choice for people who find satisfaction in back-room deals, pimping themselves to the highest bidder, and exercising control over their minions.
Holding them to the notion of "improving life for all people" smacks of communism. It's not the government's responsibility to improve the lives of people- at least directly. This is a responsibility that each person assumes as a member of a free society.
my party lost seats in the house and senate? i didn't know we had any in my political party.
sorry fucktard, i'm not a republican. it's more that i'm sick of slashdot transforming from a tech site to a political site where it's simply a bashfest that is always leaned towards the democratic party. unless you dems open up your crust filled eyes (along with the republicans) we're just going to have the same shitty cycle over and over again.
i love you assholes who thinks that the [republican/democratic] party has the market cornered on common sense even thought there is a ton of evidence that neither party has made any real progress in decades.
just keep burying your head in the sand, loser... it seems to have made you feel superior up to this point.
I think Jericho is so obssesed about pigeons because it relates back to this: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IP_over_Avian_Carrier s [wikipedia.org]
Specifically, the reference to "carrier pigeons" convinces me.
Ahh but you have to understand: Sandy Burger accidentally stuck those pages in his socks and underwear. In fact, he wasn't even aware they were there! The hypocrisy on the left is amazing. - Anthony Visit My Blog
Anthony Papillion
Advanced Data Concepts, Inc.
"Quality Custom Software and IT Services"
...they still hire armies of armed thugs to intimidate the peasants. I will believe the opposite when I see the police break up a conspiratorial meeting of corrupt politicians sitting around plotting to rule the nation, such as during the controlled "national debates" where only two parties are allowed. That's about as corrupt as it gets, but the goons only harass the people protesting that corruption, tell them at gunpoint and threat of getting beat up, maced, tasered or otherwise they are only "allowed" to present their grievences in a caged "free speech zone". they never go do the same to the corrupters who hired them and give them armed authority. They are mercenaries, that's all, not worthy of any respect whatsoever. None.
The police and military and those disgusting "security contractors" all work for the corrupt people and follow their orders, all the way from normal edicts and pompous commands to mass killings, secret arrest and torture and imprisonment, domestically or outside the borders.
This is no different from the old days of feudalism, the only thing that has changed is the clothes they wear, what weapons they have, and they dropped calling themselves "royal" or their mercenaries as "the king's royal guard" BS (I willo limit this to the US for now). Everything else is exactly the same. Oh wait, one more thing is different, now they don't even have real money, they print the stuff up out of thin air then tell that you are now in "debt" for some reason and demand you owe them interest on it..because they sayso at gunpoint. You can never really be out of debt because they keep printing up IOUs with your labor as collateral, designed to profit them and keep you in economic serfdom for your entire life. So in that sense it has even gotten worse than during the admitted to feudalistic period.
... guess what, he's republican... or at least the guy he works for is. Queue the media's leftist agenda in 3... 2... 1...
...(My point is that it could have been anyone but you can bank on the fact that the media will drool all over this if it's legit, heck--sometimes they don't even do that. BTW I'm an independent.)
My obvious axe-grinding and excuse making is completely unbiased!
Nobody here would believe you're an independent, not even you. Why do people like you always portray yourselves as independents? As if it somehow give you the slightest bit of credibility that you lose with the rest of your diatribe! "Those baby-raping communist devil-worshiper democrats just can't be trusted! But I can! I'm an independent!". What. The. Fuck.
I'm a republican*, and it pains me to see you crying foul that the headline mentioned this guy's party affiliation. Would you be complaining about bias if he was a democrat? No? Then shut the fuck up, it just makes us look like insecure partisan whiners. * not a republican
You have my deepest condolences. I know that the Republican Party is a persecuted minority these days: Nobody gives the poor, innocent Republicans a fair shake. Everyone else in the world hates God and America and, therefore, Republicans as well. And there's the vast conspiracies, the lynchings, and all the inequities and indignities Republicans must suffer for no other reason than following the divine hand of God - appointed by holy power and elected by a clear majority choice. Oh, woe be the poor Republican, for he is a poor, battered victim of a world which is against him for no good reason at all.
This guy made Slashdot because he was especially stupid, not simply because he was caught, and not because he was a Republican. He tried to commit a crime, but went about it in a very idiotic way - made contact with someone he had no logical reason to trust and requested an illegal job, discussed details that were way out of his depth and technical expertise, freely gave away his personal information, went outside to take a picture of some pigeons (I guess to prove that he is one himself) - the whole story just shows an incredible lack of intelligence and sophistication - any kind of subtlety or careful discretion in how he sought criminal help - and he got completely suckered as a result. A tale like this is great "News For Nerds" fodder - dope who knows nothing about computers tries to contract for a system intrusion goes in over his head with someone who actually knows a thing or two, and gets exposed.
Stealing national security documents isn't "News for Nerds", it's just "News". Go watch some Fox News if you want to see that story, I'm sure they'll rattle their sabers and go on about it for weeks - because they are not part of the conspiracy. They are not biased. They will give you the straight story, just the facts, and let you draw your own conclusion. England Prevails!
---GEC
I'm but the humble pupil, seeking to snatch the scratchbuilt pebble from the master's fully articulated hand
I'm as liberal as they come: anarcho-syndicalist, it doesn't get more hardcore leftist than that. Normally I am all for anything that makes the Republicans look bad, but this is just dumb. It's like how news stations only mention the race of an alleged criminal if they are non-white. Who cares what race a murderer is, or what party a doofus belongs too? What's that got to do with anything?
Until I read the summary, I was hoping this was some kind of political hack attempt that would put another big black eye on the Repugnicans, but no such luck, it's just some dumbass trying to get his grades changed. The story is funny enough to warrant being on Slashdot's front page without mentioning the word "Republican" at all.
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
Is Hans Reiser a Democrat or a Republican?
(think about it...)
- None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
It just so happens that I provide services for a state legislature and was one of the technical people consulted when they passed a law last term relating to electronic government documents.
Terms definitely should not be limited. It takes time to learn how to do things. How do you think the shareholders would react if all the big corporations fired all the CEOs with more than a certain amount of experience? Managing government and setting public policy is very complicated. What job can you think of where not knowing what you're doing is an asset?
Try reading some laws on any topic and see how easy it is to understand. Legislators are ordinary people and rarely have expertise on legislation they are voting on. In order for them to do good, they have to understand the process and you can't do that if you have nothing but newbies who can easily be manipulated by experts with an interest in particular laws (a.k.a. lobbyists)
People hate lawyers, but it really wouldn't be a bad idea for people making the law to understand something about it. Think of the projects you've worked on where nontechnical people make technical decisions -- you get some pretty screwed up results. There's a similar dynamic when it comes to making public policy. You need people who actually know something, not just "nice" or "honorable" individuals.
(im re posting this because this "persecution of republicans" seems to be a theme) Its amazing how perspective changes everything. This was posted on numerous websites yesterday with no mention that the guy was a republican. In fact, there was a large debate as to whether it was actually real, or made up by attrition.
Now knowing that it was a republican makes it 1) probably real since I guess he confessed to it and 2) really a whole lot funnier.
I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
From the previous post:
"Iverson said Shriber was concerned about his grades because he eventually wanted to study for a master's degree"
Schools are not obligated to deny entrance to the Master's program based upon grades. If he was truly driven, but simply made some youthful mistakes, he could have gone the route of life experience + post-bachalaureate classes (with excellent grades of course) + strong showing on the GRE.
A tough road to be sure, but legal, and possible.....it worked for me.
A goal is a dream with a deadline
Press aide who tried to hire hackers has been fired.1 5
http://www.networkworld.com/community/?q=node/100
Here's a news article from the local paper about the incident. The Missoulian
When in doubt.. do it on someone else's machine
Comment removed based on user account deletion
"kay, first you pin this sort of behavior on "ambitious, young-republican types". Then you cite a bunch of names - "Rove, Gannon, DeLay, A[]bramoff" - who don't actually fit that mold, all of them being well-established, somewhat aged participants in the political arena."
I doubt that's what Gannon's male escort ads would say. Maybe a well-endowed, professional-looking, male looking for a strange bedfellow (politics, get it?), but I'm uninformed on such matters.
Can we also call this game pigeons and squirrels?
In Soviet Russia, pigeons and squirrels photograph you....
imagine a Beowulf cluster of pigeons and squirrels.
How to bias a story summary. Let's say you don't like Republicans, and want to bias a story against them. So instead of writing "congressional aide", you write "Republican Aide". Instead of writing "the communications director for a congressman", you write "Republican Communications Director".
You're still being accurate, of course, but that doesn't change the fact that you have just deliberately editorialized and biased the reporting.
Reading the original story, you don't even see the word "Republican. All you see is an "R" after the congressman's name. But it's NOT the congressmen who is the subject of the story, it's one of his aides. Soem people do stupid, unethical and immoral things. Sometimes these people are Republicans, sometimes they are Democrats. But their political affiliations are irrelevant to their misconduct.
Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
On the other hand, he appointed Condaleeza Rice. Probably the most smartest and most educated woman in poltical office this decade. Roberts is brilliant. He may not share your politics, but that doesn't detract from his qualifications. And from what I hear on the grapevine, Karl Rove is a genius. Evil genius, but a genius nonetheless.
So sometimes the B students do hire A people. Thank goodness, because the last A student we had was Carter. And he's not exactly known for the quality of his appointments either.
Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
They top post, damn them!
Just wanted to remind all of the "liberal/dem/blame-America-first/hate-Bush/Love-Cl inton/Actually-believe-Obama-is-more-than-an-empty suit/hate-America" types that there is an extreme double standard that favors the Dems. (I know...of course we all know.)
Can you imagine if a Republican had done what Sandy Burglar did? It would still be a nightly news story.
I strongly believe that we will "wake-up" in this country one day and realize what the Dems/liberals truly are and we will collectively recoil in disgust. I, for one, can't wait. It will be a glorious day. I just have faith in mankind's ability to look at itself and make the necessary corrections.
How does mentioning the political affiliation of the aide in question illuminate this story? It seems more likely that the poster included this bit of trivia as a means of reinforcing stereotypes.
The Big News Page
Yeah! Politicians have nothing to do with politics. Stop making this so political.
It is partisan because it makes republicans look bad. Why else would they bring up that he's a republican. Who cares about background information or possible reasoning behind an immoral act?
To be as unbiased as possible it should contain no personally identifiable information. Such as: "Person Makes Decision That Benefits Self At Expense Of Others".
1.) When Republicans do bad things, journalists always make sure to mention that he's a Republican. When Democrats do bad things, political affiliation is often left out. The Associated Press did this very thing recently with a Democrat politician who was found guilty of financial crimes.
2.) This will make it to the front page of many news sites, and Democrats will cite this as proof of how corrupt and evil Republicans are. Meanwhile, the media will continue to sweep the Sandy Berger under the rug. If only Berger was a Republican...then it would be massive national news. But when a Democrat official working for a presidential administration steals documents that may embarrass said president, it's old news and nobody cares, right? After all, the 9/11 commission already had copies of the documents he took, right? It makes total sense for an administration official to steal official documents that the commission already had copies of. There's surely nothing being hidden in this story. Ahem.
"Sufferin' succotash."
If you are not wealthy you will need financial backing from someone else to even run your campaign anyway.
Actually, here's my idea for campaign finance reform: Any campaign contribution is split 50/50 between the candidate to which it is contributed and a general campaign fund. The money in the fund is split between the top n candidates determined by petition. Only one candidate per party can receive money from the fund. Established parties would have the right to determine the candidate to receive the funding for their party via primary (as they do with the nomination today.)
Distribution of funds is the only part I haven't figured out yet. I think the way to go is that the 50% going to all candidates is split immediately between all candidates but the one receiving the other 50% of the donation.
Finally, all media outlets would be required to donate a certain amount of space, not to exceed some reasonable percentage of their paper (A small one) and portion it equally between all candidates who want a piece of it. All other political advertisement in any media outlet forced to provide this coverage would be banned. I am willing to forego this suggestion for newspapers but not for broadcast media, which is to say radio and television. Cable television should also be required. Basically, any state-granted monopoly should be required to comply. The airwaves are supposed to be held in trust for the benefit of the public, so this falls well within the charter of the FCC.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
You mean like the "disbelief" (and ethical) suspension required to run the communications operations of a Republican Congressmember, like the crook getting burned in this story?
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make install -not war
Why didn't he follow the leadership? Oh wait...
But not even capable of appointing an ambassator to Australia in well over a year. She is not being allowed to do her job - her inability to do ANYTHING constructive during the war in Lebanon and the North Korean nuclear events showed that in greater detail. Powell was good too but also could not do his job - being told to spread absolute garbage in the UN to push a radical political agenda does nothing for credibility. We don't talk to people only drop bombs on them - childish policy - you have to talk to terrorists while they are still terrorists even if it is just to work out what they will do next.
It disturbs me that Bush appears to be incapable of appointing anyone that he doesn't know personally and makes me wonder what will happen during the remainder of his term.
It is a different story and has nothing to do with technology. Also, currently many Republicans have an anti-science bias which is one reason they come off badly on this site IMO. I am not from the USA and don't choose the stories so please don't make silly assumptions about my partisanship based on a couple of sentences.
no, it smacks of democracy. you know, that weird and unfashionable idea that elected members should actually represent the people who live in the region that elected them and act in their interests.
an elected representative is supposed to be the agent of the people in their electorate, and that includes acting to improve their lives.
ps: please take the following advice: if you're an american, then take the time to look up the words "communism" and "capitalism" so that you actually have some chance of knowing what the hell you're talking about before mentioning them - or, worse, basing your argument on your misunderstandings of the words.
You've done it again!
Clearly this guy was setup by Democrats trying to make him look bad. It was probably Democrats who gave him the idea of having his record changed in the first place.
/snark
Hell, the guys stringing him along were probably Democrats! So that makes this whole thing a BI-Partisan scandal!
Damn Democrats! you just can't trust them. They're always out to make you look like a fool!
Between Democrats and the Damn Liberal Media who reported this... It's a wonder the Republicans get any good news out.
Why do you think she's particularly smart?
Her BA and Ph.D are both from the University of Denver. Her post-graduate research was detail-oriented and otherwise unspectacular. The only awards she won as a professor were for teaching. And I'm an academic, so don't bother with "she was Provost for a while at Stanford".
an elected representative is supposed to be the agent of the people in their electorate, and that includes acting to improve their lives.
And just how is this accomplished?
"Appeasers" is another Republican favourite.
As to terms specifically relating to modifying the name, I think "dumbocrats" got a bit of a run, back in 2003-04 or so, but it kinda lacks its sting in today's political climate.
Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
--Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
Only his tendency toward a dazed stupor prevented him from screaming aloud.
oh trivial things, really. proposing bills for and voting for things like funding public health and public education services, anti-pollution laws, protection of individual rights, even down to legislating a livable minimum wage.
in other words, pretty much the exact opposite of what most of them vote for now.
government exists to do collectively the things that it makes sense to do collectively, so that everyone benefits from living in a society, not just a few.
you have no right to privacy when the subject of your communications is illegal. not in confessional, not on the couch, nowhere but with your lawyer. the end.
a small question: how can we be sure those e-mails are legitimate?
there were no headers and no real way to tell who said e-mails were really from.
if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is....
Understanding is much like a 3-edged-sword. in this: there are always 2 sides and the truth.
It's fun, but it can get really repetative. For my money, I find Diablo and Diablo 2 to still be extremely enjoyable old games.
Yes Francis, the world has gone crazy.