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Wednesday, June 19, 2013

DRONE "KISSES" .............Wicked Operations by the U.S.

Would You Like To Buy a DRONE? It's Actually Sold on-line.....Too bad it doesn't deliver Love Kisses....Updated 03.21.2013....

Buy Your Own Drone! Now Only $300 Online

Apr 28, 2012 4:45 AM EDT

We don’t need to imagine the future anymore, writes Clive Stafford-Smith. In the dystopian reality of 2012, the drone can ruin your life in ways you never imagined.

The scene is easy enough to picture: In a dark, quiet room at Creech Air Force Base in Indian Springs, Nev., a CIA “pilot” leans back in his leather chair, sips coffee, and watches a computer screen. He manipulates the joystick of his video console as the camera provides a grainy image of a man with a beard who may just have noticed an angry-sounding buzz overhead. The bearded man—7,000 miles away, in a mountainous village of Waziristan—runs for shelter. This apparently indicates his guilt, and the pilot labels him a “squirter.” The pilot locks a $60,000 Hellfire missile onto his target and fires. Boom: the “squirter” becomes a “bugsplat.”

 

Earlier that morning, the pilot kissed his children goodbye, then drove to his job killing people the other side of the world. His fellow intelligence officers, all a safe distance from any physical peril, talk bravely about “killer apps” that are designed to put “warheads on foreheads.”

As the pilot leaves Creech at the end of his shift, he drives past a large road sign: “Drive Carefully! This Is the Most Dangerous Part of Your Day!”

If we have lived in the nuclear age for nearly seven decades—an era into which we were forced, without discussion, on Aug. 6, 1945—we are now entering the drone age, and nobody seems to be giving it a second thought.

Drone machismo is not confined to soldiers and special agents. President Obama recently joked that he’d use a Predator drone on anyone who messed with his daughters. In real life, he’s already approved the missiles that have killed more than one American—without trial, of course.

**

In the dystopian films of the 1980s, much of humanity had been displaced by robots, and privacy had dissolved into constant monitoring by Big Brother.

But we don’t need to imagine the future anymore, because it is here. In the dystopian reality of 2012, the drone, or unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV), has the potential to ruin your life in ways you never imagined.
Pakistani Anti-drone Protests
Pakistanis shout anti-U.S. slogans during a protest in Islamabad against U.S. drone attacks in the Pakistani tribal region. Leon Panetta has described the drones as “the only game in town.” In 2001 the Pentagon had 50 weaponized drones; today it has more than 19,000, Aamir Qureshi, AFP / Getty Images

My own experience confirms the arbitrary nature of the drone killing. Last October I met a 16-year-old kid from Waziristan named Tariq Aziz. He wanted to know what he could do to stop the Americans from raining death on his family. Three days later the CIA announced that it had eliminated “four militants.” In truth, Tariq had been driving his 12-year-old cousin to their aunt’s house when they were both blown into very small pieces. This was just 24 hours after the CIA boasted that six other militants had been killed—it turned out that they were four chromite workers who had been minding their own business until a local informant apparently tagged their car with a GPS monitor and lied about who they were to earn his fee.

The CIA insists that it has not killed an innocent civilian in Pakistan for well over a year while eliminating hundreds of terrorists. People who know better sneer at this, including Jeffrey Addicott, a former special adviser to the U.S. Army special forces. At best, Addicott wrote, we should expect three innocent deaths for every two “bad guys. In the trade, this is called the ‘Oops’ factor.”

And even that may be overly optimistic: independent data suggest that U.S. drones have killed hundreds of women and children. That should be no surprise, since the CIA is using the same forms of intelligence that landed 779 people in Guantánamo Bay, more than 80 percent of whom were subsequently shown not to be terrible terrorists. The intel the agency relies on is purchased by offering bounties to people who would sell their own grandmothers for half the price.

**

It’s been a very fast descent into the drone age. Shortly before Sept. 11, then–CIA director George Tenet said it would be “a terrible mistake” to use a weapon like the Predator. It would be illegal, for one thing, and would lose the battle for hearts and minds. At the time, the U.S. condemned Israel’s policy of assassinating Palestinians.

But that was then, and this is now. Only eight years later, Tenet’s successor, Leon Panetta, described the drones as “the only game in town.” In 2001 the Pentagon had 50 weaponized drones; today it has more than 19,000. Assassination remains illegal under U.S. law for the time being, so it’s called “targeted killing” instead.

Drones can currently circle a target for two days, but their endurance is improving exponentially. Two weeks ago, for fear of the public-relations backlash, the U.S. government announced that it was suspending plans for a nuclear-powered drone that could circle overhead for most of the next century without refueling. Meanwhile, the CIA has acquired a thermobaric weapon that creates a pressure wave that kills humans but leaves property undamaged. Apparently, the moral debate in the 1970s over the neutron bomb passed them by.

The CIA insists that it has not killed an innocent civilian in Pakistan for well over a year while eliminating hundreds of terrorists. People who know better sneer at this.

The U.S. use of drones continues to get the most coverage, but the disease is spreading like a virus. At least 40 other countries currently maintain UAV programs, although the British names are naturally far more sophisticated: the Taranis is named after the Celtic god of thunder, and Rolls-Royce is making drone engines.

They’re not just used to kill people, either. In 2009 a SWAT team in Austin, Texas, carried out the first arrest aided by a law-enforcement drone—a surveillance WASP—taking a suspected drug dealer into custody. And last year, the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, also in Texas, dropped half a million dollars on an MK-II ShadowHawk unmanned aerial system. (Half the tab was picked up by the Department of Homeland Security.)

Of the four variants of the ShadowHawk developed by Vanguard Defense Industries, only the Mark IV is specified for nonmilitary purposes—a version that the Montgomery County sheriff pointedly did not buy. The Mark II can be fitted with a taser. Given the mistakes that police officers make with tasers when standing right in front of their suspects, we might be forgiven for worrying.

**

Of course, UAVs have many potentially positive uses: they could help provide accurate information in the wake of natural disasters, they might facilitate search-and-rescue missions, and journalists may soon find themselves reporting various difficult stories—from the Japanese tsunami to the Syrian uprising—with the help of drone photography.

But still, there are few limitations on drones’ use by others. Peter Singer, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, described to Congress two years ago how a 77-year-old blind man has already flown his own homemade drone across the Atlantic. Even for those who are not amateur engineers, access to drones is so easy that I have one myself: I bought it online for $300. I thought it might be fun to get one and spy on the drone makers. There’s nothing illegal about it here in Britain. Because small drones are still considered the equivalent of radio-controlled toy airplanes, I can fly it almost anywhere I want. Even when I attach a camera, I can hover over the drone makers’ offices at 150 feet and film them to my heart’s content.

My ambitions are benign and targeted solely at getting the world’s attention, but others with more violent aims are way ahead of me. Hizbullah flew four drones in its last war with Israel. And UAVs are perfect for the distribution of germ warfare. While a ballistic missile would destroy 90 percent of the anthrax in its warhead upon impact, virtually all would survive to do untold damage if gently delivered by drone.

Even the “lawful” drones are creeping into our lives in ways we don’t realize. Already the CIA is boasting that it has a micro-UAV the size of a small pizza, invisible at night and capable of hovering soundlessly outside your window for several hours. Soon, the nano-class of drone promises to perform surveillance missions inside buildings and in confined spaces.

The current victims of drones seem to understand the future better than we do. In Pakistan, the locals refer to the drones as bangana,the Pashtun word for “wasp,” because of the buzzing sound they make, swarming overhead, seemingly beyond all human control.

Meanwhile, drone manufacturers gleefully project sales of $89 billion in the next 10 years. I paid only $300, so that leaves more than $88 billion worth of drones that will be capable of doing a lot of damage.

We need a full and open discourse on the rules that should apply to drones, or we will discover that we have sleepwalked into a nightmare.
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Take Back Your Government Americans!
alohal.
Tags: Americansabuydronedronesgovernmentwar

Replies to This Discussion

3/21/2013 Post:  DRONES IN KALAELOA..........

Fw: Military Drones Based Soon In Kalaeloa?: Confronting Hawaii's dystopian future

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pilipo
Mar 18 (3 days ago)
to John
Aloha kazoo he Hawaii au,

Mahalo piha e Ioane for his dedication for pono!

Although I lack a PhD. it amazes my intellect how Welfare is a by product of Warfare?

Even prior to the alleged 1893 overthrow of Queen Liliu' okalani, the Oceania of Hawaii and Polynesia was a floating "Playground for Military" of many Nations. Warships of armament deck with stationary and revolving deck guns have traversed in and out Honolulu Harbor even before Pearl River became Pearl Harbor, almost like weekly "Boat Day Celebration". Each showing off their threat, "don't f___ with me". I remember, my backyard and school bomb shelters with almost constant two to three feet of water, a harbor for mosquitoes and toads, while the only threat to me was Malaria and Dysentery. My first school bag other than an occasional brown paper lunch sack was a G.I. canvas olive drab bag for my very own gas mask, and who could forget beautiful Kailua Bay stranded with barbed wired and military discarded scrap iron as "Indoctrination of Threat 101"?

Since RIMPAC's successful invasion (Beachheads) at Sherwood Forest, Waimanalo Bellows or East Lanikai has become the "Training Backyard Occupation of Marine Corp Base Hawaii (MUCH)" with daily and even weekly Urban Warfare with Chinooks and occasional Osprey Assaults. The presence of Marine Tactical Warfare in "Electronic Combatant Villages" is even greater than that of WWII or the Conflicting Koreans of 1950-1954. The sounds of hovering copters are liken to spending a 6 to 8 hour "Rambo "movie at Consolidated Amusement. I don't believe the residents of Kailua or Lanikai have witnessed what is going on now in Waimanalo. The only maneuver missing thus far is Troop Movement within the Waimanalo Town and with the Homestead and Jet Fighters of Kaneohe.

But that is Warfare Tactics of yesteryears. Soon as displayed in the attached "drones near you advertisement" we of Waimanalo may become "localized" with Hawaii National Guard Technicians controlling drones upon our Backyard BBQ to make sure our Meat from Shim's Market is "USDA Approved Grade" fit for Native Hawaiian American subjects consumption. Just think of the great extension of this conquest that started with only (160) Marines of the Gunship U.S.S. Boston and 300 or less collaborating local Traitors to the Hawaiian Nation.

auwe! i ka hewa! eo, kaulana na pua!

malama ke kino,

pilipo
Hawaiian National (1936)


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Sent: Monday, March 18, 2013 11:39 AM
 
Subject: Military Drones Based Soon In Kalaeloa?: Confronting Hawaii's dystopian future

The Hawaii National Guard has already been assigned drones and
National Guard units
all over the US are getting them. The Hawaii Guard aviation group will
be moving to
Kalaeloa Airport. Turning Kalaeloa into a drone training center would
seem to be a
logical addition to the FBI, Federal BioLab transformation that is going on.

SAIC, a major drone training contractor is involved in the new NG
aviation facility now
being built at Kalaeloa...

Check out this very creepy anti-drone video:    http://vimeo.com/59689349

http://www.hawaiireporter.com/the-threat-of-domestic-drones-confron...

There are some practical concerns. For instance, a Washington Post
article from November found that poorly trained military contractors
were making repeated blunders in their operation of these aircraft,
leading to multiple crashes at highly populated airports. In other
words, this video-game-like process is leading to real dangers.

But the biggest fear involves our freedoms. We should be able to live
our lives without being constantly monitored by the authorities—unless
the authorities have a specific, court-backed reason for the
intrusion.

The Bill of Rights puts such emphasis on due process and on protecting
citizens from unwarranted search and seizure because those are the
cornerstones of a free society. The New York Times found that drone
operators at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico practice by
tracking and spying on the occupants in civilian cars driving near the
base, which is a small reminder that the government always abuses its
powers.

Emmy Award-winning newscaster Shad Olson’s ‘The Great Drone Debate’,
featuring US Senator John Thune:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ssoOASanKao

Here’s a mind-blowing, well-done animated short that really captures
our collective angst that if the road to hell is paved with good
intentions, then domestic drones are a superhighway to an Orwellian
panoptic gulag.
http://vimeo.com/59689349

For national security purposes, Americans are already subject to
warrantless wiretaps of calls and emails, the warrantless GPS
“tagging” of their vehicles, the domestic use of Predators or other
spy-in-the-sky drones, and the Department of Homeland Security’s
monitoring of all our behavior through “data fusion centers.”
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/03/ff_nsada...

William Cole    May 25, 2011

http://www.staradvertiser.com/news/20110525_hawaii_guard_gets_flock...
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NOTE:  Drones in a neutral, non-violent, friendly nation is Not O.K.........Genocide Issues ongoing by a Pirate based nation occupying our lands without authority......Wake up Americans! 
Also, see what was posted on Keanu Sai's website......he was asked to explain the history of the Hawaiian Islands:

The Names of the Cut- Throat Pirates !! Keep Your Eyes Open, Hawaiians !!

Cut- throat Pirates reported to the United Nations 
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, 
Human Rights Council Branch-Complaint Procedure Unit, 
Geneva, Switzerland, for war crimes:
Judge Glenn S. Hara

Judge Glenn S. Hara's varied legal experience includes service as a 
JAG officer in the U.S. Army and the Hawai`i National Guard, 
Deputy Attorney General with the State of Hawai`i, 
Deputy Prosecuting Attorney with the County of Hawai`i, and 
private practice in Hilo in the areas of real estate, commercial counseling and litigation, and wills, 

trusts and probate law. He has represented clients in criminal and civil cases. 
From 1982 to 1987, Judge Hara served as a per diem District Court judge.

In 2004, Governor Linda Lingle appointed Judge Hara to the Third Circuit Court.

He received his law degree from Stanford University. After graduation from law school, Judge Hara 

clerked with former Hawai`i Supreme Court Associate Justice Kazuhisa Abe.
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Leslie Kobayashi

Born:      1957
Home State:      Mount Holly, New Jersey
Bachelors:      Wellesley College, B.A., 1979
Law School:      Boston College School of Law, J.D., 1983

Leslie Emi Kobayashi (b. 1957) is an Article III federal judge for the United States District Court for 

the District of Hawaii. She was nominated to the court by Barack Obama.
Early life and education:

Judge Kobayashi received her undergraduate degree from Wellesley College in 1979 and her law 

degree from the Boston College Law School in 1983. [1][2]
Professional career:

Kobayashi served as a federal magistrate judge for the United States District Court for the District of 

Hawaii from August 2, 1999. She was reappointed in the summer of 2007 to a term that ended on 

August 2, 2015, but joined the District of Hawaii as an Article III judge on upon the receipt of her 

commission on December 22, 2010. [1][3]

Judge Kobayashi worked as a trial attorney and managing partner of the law firm Fujiyama, Duffy & 

Fujiyama for 17 years. She worked as a deputy prosecuting attorney in Honolulu before becoming a 

magistrate judge in 1999. She has also taught at the William S. Richardson School of Law (part of 

the University of Hawaii at Manoa).[1]
Judicial career:
District of Hawaii

On April 21, 2010 Kobayashi was nominated to a seat as a federal judge on the District of Hawaii by 

President Obama. She was nominated to fill the seat vacated by Helen Gillmor. [4][5][6] Kobayashi 

was confirmed to the court by the Senate on December 18, 2010. [3]

Kobayashi was rated "Well Qualified" by a substantial majority and "Qualified" by a minority of the 

American Bar Association. [7] 

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Judge Greg Nakamura, Circuit Court of the Third Circuit, State of Hawai'i
Nakamura earned a B.A. from the University of the Pacific, and a J.D. from University of the 

Hawaii.[2]
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Barbara T. Takase is a judge of the Hawai`i Third Circuit District Court of Hawaii. She was 

appointed on May 26, 2004 and her term will expire on May 25, 2016.[1][2] 
Takase earned a B.A. from the University of Hawaii, Hilo, and a J.D. from the University of Hawaii 

William S. Richardson School of Law.[2]

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Throats cut/War Crime Victims:
Elaine E. Kawasaki
Francis E. Chandler, III
Harris Bright
Kale Kepekaio Gumapac
Samson Okapua Kamakea, Sr. & Talia Pomaikai Kamakea, husband and wife
Landish K. and Robin R. Armitage, husband and wife

http://hawaiiankingdom.org/warcrimes.shtml
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