• Entredropper
      Adgitize your web site.

    • open all | close all
    • Enter your Email


      Preview
      | Powered by FeedBlitz

    • Add to Technorati Faves
  • VirusHead 2003-11-21 - Get your own free Blogoversary button!
  • Rate Me on BlogHop.com!
    the best pretty good okay pretty bad the worst help?
  • Blog Catalog
  • Blog Elites
  • 2-Review
  • Blogarama
  • BlogExplosion
  • Bloggernity
  • Bloggapedia
  • BlogHop
  • VARB at BlogMad
    • DreamHost - inexpensive with tons of space and bandwidth, wordpress, jabber - lots of GOODIES and one-click installs included


  • StatCounter

    SiteMeter
  • Posts Tagged ‘suppression of information’

    Main Page – WikiThePresidency


    People For the American Way believes that “a healthy democracy is an informed democracy,” so they have created WikiThePresidency.org to establish a single place for the public to both acquire and share information about Executive Branch wrongdoings.

    It’s a Wiki, so anyone can edit the site, but there are rules. You must post factual claims (no op-eds), with links to credible supporting material. No spouting off.

    Take a look. It’s interesting reading.

    Main Page – WikiThePresidency

    Action: Release CIA Report on 9/11


    Call to Action – Release CIA Report on 9/11 – Click here to sign at WorkingforChange.com:

    “What is the Bush administration afraid of?

    Perhaps it is the CIA inspector general’s report on 9/11, completed in June of this year. The CIA will not even release it to the House intelligence committee which requested the study two years ago. When it comes to the Bush administration and accountability, the buck doesn’t stop until at least after the upcoming election, it appears. According to a report in the Los Angeles Times, the CIA report differs from all the other analyses of 9/11 in its bluntness and willingness to name specific names of high-level government officials who were missing in action before the attacks.

    In an administration that will not admit that it makes any mistakes and in which no government official has been held accountable for either the 9/11 tragedy or the Iraq misadventure, such a report must cause great alarm.
    The only legitimate reason for holding back the report is national security, yet neither our new CIA chief nor the previous acting director has used national security as an explanation for the delay, and the anonymous intelligence source cited in the Los Angeles Times backs that up: ‘It surely does not involve issues of national security.’ The CIA has even refused pleas from families who lost loved ones in 9/11.

    This pattern of suppression is nothing new. The administration fought the creation of the 9/11 Commission until shamed into supporting it by the 9/11 families.” Urge President Bush to immediately release the CIA Inspector General’s 9/11 report.

    Recent Posts:

    VirusHead is using WP-Gravatar