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NSA Recruitment Drive Goes Horribly Wrong

An anonymous reader writes "The Guardian is running a story about a recent recruitment session held by the NSA and attended by students from the University of Wisconsin which had an unexpected outcome for the recruiters. 'Attending the session was Madiha R Tahir, a journalist studying a language course at the university. She asked the squirming recruiters a few uncomfortable questions about the activities of NSA: which countries the agency considers to be 'adversaries', and if being a good liar is a qualification for getting a job at the NSA.' Following her, others students started to put NSA employees under fire too. A recording of the session is available on Tahir's blog."

26 of 530 comments (clear)

  1. If they had trouble answering the questions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Then the answer to question #2 is no. Also, the answer to question #1 is all of the above.

  2. One interesting tidbit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    They get "targets" handed down, and don't decide who is an "adversary."

    So we are all targets.

    Great.

    1. Re:One interesting tidbit. by fiziko · · Score: 5, Insightful

      To heck with K-Mart. Shop smart: be an S-Mart!

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  3. Re:come on by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 5, Insightful

    These are people doing a job.

    So were the Stasi.

    --
    When information is power, privacy is freedom.
  4. Re:come on by Roogna · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No, they are government employees, which according to our HIGHEST LAWS means they answer to US the PEOPLE. If they can't handle people asking them some hard questions, then it's a good chance they know that they are doing things they shouldn't.

    Now no one beat them up, no one attacked them. But these "recruiters" jobs is to spread propaganda, and it's about time people started calling them out on it.

    And yes physically attacking a cop just because they're a cop is a horrible idea. But asking a cop to abide by their OATH to Protect and Serve, and calling them out on it verbally when the police office they work in is breaking the law? There's nothing wrong with that, as perhaps they shouldn't let their fellow officers break the law in the first place.

    Those that hold themselves up over others as authorities, or as law, should also be held to the strictest standards.

  5. Re:come on by dirk · · Score: 5, Informative

    Have you actually listened to it? No one attacked them. They asked them some very pointed questions, but even the pointed questions were generally in reference to what they said (while referencing what is now known because of the leaks). When they ask about which countries were "adversaries" it was because they said they analyzed the communications of "adversaries". So she asked what they considered adversaries, since we know they analyze the communications of our allies. A lot of hard questions were asked, but no one attacked them just because they worked at the NSA.

    --

    "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
  6. Better blog link by Bill+Dimm · · Score: 5, Informative

    A recording of the session is available on Tahir's blog.

    It would probably make more sense to link to the blog post instead of the main blog page so people can actually find the recording in the future after new blog posts are added.

  7. Re:come on by geminidomino · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What utter bullshit. You can't be a "nation of laws" when the laws apply differently to different subsets of the nation, when you're not allowed to know how the law works, and when those enforcing the law are above it.

    If you want to keep sucking off your jackbooted masters, you'll need a new sound bite to try to excuse it. That one stopped working decades ago.

  8. NSA muzzles the Press... by Anachragnome · · Score: 5, Informative

    The NSA is wiping their ass with the U.S. Constitution again.

    A recent article in CNN outlines why there is little in the US Media regarding Eric Snowden and the NSA Prism program--the NSA is literally threatening journalists with prosecution for espionage for doing their jobs.

    http://www.cnn.com/2013/07/03/opinion/snepp-journalists-espionage/index.html?hpt=us_mid

    We are sliding down that slippery slope fast, folks. I honestly feel the next few months will determine whether or not our Constitution remains viable as a means to protect basic human rights. Help the press help us--tell as many people as you can about this article and the serious repercussions the article outlines. These are not potential repercussions--this is happening folks. A near-complete lack of articles in main-stream media about the Prism program and Snowden is all the evidence I need to come to that conclusion.

  9. Re:come on by EllisDees · · Score: 5, Insightful

    >We are a nation of laws, not men

    Lol! Really? So when is James Clapper going to be charged with contempt of congress for telling them that the NSA isn't spying on millions of Americans? When are the people in the previous administration going to be held responsible for ordering torture - also a felony? We ceased being a nation of laws a while ago.

    --
    -- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
  10. Re:come on by Wookact · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Thats funny they taught us in the military that it was our personal responsibility to refuse to follow an unlawful order. The whole "I was just following orders" routine didn't work at Nuremberg, and should not work here. I just wish the other government agencies held that belief.

  11. Re:Dumbasses by ancientt · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You're never going to make it at that rate. Mother Theresa has been criticized for some time. Perhaps most amusingly by Penn and Teller on their BS show where she is described as a fraud, a fanatic and a fundamentalist, corrupt, nasty, cynical and cruel by Christopher Hitchens.

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  12. Obligatory Good Will Hunting by istartedi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Good Will Hunting

    Skimmed and didn't see anybody else posting it. Kinda surprising.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  13. Re:Normally I don't reply to ACs by Nerdfest · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Asking who they consider adversaries is excellent journalism. I'd actually like to hear an answer to that question.

  14. Re:come on by 0123456 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The Stasi weren't just doing their job, and they weren't just cops.

    The Stasi secret police were in effect Communist activists suppressing speech, religion, political opposition, political organization, and anything else that was deemed opposition to the communist one-party regime. They were an instrument of totalitarian rule.

    Which was their job.

  15. Re:come on by fustakrakich · · Score: 5, Informative

    The law is public.

    No... It is not!

    Stop trolling :-)

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  16. Re:Normally I don't reply to ACs by Muros · · Score: 5, Insightful

    She was unprofessional as a journalist and came off as immature as well. These people weren't squirming, they were just answering this bull dog's questions as best they could without getting fired in the process. She was clearly interested in painting them in a negative light so I would not attribute journalist credentials to her in this exchange. They did clearly state that policy makers hand down the requirements of their job--in other words the NSA doesn't choose targets the politicians do. End of story really. She seems angry.

    I can't comment on this apart from the partial transcript, because the blog is down. But from what i read, it was perfectly acceptable behaviour from a journalist. Perhaps you are not familiar with journalists who ask hard, uncomfortable questions to someone's face. If you are in the US, you are probably used to interviews where the questions are vetted beforehand, and "questioning" is done in the absence of the questioned in clearly biased opinion broadcasts. Professional journalism in a functioning democracy consists of asking people hard questions to their face, and either have them answer them fully or partially, make a promise to give an answer if they don't know, or obviously refuse to answer them. An important part of that sentence is the bit allowing them to answer the questions; "opinion" televeision does not allow that. The only time I saw an american president being asked hard unscheduled questions in a live interview, it was a foreign journalist who later received death threats for being "rude" enough to ask the president a question he had not agreed beforehand was an acceptable one for him to answer. And you call yourselves the land of the free.

  17. Re:come on by Jmc23 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    ...and yet you guys still invaded Iraq.

    --
    Don't complain about syntax, grammar, or spelling. There is no.hell like input on android.
  18. Re:come on by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 5, Informative

    The amount of stupidity in your post is too high. Why the hell are you not allowed to know how the law works? The law is public. You're just too lazy to study it.

    To actually study and know all the laws that apply to you living in the US of today would require more than just not being lazy, it would require a full-time staff, at least. Even the so-called "representatives" voting on the laws don't have the time to study and understand them. And even if you could get to that point of knowing all the "public" laws (not to mention the ones you have to pay a license fee to even read, or the ones that are kept secret for "national security"), the amount of machinations you would have to go through to not break any of them would be outside the realm of feasibility. At times you will find yourself in a catch-22 where one law says you must do A, and another says you are not allowed to do A. Did you know if you toss out a piece of junk mail addressed to someone else you could be charged with a felony that carries 5 years in jail time? That law exists in spite of the fact that the post office cannot forward that mail anyway.

    Harvey Silverglate estimates that the typical American unwittingly commits three felonies a day, and he backs it up very well. This is the infrastructure that police states are built upon. You don't need to look for crimes, you just pick someone and find some laws to charge them with violating.

    --
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    --- Jerry Garcia
  19. Re:come on by Moof123 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We are a nation of laws, sure... Secret laws overseen by secret courts who round up people and hold them in secret prisons. Hard to be proud of these laws.

    A functioning democracy needs the voters to be sufficiently aware of what their elected officials are doing to be able to be informed voters. Adopting an attitude of only sharing with the country what you have to, instead of only hiding what you have to undermines the whole logical argument supporting the concept of a self governing populace.

    Oh well.

  20. Tyranny of the majority by Valdrax · · Score: 5, Insightful

    We are a nation of laws, not men. If you don't agree with the actions of a governmental organization then you need to lobby your governmental representatives with your views.

    You also need to accept that your views might not be the majority and that, to some extent, we're a country of majority rule.

    Freedom does not depend on majority rule. In fact, it frequently stands against it. That's what the "tyranny of the majority" means.

    Desegregation was unpopular. Interracial marriage was unpopular. Letting groups like the KKK and Communists have speak their minds was unpopular. Burning draft cards was unpopular, and burning the flag in protest still is. Keeping church out of state is unpopular. The right to marry whoever and however many people you want is unpopular.

    Interring Japanese and German citizens during WW2 was popular. Laws requiring everyone to salute the flag regardless of minority religious belief were (and still are) popular. Prohibition was popular -- at first. Racially restrictive housing covenants were popular in the communities that "benefited" from them.

    If polls today show that a slim majority support the NSA spying on us, then remember that equivalent numbers sat out the revolutionary war or actively aided the British. The majority is not always right. The majority does not always stand for real freedom -- all they want is the freedom to keep living their narrowly-focused, myopic lives in the same day to day way that they currently do, and to hell with everyone else.

    I think most Americans would gladly vote in a dictator if that dictator established that everyone had to live the way that they think people should, if they called it the "freedom" to do so. History is filled with peoples who chose to do just that.

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  21. Re:Normally I don't reply to ACs by drinkypoo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    That is a question to ask NSA public affairs, not HR recruiters.

    What these HR recruiters were doing in this context constitutes public relations. If they do not have answers to these questions, perhaps they should not be placed in a position in which they might have to answer them. If the NSA does not want to field uncomfortable questions, perhaps they should terminate their wholesale lawbreaking operation.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  22. Re:Normally I don't reply to ACs by chihowa · · Score: 5, Insightful

    HR recruiters are a potential employee's first contact with a company and ought to be able to answer any reasonable questions a potential employee might have. "Who does your agency consider an adversary," is a valid question to ask of an agency that's trying to recruit you. It's akin to asking a business, "Who do you consider a potential customer?"

    It's a core function of an organization's representatives to have answers to these simple questions and understand the organization's purpose. Even without the current situation the NSA is in, this sort of thing is something that a potential recruit may be curious about. I'm surprised they didn't have an answer ready for it.

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  23. Re:ONE THING I agree with Chomsky on by Mashiki · · Score: 5, Informative

    The problem with your bad attempt at an analogy is that none of those crimes really represent anything personal. The kinds of people that commit those crimes don't care who their victim are. Even a rapist doesn't have any strong preference. It's not personal.

    Uh no, not always. About 30% of the time they're targeted attacks for car jacking. Armed robbery is almost always a targeted attack, with the person checking out several locations and picking one. Rape about 70% in all cases the person knows who attacked them. And in all cases it *is* personal, that's the thing with rape and a graduated crime. It's the same with psychopathic killers. It is personal, and they've graduated from a lower series of criminal acts to the point at which they're at.

    Terrorism on the other hand can be both personal and impersonal. Sometimes terrorists are out to kill *insert religious branch here* or *kill people of x society.* In other cases they meticulously target and select exactly who they're going after and where.

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  24. Re:ONE THING I agree with Chomsky on by Sloppy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The normal rule of gunnery is to shoot, and then whatever you happen to hit: call that the target. ;-) With terrorism, whoever you missed is the target. And whoever you hit, is your weapon against that target. But in order to work, it requires the cooperation of the target. If the target does not choose to react fearfully, then the terrorism does not accomplish its objective.

    Does the same thing apply to carjacking? Armed robbery?

    No. The goal of carjacking is to get a ride; the goal of robbery is to obtain value. Deciding to not fear it, does not deny your adversary his goal.

    But terrorism is about persuading the survivors, the technically-not-victims. Nobody ever carjacks in order to get the next car to lock their doors. Nobody commits armed robbery in order to manipulate a third party (movie script counter-example: Die Hard, but the FBI was manipulated as part of a "Briar Patch" strategy, rather than terrorism(*)).

    e.g. Not Terrorism: "Your tank factory and its workers are gone. This gains me a numeric advantage in next month's tank battle." Terrorism: "Your tank factory and its workers are gone. Surrender or else I'll wreck more of your expensive factories and kill more of your workers."

    (*) Does this happen in real life? What believed acts of terrorism were actually not?

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  25. Re:Normally I don't reply to ACs by causality · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This simply cannot be rated highly enough.

    Your perspective is that of an adult who is able to deal with reality. Those complaining that it's somehow "not nice" to expect real answers from people who are our servants and routinely act against our interests have some serious growing up to do. If everything the NSA did were acceptable and beneficial, these wouldn't be "uncomfortable" questions. It just can't be that hard to understand.

    We're being transformed into a nation of pussies who can't deal with reality unless it's brought down to a child's emotional level, dumbed down to about a 5th-grade reading level (not a joke - the media targets this), condensed into 10-second sound bites to suit the prevailing attention span, spoon-fed, and guaranteed never to offend the most irrational and overreactive among us.

    You can blame Wall Street, megacorps, sociopaths in government, and the like, but those are opportunists who saw a weakness and ruthlessly exploited it. The truth is, the nation is losing its prosperity because it is no longer worthy of it. For all the people who like to put on a big show this time of year concerning how fashionably patriotic they are, so few are actually looking for the root of our problems.

    --
    It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein