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Sharyl Attkisson

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News

Texas doors closed to new refugees in 2020

Texas Governor Greg Abbott, a Republican, has announced that the state of Texas will not accept new foreign refugees in 2020, reports The Hill.

Last year, President Trump signed an executive order that required refugees to enter the U.S. to resettle only in jurisdictions that have agreed to accept them. Texas is the first state to "opt out" of accepting new refugees in 2020 based on the executive order, according to The Hill.

Governor Abbott noted that Texas has borne more than its share of refugees during the settlement process and says the state has a responsibility to take care of the refugees (and Texans) who are already there before accepting more.

The policy does not prevent refugees from coming to Texas after initially settling in another state, Abbott clarified.

Click on the link below to read the full article in The Hill:

https://thehill.com/homenews/state-watch/477755-texas-governor-says-state-will-not-accept-new-refugees

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

VIDEO: College football crowd chants "Four More Years" at President Trump

When President Trump and First Lady Melania appeared at the NCAA football championship, they were greeted by a crowd that seemed far friendlier than the average group you might find in New York City or Washington D.C.

Watch the video below courtesy of 4WWL:

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WATCH: We dissect Chinese trade deal to be signed this week

The following is an excerpt from Full Measure with Sharyl Attkisson. Watch the video investigation by clicking the link at the bottom.

Phase One of a landmark trade deal with China will be signed this coming week. If there are no more snags. Six months ago, the Chinese backed off of what they’d agreed to at the last minute prompting President Trump to put big taxes on Chinese imports. If you aren’t sure what all this is about and why it matters so much, there’s no-one better to ask than Michael Pillsburyan outside adviser to President Trump, head of the Center for Chinese Strategy at the Hudson Institute think tank and author of The Hundred-Year Marathon: China's Secret Strategy to Replace the United States.

Sharyl: What does phase one seek to do, or what will it accomplish?

Michael Pillsbury: The most important thing about phase one in my opinion, is to have an enforcement mechanism where the Chinese set up a system that the American side can make complaints. You stole this intellectual property from us on this date, and we lost this much money, please fix it. China's never agreed to it with any other country in the world. So this will be the breakthrough the president will have achieved.But there's also something that the president cares a lot about called the trade deficit, that China has a $500 billion trade deficit with us. It's the biggest one in the world. The Chinese are promising to greatly increase the purchase of American exports.

Sharyl: If you can explain in simple terms why Americans who are not wrapped up in China trade and geo global politics, why this matters to them, what would you say?

Michael Pillsbury: The key thing is American jobs. The American infrastructure, the number of manufacturing jobs, the rise of the drug problem with fentanyl and the opioid crisis—this is all related. As we've exported jobs, many to China, our own country has suffered a certain number, let's say 3 million, lost jobs. High paying jobs are also being lost. So the trade agreement's designed to increase the number of American jobs that come from exports.

Read more about Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI here.

Sharyl: Can you give a specific example of a way the United States of America had jobs and what happened that put those in China's lap?

Michael Pillsbury: Sure. There are many, many examples. The Chinese will pick a company, they will steal its intellectual property, its trade secrets. They will essentially put it out of business.

Sharyl: An American company.

Michael Pillsbury:An American company. They will take its market share. And that American company in a certain city then no longer has those 1,000 jobs. And they've been doing this off and on in different places for 20 years. So over time it's all built up, and no one's noticed this.

Sharyl: In terms of how large, if this phase one is signed, how big of a deal this is. How would you characterize that?

Michael Pillsbury: It’s pretty big. The president at one time used the joke, granddaddy of them all trade deals, because we're the two largest economies in the world. Many people think China's still a backward country with peasants, and they ride bicycles. No, they're ahead of us in many ways. Supercomputers, 5G, telecommunications technology, it's quite a long list of where China has surpassed America.

Sharyl: Phase two, in a paragraph ,would cover what, and when could we expect that?

Michael Pillsbury: This is a very delicate issue, because phase two is supposed to be things that were not resolved in phase one, the biggest one being the subsidies Chinese companies get from their government. They give them massive unfair advantages against our companies. Some people think phase one means no more tariffs, President Trump has dropped them all. No, he's kept most of the tariffs on China. Roughly 25% tariff rate or tax rate, you might say on about 250 billion Chinese exports to our country. So the pressure is still on. China is very unhappy about this. If they don't show up for the signing, my view is it'll be because we didn't take all the tariffs off. We're continuing to really punish them, while they claim they're making these concessions to us. So there's some level of suspense. I think they will come. I think they will have a signing ceremony Wednesday, January 15th, but I don't want to be totally optimistic, foolishly optimistic, and say everything is taken care of.

Add to the volatile mix: some Chinese claim the U.S. is trying to provoke China into a military confrontation through U.S. attacks on Iran since China is a major importer of Iranian oil and a close partner of Russia.

Click on the link below to see the story on FullMeasure.news:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/politics/the-china-deal

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

VIDEO: Is nuclear power clean energy the key to a bright future?

The following is a transcript of my investigative report on Full Measure. Click on the link at the end of the transcript to watch the story on Full Measure.

One of the biggest energy challenges of our time is how to produce more energy in a way that’s considered cleaner for the environment. In his book: A Bright Future, Swedish nuclear engineer Stefan Qvist — writes that some countries have solved climate change and the rest can follow, if they just embrace what he says is a misunderstood platform: nuclear power. We recently caught up with him in London.

Stefan Qvist: What we're trying to explain in the book is basically there are a few countries in the world that have clean electricity 24 hours per day, year round. And those are Sweden, France and Ontario. And all three places did it by a combination of renewable energy and nuclear power.

Sharyl: You have a phd as a nuclear engineer. What are a couple of misconceptions you think people have about nuclear power?

Stefan Qvist: One is the volume and how dangerous nuclear waste is. And another one is the safety record of nuclear power. Both of them have been quite thoroughly misunderstood and we tried to go through that in the book quite comprehensively.

Sharyl: Do you find a lot of people don't know that nuclear power is green energy?

Stefan Qvist: Yes. Less and less. Fortunately, if you asked me five years ago, most people probably wouldn't know that nuclear energy is low carbon and doesn't emit greenhouse gasses. Today that's starting to become public knowledge, which is very good.

Sharyl: It's often said that when nuclear goes wrong, it's catastrophic. How do you get people comfortable with that calculation?

Stefan Qvist: In terms of of people dying from a disaster, energy related disaster, one the worst one we've seen in world history by far is the hydroelectric dam bursting in China in the 1970s, killed over, well in some estimates over 200,000 people. Nothing is completely safe. Nothing is completely clean, but we have to choose the best out of poor options almost everywhere in society and economy.

Sharyl: So what are a couple of comments you have on Fukushima, which is a recent disaster that people know about and hear a lot about?

Stefan Qvist: Yeah. So Japan was struck by an epic natural disaster that killed 16,000 people. Certainly compared to other energy accidents that we've seen with the oil platforms exploding or hydroelectric power, dams failing or gas pipelines exploding, Fukushima, in terms of relative effects to human life, is quite benign compared to those, but obviously a very serious and horrible accident anyway.

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

Sharyl: A comment on the Chernobyl disaster?

Stefan Qvist: It was actually constructed and redesigned the Soviet engineers. This is technology that will never be built in the West that will never be allowed to be operated in that way in the west.

Sharyl: What are the lessons learned from Three Mile Island in the United States?

Stefan Qvist: So it was really kind of a proof of concept of the safety built into Western type of nuclear power reactors. You have a a really severe event, you have core melt and no one got hurt. So I, that's the, the main lesson I guess.

Sharyl: Why can nuclear solve a problem do you think, an energy problem that wind and solar alone cannot?

Stefan Qvist: Well, the main reason is that wind and solar obviously rely on the wind and the sun being available. So it's much more effective, much more cost effective, and it's proven to work much better if you have something in the system that doesn't rely on the weather cooperating with you as well. We all share the same atmosphere and the same globe, but some countries have found a way to at least produce electricity cleanly, 24 hours per day around the year. And that's something that other countries can be inspired by because we have an existing solution to that. And that's basically what we mean when we say how some have solved climate change.

Germany is planning to close all of its nuclear power plants by 2020 in response to the Japan nuclear disaster. Nuclear power supporters say that will mean back to relying on more energy from coal.

Click on the link below to watch the report on Full Measure:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/politics/clean-energy

Thank you to the thousands who are supporting the landmark case of Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions.

POLL: Most agree with US air strike that killed Soleimani

Over 95% of the respondents of the latest unscientific poll at SharylAttkisson.com replied that the U.S. air strike that killed Iranian military leader and terrorist Soleimani was "right."

Four percent (4%) of the respondents said that it was wrong, and just over 1% said they didn't know or care.

Read the full results below. Meantime, be sure and vote in our latest poll at SharylAttkisson.com on the home page. Look for the black box in the right sidebar or scroll way down on the mobile site!

The US air strike that killed Iranian military leader and terrorist Soleimani, was:

95% Right

4% Wrong

1% I don't know/don't care

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

Attkisson v. Rosenstein re: the government's illegal computer intrusions (PODCAST)

Hear more about the former government agent who admits to illegally spying on me and my family-- and other innocent U.S. citizens.

I'll talk about how this fits into the bigger picture of government surveillance abuses and address the puzzling appointment by the FISA Court of an anti-Trump attorney to help fix FBI abuses identified by the Inspector General.  

Urge @TheJusticeDept and @RealDonaldTrump to investigate the Baltimore-based task force allegedly involved in the illegal surveillance operations. 

Read more about the case here: https://sharylattkisson.com/2020/01/former-govt-agent-admits-illegally-spying-on-sharyl-attkisson/

Listen now on iTunes or your favorite podcast distributor or by **clicking the arrow in the player below**! Subscribe to my two podcasts “The Sharyl Attkisson Podcast” and “Full Measure After Hours” on iTunes or your favorite podcast distributor. Leave your comments and share with your friends!

Visit SharylAttkisson.com and www.FullMeasure.news for original reporting.

Support the fight against government overreach in Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions.
Thanks to the thousands who have already supported!

Journalist seeks to revive litigation over alleged surveillance by feds

The following is an excerpt of an article in Politico by Josh Gerstein. Read the entire article by clicking the link at the end.

A TV journalist known for against-the-grain reporting is unleashing a new flurry of litigation on Friday alleging she was subjected to illegal surveillance by U.S. officials while covering Obama administration controversies such as the Benghazi attack and Operation Fast and Furious nearly a decade ago.

Now, Sharyl Attkisson says an informant has acknowledged a role in the snooping. The journalist and her attorneys believe that development may be enough to allow her to restart the litigation and demand answers from government officials...

...

One of those Attkisson is now accusing of directing the surveillance was little known at the time but was regular headline fodder in the past couple of years: Rod Rosenstein. He was the U.S. Attorney in Baltimore for 12 years and went on to serve as deputy attorney general under President Donald Trump from 2017 to 2019.

The suit claims that Attkisson, as well as her husband and daughter, were targeted by an interagency task force which was based in Baltimore and overseen by Rosenstein. A newly-filed suit asserts Rosenstein “ordered” four government employees “to conduct home computer surveillance on the Attkissons and other U.S. citizens.”...

...Attkisson faces an uphill legal battle in trying to revive the litigation, but she and her attorneys saw a glimmer of hope in a ruling last March from a federal appeals court. The 4th Circuit decision upheld the tossing-out of an earlier suit she brought in Virginia, but said the dismissal was “without prejudice,” leaving open the possibility she could try to proceed by revising her suit.

In addition, one judge on the appeals court panel teed-off on the federal government, calling its stance in the case “Kafkaesque.” Judge James Wynn Jr. said that the Justice Department frustrated Attkisson’s efforts to identify those involved, then urged her case be thrown out for failing to name the government officials responsible for the alleged snooping.

Wynn compared the feds’ approach to the “four corners” strategy University of North Carolina basketball coach Dean Smith perfected a half-century ago to run out the clock on offense when his team was ahead.

“In this case, the government — not unlike Dean Smith’s Tar Heels — put up the ‘fours,’” Wynn wrote, referring to the hand sign Smith used to signal the play. “Attkisson never got a meaningful opportunity to pursue her claims because the government did everything in its power to run out the clock on Attkisson’s action.”...

...A Justice Department inspector general inquiry found no signs of illegal surveillance and suggested the problems could be due to mundane issues, like a stuck laptop key.*** But Attkisson says DOJ never managed to get access to her work computer and explanations like a stuck key don’t explain why others were logging into her Skype account or why experts found some data on her computer was being relayed to a mysterious internet server address tied to the U.S. Postal Service.

***Attkisson note: There has been widespread misreporting on this point. Please see clarifications below.

In 2014, after initial forensic exams revealed remote government intrusions into the operative computers, the CBS Toshiba Laptop and the iMac Desktop; Attkisson was working on a new computer— a MacBook Air— and managed to captured a brief video of deletions of data being made remotely on that device.

After Attkisson posted the video, a disinformation campaign was launched by the Obama and Clinton-affiliated smear group “Media Matters.” Assisted by their media associates and affiliates, they maliciously and with reckless disregard for the truth claimed a Department of Justice Inspector General exam disproved the allegations of government intrusions into Attkisson’s computers. They further alleged that the signs of intrusion were simply due to a “stuck back space key.” This is demonstrably false on multiple levels:

Importantly, the DOJ IG never examined Attkisson’s MacBook Air pictured in the video.

There is no “back space key” on the MacBook Air. 

The MacBook Air was wiped remotely at speeds not possible with a “stuck” or held down key.

Neither did the DOJ IG examine the main computer at issue: the compromised CBS Toshiba laptop. 

Therefore, it is false to state or imply that the DOJ IG ruled out or was in a position to rule out the remote intrusions into Attkisson’s computers, which were proven through multiple forensic exams.

For more details on the Attkisson lawsuit and background, click here.

To read the entire Politico story, click the link below:

https://www.politico.com/news/2020/01/10/sharyl-attkisson-federal-surveillance-097264

Fight government overreach and double-standard justice by supporting the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund for Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions. Click here.

The government game of "I Spy"

The following is an excerpt from Full Measure with Sharyl Attkisson. Watch the video investigation by clicking the link at the bottom.

We begin with an examination of one of the worst abuses of government power that could happen in our society. Illegal spying on U.S. citizens. Amid findings about egregious violations by our intelligence community, there’s a criminal investigation. And the court that approves surveillance on U.S. citizens has instructed the FBI to implement new safeguards as of this week. As our intelligence agencies face what may be their biggest scrutiny in decades, we examine how we got here.

Our examination of government surveillance controversies begins in 2001. Under FBI Director Robert Mueller, new rules were imposed to address FBI abuses.

FBI Agents had repeatedly gotten caught submitting false information to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court to justify wiretapping or spying on U.S. citizens.

The new protections called “Woods Procedures” were named for the FBI official who helped devise themMichael Woods. He’s seen here testifying to Congress.

Michael Woods: There is significant public concern about the impact of surveillance activities on the privacy and civil liberties of Americans.

The Woods Procedures require the FBI, all the way to the top, to strictly verify each fact in a wiretap application. Now, eighteen years later, those very rules are back in question. More on that later.

First, we go to Salt Lake City, Utah in 2002 and a National Security Agency whistleblower named Thomas Drake. Drake said the NSA was “fine [tuning] a new scale of mass surveillance” and secretly conducted “blanket surveillance” of “virtually all electronic communications going into or out” of the area during the Winter Olympics. Intel officials denied it.

In 2009, FBI whistleblower Shamai Leibowitz stepped forward and accused intel agencies of serious constitutional violations and illegal “abuse of power.”

As the government secretly expanded its surveillance powers in the name of national security there were shades of what was later to come in 2016.

Intelligence officials began to listen in on members of Congress— sometimes political rivals— speaking with American-Jewish groups and foreign officials including Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

A senior official confessed it “raised fears [of]—an ‘Oh-[blank] moment,’—that the executive branch would be accused of spying on Congress.”

Someone illegally leaked information about private calls made by Democrats Jane Harman and Dennis Kucinich and even leaked actual recordings of Kucinich calls with Libyan officials.

Saif Gaddafi: Hello

Dennis Kucinich: Yes sir.

Gaddafi: This is Saif speaking.

Kucinich: Yes. This is Dennis.

Journalists were targeted, too. Government agents initiated secret surveillance and subpoenas against then Fox News reporter James Rosen and 20 Associated Press reporters. They also secretly hacked into and monitored my computers while I worked at CBS News.

CBS News: Someone has been breaking into the computer of our investigative correspondent Sharyl Attkisson.

An internal email by a global intelligence firm laid some blame at the feet of then Homeland Security adviser John Brennan.

“Brennan is behind the witch hunts of investigative journalists learning information from inside the beltway sources. There is specific tasker from the [White House] to go after anyone printing materials negative to the Obama agenda.”

Brennan went on to head up the CIAwhere questions continued to build. In 2014, the CIA Inspector General revealed that under Brennan, five CIA officials had improperly searched through staff emails of the Senate Intelligence Committee. Brennan had denied it — but apologized after the IG report.

John Brennan: But what I really want to do is to have as much dialogue as possible with you to have that trust can be built up.

Meantime, at a public hearing, Democrat Ron Wyden asked another top intel official, Director of National Intelligence James Clapper, about mass surveillance on innocent U.S. citizens.

Sen Ron Wyden: Director Clapper, I want to ask you about what I asked you about a year ago. Does the NSA collect any type of data at all on millions, or hundreds of millions of Americans?"

James Clapper: "No, sir."

Wyden: "It does not?"

Clapper: "Not wittingly.

Clapper’s testimony proved false. He later apologized saying he’d misunderstood the question.

It was NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden in June 2013 who blew the lid off just how massive and intrusive the government’s surveillance dragnet had grown.

Edward Snowden: You can't come forward against the world's most powerful intelligence agencies and be completely free from risk because they're such powerful adversaries that no one can meaningfully oppose them. If they want to get you, they'll get you in time.

President-elect Donald Trump received a similar warning from the Democrats’ Senate leader Chuck Schumer after Trump criticized sitting intelligence officials.

Sen. Charles Schumer: You take on the intelligence community — they have six ways from Sunday at getting back at you.”

Sure enough, Justice Department Inspector General Michael Horowitz recently concluded the FBI committed egregious errors in targeting Trump associates for investigation and surveillance during the 2016 campaign.

Donald Trump: Today is our Independence Day.

Michael Horowitz: We are deeply concerned that so many basic and fundamental errors were made by three separate, hand-picked investigative teams on one of the most sensitive FBI investigations.

On their way out, Obama officials secretly listened in on conversations between Trump officials and others including at Trump Tower.

They wiretapped former Trump campaign volunteer Carter Page as if a Russian spy.

To get the wiretap, an FBI lawyer allegedly doctored a document.

And the FBI used evidence that turned out to be unverified political opposition research bought by the Clinton campaign and delivered to the FBI and the media.

Less than two weeks before the 2016 election, the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court’s lead judge Rosemary Collyer secretly slammed Obama intel officials over a series of surveillance violations she’d just learned about. She accused the NSA of “institutional lack of candora very serious Fourth Amendment issue” and demanded fixes.

Intelligence officials deny doing anything wrong. They say their motivations were never political or to spy but to protect national security and that whenever they’ve discovered issues, they’ve taken steps to correct them.

In a speech and Congressional testimony, Trump FBI Director Christopher Wray claimed there’s never been any abuses of surveillance authority known as “702” although the court has documented numerous examples.

Christopher Wray: There’s been no evidence of any kind of abuse of power under Section 702 despite all the oversight I mentioned before, with the three branches of government and quite a few years of experience now.

In the end, those who blew the whistle on alleged government abuses paid a price. The NSA’s Thomas Drake was prosecuted for mishandling documents and made a plea deal. The FBI’s Shamai Leibowitz was prosecuted for leaking to the media.

Snowden: It’s a fear I’ll live under for the rest of my life.

And Edward Snowden is charged with three felonies in his absence from the U.S.

This story ends today back at square one where it began. According to the Inspector General’s report last month, FBI officials violated the Woods Procedures when they wiretapped Trump campaign volunteer Carter Page repeating the very mistakes the Woods Procedures were set up to avoid 15 years before.  

There’s news regarding Sharyl's computer intrusions. A former government agent who admits he took part in the illegal surveillance operation against her has now stepped forward to provide information and implicate his colleagues. He says many US citizens were illegally spied on in the same way. And a former FBI Unit Chief has also publicly confirmed he initiated the original forensics that proved the government was involved. You can read more at SharylAttkisson.com.

Watch the report by clicking the link below:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/politics/i-spy

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