“Dick Cheney Lies About Torture Working?”

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Soon after the Obama Administration successfully killed al-Qaeda leader Osama Bin Laden, Fox News and the right wing began spinning the event as a justification for the Bush Administration's so-called "enhanced interrogation techniques," including the torture method known as waterboarding, with former Vice President Dick Cheney getting a friendly interview from Fox News Sunday's Chris Wallace to spin the comments of the Obama Administration's departing CIA director, Leon Panetta, and to misstate the conclusion of a CIA report as supporting the effectiveness of torture, as I show in this video.

The clip I show of Obama Administration Counter-Terrorism Advisor John Brennan comes a longer segment of Fox News' May 3, 2011, broadcast of "Fox and Friends" available online at http://bit.ly/GitmoKey

The audio clips I use of the ACLU's Ben … more

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Wall Street Journal Tries Wikileaks v1.0 < Doesn’t Work


Is the WSJ’s WikiLeaks knockoff ready for prime time?


Posted By Charles Homans Share


WikiLeaks has caught a lot of grief from the media in the past year for its relative lack of concern for safeguarding the identities of individuals put at risk by its document dumps, so the organization is entitled to at least a small measure of Schadenfreude over the flak the Wall Street Journal has been getting today over the rollout of its own online drop box for leaked documents. The Journal site, SafeHouse, is the first of several WikiLeaks-inspired ventures that media organizations are launching (the New York Times and the Guardian, among others, have their own in the works) with the none-too-subtle aim of reaping the benefits of WikiLeaks without having to deal with its mercurial management.


But as Gawker’s Adrian Chen has reported, SafeHouse has at least a couple of bugs that would make a would-be leaker think twice about taking Rupert Murdoch over Julian Assange. The first is a legal one: Uploading documents to SafeHouse requires signing off on terms of use under which the Journal “reserve[s] the right to disclose any information about you to law enforcement authorities or to a requesting third party, without notice in order to comply with any applicable laws and/or requests under legal process, to operate our systems properly, to protect the property or rights of Dow Jones or any affiliated companies, and to safeguard the interests of others.”


In practice, this isn’t necessarily any less protection than a newspaper source would have under other circumstances in the United States — most states don’t have shield laws for journalists, and leakers basically have to take it on faith that the reporters they talk to are willing to go to jail if necessary to protect their anonymity (and reporters have a good track record of doing exactly that). All the same, it’s a little chilling to see it in writing.


The second problem is on the technical end of things. As the Atlantic‘s Alexis Madrigal reports, the Journal did build a number of safeguards into its submitting system:


SafeHouse runs on its own servers, separate from the servers that run the WSJ.com. File transfers occur through an encrypted connection and the documents themselves are encrypted, too. (Only a few Journal staffers will have the keys to unlock them.) Finally, the time that uploaded documents spend stored on computers with connections to the public Internet will be minimized by “a fairly complicated” internal document flow system.


But SafeHouse has taken a lot of heat from Internet security types on Twitter today for design flaws that make it less secure for anonymous users than the Journal suggests. Many of them have been pointed out by Internet anonymity guru Jacob Appelbaum — who, it should be noted, has worked closely with WikiLeaks for years — and are well-summarized here by Forbes‘s Andy Greenberg. Among other things, Appelbaum argues that users switching between unencrypted and encrypted versions of SafeHouse are vulnerable to programs that trick users into continuing to use the unencrypted version, rendering their data potentially accessible to third parties. None of the problems that have been pointed out are un-fixable kinks, but they’re a reminder that the buyer has to beware in the age of radical transparency.

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Confidence in God’s Providence

“We know that God causes all things to work together for good to those who love God, to those who are called according to His purpose.”
Romans 8:28

We will be better prepared for what God teaches us through trials if we have a basic understanding of His providence.

I believe it is vital that all Christians have an essential awareness of God’s providence if they want to be fully prepared to cope with life’s adversity. Providence is how He orchestrates, through natural means and processes, all things necessary to accomplish His purposes in the world. It is the most frequent way He works and controls the daily course of human events. The only other means the Lord uses to intervene in the flow of history is miracles. But He does not perform miracles in the same way now as He did during the days of Christ, the apostles, and the prophets. However, God has continuously used providence from eternity past to coordinate the infinite variety of factors necessary to accomplish His perfect purpose.

Think about it. The vast scope and endless outworking of divine providence, in which God draws together millions of details and circumstances to achieve His will each day, is a far greater miracle than the relatively uncomplicated, one-time supernatural occurrences that we usually term miracles. Belief in God’s providence is, therefore, one of the greatest exercises of faith we can have and a major contributor to our general preparedness and peace of mind as we encounter trials and hardships.

Paul trusted wholeheartedly in the providence of God, no matter how easy or challenging life was (Phil. 4:11). Joseph the patriarch stated his confidence in providence this way: “You [his brothers] meant evil against me, but God meant it for good in order to bring about this present result, to preserve many people alive” (Gen. 50:20). Until we come to a similar acceptance of God’s providential control of everything, we will not fully realize the rich lessons He wants to teach us through trials, and we will not be able to apply the truth of Romans 8:28.

Suggestions for Prayer:
Thank the Lord that His providence is always at work for your benefit. If this concept is new to you, ask Him to help you understand it better through His Word.

For Further Study:
Read more about Joseph in Genesis 39—50. Jot down some of his positive character traits. What events in the narrative were possible only because of providence?

From Strength for Today by John MacArthur Copyright © 1997. Used by permission of Crossway Books, a division of Good News Publishers, Wheaton, IL 60187, www.crossway.com.

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