A letter leaked by TorrentFreak in May of 2011 shows the extent to which Hollywood based firms back ACTA. Twenty-one corporations that were and are afraid of “unfair competition” penned the letter in the hope that “the European Parliament would[will] give its consent to ACTA with no further delays.” Treaties like ACTA and laws like SOPA and PIPA are the life blood of Hollywood just as taxpayer money is the life blood of Goldman Sachs. These regulations favor large, “too big to fail” corporations and banks that are scared to death of free market competition.
Police Hurl Tear Gas and Flash Grenades at Occupy Oakland Protesters
Nine-teen occupy Oakland protesters were arrested as police violently attacked occupiers with tear gas grenades, flash bang grenades, and rubber bullets. Three police officers were reportedly injured as occupiers fought back with rocks and other objects Saturday night. Hundreds of protesters marched throughout downtown Oakland causing a four-block area to be shut down by Oakland [...]
ACTA Explained: The treaty that lets Customs search your iPod
Before Wikileaks disclosed several documents regarding the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), the entire treaty was veiled behind a curtain of secrecy, while little was known about the negotiation process. In September of 2008, the Bush administration refused to release information related to ACTA and more recently in March 2009, the Obama administration classified ACTA related [...]
Goodbye Bill of Rights, Obama Signs NDAA
To no one’s surprise, President Obama signed the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) tonight–a great way to start off the new year! Immediately after the House of Representatives passed it on a vote of 283-136, Obama signaled that the bill would be signed in the coming weeks. This deplorable act of treason only serves to [...]
Romney & Gingrich: The Draft Dodgers That Want to Send Your Kids to War
When it came time for Mitt Romney and Newt Gingrich to serve in the armed forces during the Vietnam War in the 1960s, both Presidential candidates weaseled out of their duty to “serve their country”. Now they espouse hawkish rhetoric, vehemently back the occupation of Afghanistan, think it was a mistake to pull combat troops [...]
Americans Can be Transferred to Foreign Prisons Under NDAA
If you thought the clause in the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA), which now allows for the indefinite detention of American citizens, was the most egregious violation of your Constitutional rights, think again. A section of the NDAA that isn’t receiving the much due attention it rightfully should is even more dangerous and far more [...]
ACTA Explained: The treaty that lets Customs search your iPod
Before Wikileaks disclosed several documents regarding the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA), the entire treaty was veiled behind a curtain of secrecy, while little was known about the negotiation process. In September of 2008, the Bush administration refused to release information related to ACTA and more recently in March 2009, the Obama administration classified ACTA related documents and stated that their release would be a threat to “national security”. Many, many Freedom of Information Act requested were denied. Over in Canada, a document with only the title of the treaty was released after the University of Ottowa filed a request, while the rest of the document was blacked out. In November of 2008, the EU Council denied a Foundation for Free Information Infrastructure appeal for information related to ACTA stating, “disclosure of this information could impede the proper conduct of the negotiations, would weaken the position of the European Union in these negotiations and might affect relations with the third parties concerned”.
Unlike SOPA and PIPA, ACTA is obviously not a bill and calling your legislators about it will, at this point, be meaningless since it was already ratified by President Obama in October 2010. Even though Congress has the Constitutional authority to ratify a treaty and several members of Senate like Ron Wyden have complained about ACTA, the Obama administration is referring to ACTA as an “executive agreement”. The argument that calling Senators specifically and reminding them of checks and balances could be made.
“But regardless of whether the agreement requires changes in U.S. law…the executive branch lacks constitutional authority to enter a binding international agreement covering issues delegated by the Constitution to Congress’ authority, absent congressional approval.” – Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR)
How ACTA will affect you
The sheer absurdity of ACTA lies very little in its clandestine negotiation process. ACTA’s usurpation of the domestic laws of all of its signers results in massive violations of the civil liberties of the citizens of those nations.
- Customs officials at airports, border check points, and various other locations will now be able to, under “international law”, search through your MP3 players, laptops, iPads, cell phones, and a host of other devices in order to find violations of copyright law and intellectual property theft. This means that customs agents will sift through your iPod playlist for illegally downloaded music and through your laptop for illegally downloaded movies.
- Internet Service Providers (ISPs) are immune from legal action for invasions of privacy, which will occur under ACTA. ISPs will be able to release your web browsing records to governments and corporations–both foreign and domestic–leaving their customers helpless against this gross violation of their privacy.
- ACTA would criminalize violations that are currently considered civil or monetary violations. Instead of going to civil court for downloading a new song and facing thousands of dollars in fines, you are now facing hard prison time.
- If your iPhone has been jailbroken, you’re a criminal.
- Are you a farmer or someone concerned about corporate patenting of organisms? Well, Monsanto’s lawsuits against poor farmers now have international legal backing. If you haven’t heard already, Monsanto has been patenting seeds and suing farmers who have had their genetically-modified seed blow into their patch of land.
ACTA would create unduly harsh legal standards that do not reflect contemporary principles of democratic government, free market exchange, or civil liberties. – Aaron Shaw, research fellow @ Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society
Rand Paul Detained by the TSA
According to a post on his Facebook page, Senator Rand Paul has been detained by the Transportation Security Agency(TSA) for refusing to be patted down. The Kentucky Senator was detained at an airport in Nashville as he was heading to Washington DC to speak at the March for Life this afternoon.
Rand Paul
Senator Paul is being detained at the Nashville Airport by the TSA. We will update you as the situation develops.
Jon Huntsman Drops Out of GOP Race, Ron Paul Scores Major SC Endorsement
After literally moving to New Hampshire and losing the 2012 New Hampshire Republican Primary to Mitt Romney and Ron Paul, Jon Huntsman exclaimed that he would continue his campaign. Now, 5 days after the NH primary, Huntsman had reportedly told his advisers that he is ready to quit. A third place finish with 17% of the vote wasn’t quite enough to help Huntsman in the polls in South Carolina where he remains at around 5%.
According to the New York Times, Jon Huntsman will soon be endorsing Mitt Romney, who was already the second choice among the majority of Huntsman supporters in South Carolina. The move by Huntsman leaves Rick Perry, Rick Santorum, Newt Gingrich, Mitt Romney, and Ron Paul as the final five contenders for the GOP nomination.
Another major announcement was made in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina where South Carolina State Senator Tom Davis endorsed Ron Paul. Davis, in South Carolina, is only second to Jim DeMint as far as the standard for fiscal conservatism goes. The Paul campaign hopes that the endorsement by Davis will help secure a strong finish in the upcoming primary.



