Glenn Greenwald reveals 5 Americans the NSA spied on

Jello Biafra

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Faisal Gill, a longtime Republican Party operative and one-time candidate for public office who held a top-secret security clearance and served in the Department of Homeland Security under President George W. Bush

:stopitslime:
Unless this dude is the deepest sleeper agent in the history of espionage they wasted a lot of time a effort spying on this guy.
 

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Did you watch the videos?

Dude says "these are the types of emails they would read from me" :beli:

huh???? :what:

Of COURSE he'd pick emails that makes him sound naive.

After the Nidal Hassan thing (and definitely before) the US Gov't was NOT trying to get caught slipping.

We need to be real here.

Being a muslim is voluntary, and they ACTIVELY engage in double-speak (look up Taqqiya) when it relates to their aims religiously.
 

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The founder of CAIR was spied on:

In 2002, al-Awlaki was the first imam to conduct a prayer service for the Congressional Muslim Staffer Association at the U.S. Capitol.[87][88] The prayers were for Muslim congressional staffers and officials for the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).

Allegations of ties to Hamas[edit]
Critics of CAIR have accused it of having past ties to Hamas. Federal Judge Jorge A. Solis said that there was evidence to show that that CAIR had an association with the Holy Land Foundation, Islamic Association for Palestine and Hamas. However, Judge Solis' acknowledged that this evidence predates the official designation of these groups as terrorist organizations.[86]

Critics of CAIR, including six members of the U.S. House of Representatives and Senate,[59][87][88] have alleged ties between the CAIR founders and Hamas. The founders, Omar Ahmad and Nihad Awad, had earlier been officers of the Islamic Association of Palestine (IAP), described by a former FBI analyst and US Treasury Department intelligence official as "intimately tied to the most senior Hamas leadership."[89] Both Ahmad and Awad participated in a meeting held in Philadelphia on October 3, 1993, that involved senior leaders of Hamas, the Holy Land Foundation (which was designated in 1995 by Executive Order, and later convicted in court, as an organization that had raised millions of dollars for Hamas), and the IAP.[90][91][92] Based on electronic surveillance of the meeting, the FBI reported that "the participants went to great length and spent much effort hiding their association with the Islamic Resistance Movement [Hamas]."[93] Participants at the meeting discussed forming a "political organization and public relations" body, "whose Islamic hue is not very conspicuous."[94] Critics also point to a July 1994 meeting identifying CAIR as one of the four U.S. organizations comprising the working organizations of the Palestine Committee of the U.S. Muslim Brotherhood, the parent organization and supporter of Hamas.[95][96][97]

The Anti-Defamation League states that CAIR's work as a civil rights organization is tainted by past links to Hamas, sometime failure to condemn terrorist organizations by name, and the presence of anti-Semites at some of its rallies.[98] Steven Emerson has accused CAIR of having a long record of propagating antisemitic propaganda.[8][99]Journalist Jake Tapper criticizes CAIR for refusing to condemn specifically Osama bin Laden and Islamic extremism, but rather making only vague and generic criticisms.[100][page needed] CAIR acknowledges that Nihad Awad declared support for Hamas in 1994. It notes that Hamas was only designated a terrorist organization in January 1995 and did not commit its first wave of suicide bombings until late 1994, after Awad made the comment.[101][102] Since then CAIR has denounced violence by Hamas, and in 2006 Nihad Awad said, "I don’t support Hamas today ... we condemn suicide bombings."[101]

As of 2007, FBI officials attended CAIR events. In 2009, Fox News said that the FBI broke off formal outreach contacts with CAIR, and shunned all of its local chapters, concerned about CAIR's ties to Hamas.[4] In 2011, the New York Times said that while the FBI and CAIR had no "formal relationship", CAIR officials and chapters worked regularly with FBI officials.[103]

Foreign funding[edit]
CAIR has an annual budget of around $3 million (as of 2007).[104] It states that while the majority of its funding comes from American Muslims, it accepts donations from individuals of any faith and also foreigners.[101] In the past CAIR has accepted donations from individuals and foundations close to Arab governments.[104] Within CAIR there is debate regarding foreign funding, and several CAIR branches have criticized the national office for accepting foreign donations.[104]

According to Zuhdi Jasser, founder of American Islamic Forum for Democracy, CAIR has received "significant Saudi financing".[105] CAIR acknowledged that it received $500,000 Library project from Saudi Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal.

In April 2011, Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va. cited a 2009 letter sent from CAIR's executive director, Nihad Awad, to Muammar Gaddafi asking Gaddafi for funding for a project called the Muslim Peace Foundation at a U.S. House of Representatives Appropriations sub-committee hearing with Robert Mueller.[106] The letter also said, in part, "I am pleased to send to Your Excellency in my name most solemn assurances of thanks and appreciation for the efforts you exert in the service of Islam, Muslims and all mankind through your initiative to teach Islam, spread the culture of Islam, and solve disputes, for which you are known internationally." Steven Emerson called the funding request "hypocritical."[107] while CAIR spokesman, Ibrahim Hooper, said that the organization didn't receive any money from the Libyan government and also that CAIR was one of the first American organizations to call for a no-fly zone[107]

Lobbying and victimology[edit]
Tawfik Hamid referred to CAIR as "perhaps the most conspicuous organization to persistently accuse opponents of Islamophobia". He criticised the way the organisation uses the "charge of 'Islamophobia' as a tool to intimidate and blackmail those ... who rightly criticize current Islamic practices and preachings", citing its lawsuit filed in theFlying imams incident.[108] Zuhdi Jasser has been stridently critical of CAIR by claiming that its agenda focused on "victimology".[105] Neuroscientist and best-selling author Sam Harris, noted mainly for his contribution to the New Atheism movement, criticized CAIR by doubting their legitimacy saying CAIR is "an Islamist public relations firm posing as a civil-rights lobby".[109]

Some Muslims criticize CAIR for taking a conservative religious approach on many issues. These critics claim that statements by the organization (for example, that all Muslim women are required to veil) often follow conservative Saudi religious doctrine and do not capture diverse religious perspectives.[110]


Oh ok :beli:
 
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sun raw

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One of the dudes is a professor at Rutgers who holds many liberal views and describes himself as an atheist

But I'm sure he's a radicalized sleeper agent listening to the numbers station and waiting from the signal from Moscow:troll:
 
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