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VernonKNOLD
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Test, upright a test

Сообщение VernonKNOLD » 23 май 2020, 10:10

Edward snowden applies to extend russia stay


(07-02-2006, 07:48 AM) snowden Wrote:

I'm interested to see how this is handled with the government. Is the government in charge of the situation and do they have to agree, if not, what do they have to do

This seems like a nice, though potentially unpopular, idea. The NSA should be given the ability to spy on foreign officials and companies who hire American workers, but the government has to agree and even then there is a question of a very broad legal mandate. And as I understand it, they could be allowed to take away people's property if a foreign government wants it back, and this could be used against them in a court of law, but that's not the only thing there would be. What if an innocent woman whose husband is being monitored receives a letter in the mail from someone outside the country and he/she doesn't recognize their name and there is no way of tracking them down?

In the short term, though, it is not clear what the NSA could do with a foreign minister, attorney, or member of the Foreign Ministry, since they aren't under the surveillance of the NSA. In the long term, though, it will likely be up to American officials, who were not involved with drafting this agreement to decide.


We are now back into the real world, where I have been looking to add another one of my favorite ideas...

I would like to see the U.S. government get involved in the situation by requiring the NSA, a foreign government which has to agree to this, to implement the NSA's proposal and then require that the government's foreign partner (the government of Poland) and foreign partner (the government of Singapore) implement the NSA's proposal as well.

The NSA could be made more aware of the NSA's existence by placing a sign at their work place where they can see when someone arrives from some foreign country that has received a copy of our documents and how they got there.

The foreign countries may be able to use it as a tool to get their own people, diplomats, or any other foreign officials/companies to sign away their privacy rights to the NSA.

The NSA should have to provide copies of all the documents that have already been handed over and the NSA should be legally required to produce them, and then the NSA could be given the ability to take them back to the NSA's data center and be able to produce copies for themselves and then demand a refund of any money it costs them to do so.

If a government decides to take it further...


I would like to see the U.S. government get involved in the situation by requiring the NSA, a foreign government whic
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36 dead in baghdad blast, 14 soldiers killed and over 300 wounded in Pakistan's deadliest terrorist attack in years

Pakistan's army was today claiming responsibility for the deadly terror attack on a police academy in Karachi, killing 14 soldiers, the police and wounded more than 300 more.

The blast at the Karachi police academy left 17 dead and 22 wounded in the early hours of Wednesday morning, police sources said.

The attack came after days of protests by the protesters who demanded the police arrest the Taliban-linked Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat leader for the killings of two police officials, Aslam Ali and Iftikhar Ali Khan.

Police officials told The Express Tribune that the police officers were killed in the blasts at the police cadet training academy.

"A total of 18 police cadets were killed and 22 other police officers were injured in the blast. We are looking into the possible involvement of others who escaped." An official of the Lahore police told PTI.

The explosion also targeted two security offices that were used by the police for patrolling and searching for suspects.

As well, the injured had been taken to hospitals and police officials said that most of those that died were in critical condition. Some of the injured had been admitted to Jinnah Hospital for treatment, said a senior police official.

"There is no reason to believe that there is a connection with terror in general. The blast is a deliberate terror attack but the link to Ahle Sunnat Wal Jamaat is highly dubious," said a police official.

The blast destroyed the building of an engineering college, which is used as the training grounds for cadets. The blast also injured the head of the college and injured a doctor at one of the trauma centres in the campus, the officers said.

Another official said that the blast was a deliberate act. "The cadet school was full of cadets. If they had come to the site for their training activities, there was no point killing them, they could not have done it. So the cadet school would have been an area of safe work," the officer said.

The police and provincial government's Home Affairs department have sought to link the blast to the same group that has been blamed for earlier fatal incidents targeting cadets by militants affiliated to the Haqqani Network.

The police officers were among the security personnel who participated in the security operation that took place against the militants for the alleged murder of two police officials during the counter-terrorism operation carried out by the state security forces in the city, they said.

Published in Dawn, May 24th, 2015

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