James Clapper Still Trying To Distance Intelligence Community From The Bogus 'Foiled Plots' Metric He Came Up With
from the but-of-course dept
In the Senate Intelligence Committee hearing on Wednesday, where James Clapper effectively accused journalists who reported on the Snowden documents of being criminals, he also tried to distance himself from the fact that the NSA's surveillance activities have been basically useless. During the hearing, he attempted to claim that looking at "foiled plots" is the "wrong metric."Clapper answered by saying "it's an important tool," but he also added that "simply using the metric of plots foiled is not necessarily a way to get at the value of the program."This is not the first time he's tried this. Last year, he started claiming that "peace of mind" was the better metric. Of course, that resulted in people pointing out that it would provide a lot more "peace of mind" if the NSA weren't collecting all of our information all the time.
But there's another issue here, which is that the only reason why Clapper has to now try to distance himself from is because he and Keith Alexander made it the metric by trotting out the whole bogus 54 "terrorist events foiled" line to defend the program -- only to see that number fall apart under scrutiny to the point that it showed the bulk metadata collection had basically stopped no US terrorist plots at all.
So, sure, Clapper wants to get away from that number now. But, perhaps he should have not brought it up in the first place in trying to defend the program...
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Filed Under: foiled plots, james clapper, metrics, nsa, surveillance
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When measuring those three metrics. The bulk unconstitutional spy program is invaluable to those who are abusing it.
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Why isn't Clapper in Jail yet? Seriously, WHY isn't he in jail for perjury yet?
American only wins, when these people are in jail, and this spying program is stopped.
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Re: Why isn't Clapper in Jail yet? Seriously, WHY isn't he in jail for perjury yet?
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So whatcha wanna do?
Or will you surrender and let him finish what Osama bin Laden has started, striking the fear of terror into your hearts and giving up the freedoms and the way of life that your forefathers chose to rather die for?
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Re: So whatcha wanna do?
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Re: So whatcha wanna do?
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That'll fix everything.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: So whatcha wanna do?
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Re: So whatcha wanna do?
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Cake
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Grasping at straws
The same line was used in an old TV show-that was "Get Smart", and the Chief was smarter than Clapper is. Of course he didn't have to pretend that he was, though.
Besides the plot premise was based on spies, there's no comparison.
Our NSA makes that fictional outfit (CONTROL) look brilliant by sheer brainwave power.
According to this page,
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Get_Smart
"CONTROL has a policy of burning pertinent documents after cases are closed; the reasons were detailed in their Rules and Regulations book, but nobody can read them, since they burned the only copy."
Sounds like the NSA should have watched this show for valuable information. Otherwise they'd not be in this situation of defending their theft of our data.
They'd have gotten rid of it long before this, and Snowden would not have had anything to work with.
But you know how bureaucracy works: forms in triplicate, neatly typed, please!
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He has to maintain the message of "we do it for the terrorists", even as there are reports after reports that say the spying has been useless against that.
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What Clapper wants is no longer of interest to me. What I want is. I want Clapper out of that office and in jail. I want him in jail for the crimes of lying to congress knowingly and intentionally, and subverting the guarantees of the Constitution, which is basically part of what he is pushing here.
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Re:
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You wish...
Most of the American public will be happy to take his meandering word over that of traitors like Snowden who would mercilessly expose them to truth rather than promise them security.
So no: there is nothing to be gained by letting his lying to congress and the public continue: either will lap it up in humility and gratitude.
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Re: You wish...
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