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DoD Paper Proposes National Security Through a Culture of Restraint (and Stigma)

decora writes "An SAIC analyst has written a paper [PDF] calling for the 'stigmatization' of the 'unattractive' types who tend to discuss government secrets in public. The plan, described in the Naval Postgraduate School Homeland Security Affairs journal, is to promote self-censorship as a 'civic duty'. Who needs to censor themselves? Amateur enthusiasts who describe satellite orbits, scientists who describe threats to the food supply, graduate students mapping the internet, the Government Accountability Office, which publishes failure reports on the TSA, the US Geologic Survey, which publishes surface water information, newspapers (the New York Times), TV shows, journalism websites, anti-secrecy websites, and even security author Bruce Schneier, to name a few."

5 of 310 comments (clear)

  1. Sounds rather un-american by similar_name · · Score: 5, Funny

    self-censorship as a 'civic duty'

    I'm speechless.

    1. Re:Sounds rather un-american by guibaby · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yes,

      But do you feel a duty to remain speechless?

      --
      Historically, the claim of consensus has been the first refuge of scoundrels.
    2. Re:Sounds rather un-american by Darinbob · · Score: 5, Funny

      I couldn't say.

  2. Re:Is this for real? by Seumas · · Score: 5, Interesting

    What choice do you have? The machinery of aristocracy and control is well beyond the need for your support. They're self-sustaining and the level of corruption in all aspects of government and politics so unbelievably extensive and deep and convoluted that there is no way to simply excise the foreign tissue by itself.

    Naomi Wolf does a great job of describing the process that seems to be occurring right now (including this event) in her book "The End of America".

    I mean, we live in a country where our president's (last president) family did extensive business with the family of the man that killed thousands of Americans. We live in a country where government officials who are employees of Goldman Sachs take a trillion dollars from the tax payers to bail out Goldman Sachs. We live in a country where our president appoints Ken Lay as energy advisor to deregulate his own industry on his own terms. We live in a country where we allow our government to pass bills that allow the president to point at a citizen and make them disappear. Off to gitmo for torture, if he wants. Without representation or a trial. We live in a country where judges are paid off in millions of dollars by the private prison industry to fuel their business by unfairly punishing minor juvenile violators with many months in juvenile detention (google it - in Pennsylvania).

    It's probably not too late to force change, but by the time you could ever even remotely possibly convince enough of the population to give a flying fuck and get their heads out of their Bible and Twilight or their "durr durr abortion" and "durr durr immigration" and "durr durr religion" bullshit to actually do something about the real problems facing us, it'll definitely be too fucking late.

  3. Re:tags by Jeremiah+Cornelius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We can avoid the possibility of terrorists trying to destroy a free and open society, by eliminating the free and open element - therefore removing attractiveness as a target.

    --
    "Flyin' in just a sweet place,
    Never been known to fail..."