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presence
09-14-2013, 08:20 AM
“Everybody wanted to sit in the chair at least once to pretend he was Jean-Luc Picard,”
says a retired officer in charge of VIP visits. (http://www.neowin.net/news/report-reveals-nsa-director-keith-alexander-replicated-a-war-room-after-star-treks-starship-enterprise)

http://assets.diylol.com/hfs/41c/b93/f04/resized/captain-picard-real-meme-generator-hawke-maximum-warp-stuff-just-got-real-58b551.jpeg?1350495271.jpg
How did the National Security Administration sell Congress on its controversial spying program?

Apparently by building a replica of the U.S.S. Enterprise bridge...
and letting lawmakers sit in the big chair and "play Picard."





As Foreign Policy's profile of the NSA's general Keith Alexander (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/09/08/the_cowboy_of_the_nsa_keith_alexander?page=full) explains: When he was running the Army's Intelligence and Security Command, Alexander brought many of his future allies down to Fort Belvoir for a tour of his base of operations, a facility known as the Information Dominance Center. It had been designed by a Hollywood set designer to mimic the bridge of the starship Enterprise from Star Trek, complete with chrome panels, computer stations, a huge TV monitor on the forward wall, and doors that made a "whoosh" sound when they slid open and closed. Lawmakers and other important officials took turns sitting in a leather "captain's chair" in the center of the room and watched as Alexander, a lover of science-fiction movies, showed off his data tools on the big screen. "Everybody wanted to sit in the chair at least once to pretend he was Jean-Luc Picard," says a retired officer in charge of VIP visits. Alexander wowed members of Congress with his eye-popping command center. And he took time to sit with them in their offices and explain the intricacies of modern technology in simple, plain-spoken language. He demonstrated a command of the subject without intimidating those who had none. Read the whole fascinating profile over at Foreign Policy. (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/09/08/the_cowboy_of_the_nsa_keith_alexander?page=full) [via BoingBoing (http://boingboing.net/2013/09/09/replica-enterprise-br.html)]

Update: I found what appears to be a picture of the Information Dominance Center, although I'm not sure if this is the version that was designed to look like the Enterprise. Here it is, via DBI Architects (http://www.dbia.com/portfolio/us-army/):


http://img.gawkerassets.com/img/1902cencpn588jpg/ku-xlarge.jpg


Expand Update #2: Someone pointed out that this was actually the Army's Intelligence and Security Command, when Alexander was running it — so this was prior to him joining the NSA, although he was in fact using a Star Trek "Enterprise" bridge to sell Congress on surveillance schemes. Sorry about the mixup. Discuss (http://io9.com/posts/1309661303/reply)







sorry for lack of formatting, text grabs are a challenge/hack from payperview foreignpolicy.com; unformatted block text was all I could score... op still manifesting






http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/09/08/the_cowboy_of_the_nsa_keith_alexander?page=full




The Cowboy of the NSA

(http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/09/08/the_cowboy_of_the_nsa_keith_alexander) Inside Gen. Keith Alexander's all-out, barely-legal drive to build the ultimate spy machine.

BY SHANE HARRIS | SEPTEMBER 9, 2013

http://www.foreignpolicy.com/files/images/170801141.jpg


On Aug. 1, 2005, Lt. Gen. Keith Alexander reported for duty as the 16th director of the National Security Agency, the United States' largest intelligence organization. He seemed perfect for the job. Alexander was a decorated Army intelligence officer and a West Point graduate with master's degrees (http://www.nsa.gov/about/leadership/bio_alexander.shtml) in systems technology and physics. He had run intelligence operations in combat and had held successive senior-level positions, most recently as the director of an Army intelligence organization and then as the service's overall chief of intelligence. He was both a soldier and a spy, and he had the heart of a tech geek. Many of his peers thought Alexander would make a perfect NSA director. But one prominent person thought otherwise: the prior occupant of that office.


(http://www.addthis.com/bookmark.php?v=20) Air Force Gen. Michael Hayden had been running the NSA since 1999, through the 9/11 terrorist attacks and into a new era that found the global eavesdropping agency increasingly focused on Americans' communications inside the United States. At times, Hayden had found himself swimming in the murkiest depths of the law, overseeing programs that other senior officials in government thought violated the Constitution. Now Hayden of all people was worried that Alexander didn't understand the legal sensitivities of that new mission. "Alexander tended to be a bit of a cowboy: 'Let's not worry about the law. Let's just figure out how to get the job done,'" says a former intelligence official who has worked with both men. "That caused General Hayden some heartburn." The heartburn first flared up not long after the 2001 terrorist attacks. Alexander was the general in charge of the Army's Intelligence and Security Command (INSCOM) at Fort Belvoir, Virginia. He began insisting that the NSA give him raw, unanalyzed data about suspected terrorists from the agency's massive digital cache, according to three former intelligence officials. Alexander had been building advanced data-mining software and analytic tools, and now he wanted to run them against the NSA's intelligence caches to try to find terrorists who were in the United States or planning attacks on the homeland. By law, the NSA had to scrub intercepted communications of most references to U.S. citizens before those communications can be shared with other agencies. But Alexander wanted the NSA "to bend the pipe towards him," says one of the former officials, so that he could siphon off metadata, the digital records of phone calls and email traffic that can be used to map out a terrorist organization based on its members' communications patterns.

"Keith wanted his hands on the raw data. And he bridled at the fact that NSA didn't want to release the information until it was properly reviewed and in a report," says a former national security official. "He felt that from a tactical point of view, that was often too late to be useful." Hayden thought Alexander was out of bounds. INSCOM was supposed to provide battlefield intelligence for troops and special operations forces overseas, not use raw intelligence to find terrorists within U.S. borders. But Alexander had a more expansive view of what military intelligence agencies could do under the law.


"He said at one point that a lot of things aren't clearly legal,
but that doesn't make them illegal,"


says a former military intelligence officer who served under Alexander at INSCOM. In November 2001, the general in charge of all Army intelligence had informed his personnel, including Alexander, that the military had broad authority to collect and share information about Americans, so long as they were "reasonably believed to be engaged" in terrorist activities, the general wrote in a widely distributed (http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/army/uspersons.html) memo (http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/army/uspersons.html). The general didn't say how exactly to make this determination, but it was all the justification Alexander needed. "Hayden's attitude was 'Yes, we have the technological capability, but should we use it?' Keith's was


'We have the capability, so let's use it,'"


says the former intelligence official who worked with both men. Hayden denied Alexander's request for NSA data. And there was some irony in that decision. At the same time, Hayden was overseeing a highly classified program to monitor Americans' phone records and Internet communications without permission from a court. At least one component of that secret domestic spying program would later prompt senior Justice Department officials to threaten resignation because they thought it was illegal. But that was a presidentially authorized program run by a top-tier national intelligence agency. Alexander was a midlevel general who seemed to want his own domestic spying operation. Hayden was so troubled that he reported Alexander to his commanding general, a former colleague says.

"He didn't use that atomic word -- 'insubordination'
-- but he danced around it."

The showdown over bending the NSA's pipes was emblematic of Alexander's approach to intelligence, one he has honed over the course of a 39-year military career and deploys today as the director of the country's most powerful spy agency. Alexander wants as much data as he can get. And he wants to hang on to it for as long as he can. To prevent the next terrorist attack, he thinks he needs to be able to see entire networks of communications and also go "back in time (http://edition.cnn.com/2013/06/12/politics/nsa-terror-hearing)," as he has said publicly, to study how terrorists and their networks evolve. To find the needle in the haystack, he needs the entire haystack. "Alexander's strategy is the same as Google's: I need to get all of the data," says a former administration official who worked with the general. "If he becomes the repository for all that data, he thinks the resources and authorities will follow."

That strategy has worked well for Alexander. He has served longer than any director in the NSA's history, and today he stands atop a U.S. surveillance empire in which signals intelligence (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signals_intelligence), the agency's specialty, is the coin of the realm. In 2010, he became the first commander of the newly created U.S. Cyber Command, making him responsible for defending military computer networks against spies, hackers, and foreign armed forces -- and for fielding a new generation of cyberwarriors trained to penetrate adversaries' networks. Fueled by a series of relentless and increasingly revealing leaks from former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, the full scope of Alexander's master plan is coming to light.

Today, the agency is routinely scooping up and storing Americans' phone records (http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/06/10/prism_isn_t_the_scariest_part_of_the_nsa_revelatio ns_phone_metadata). It is screening (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/08/08/us/broader-sifting-of-data-abroad-is-seen-by-nsa.html?pagewanted=1&_r=1&hp) their emails and text messages, even though the spy agency can't always tell the difference (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/06/27/the_nsa_cant_tell_the_difference_between_an_americ an_and_a_foreigner) between an innocent American and a foreign terrorist. The NSA uses corporate proxies to monitor up to 75 percent (http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887324108204579022874091732470.html) of Internet traffic inside the United States. And it has spent billions of dollars on a secret campaign to foil (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/09/06/us/nsa-foils-much-internet-encryption.html?pagewanted=all) encryption (http://killerapps.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/09/05/internet_encryption_guru_on_nsa_codebreak_revelati ons_were_outmatched) technologies that individuals, corporations, and governments around the world had long thought protected the privacy of their communications from U.S. intelligence agencies. The NSA was already a data behemoth when Alexander took over. But under his watch, the breadth, scale, and ambition of its mission have expanded beyond anything ever contemplated by his predecessors.

In 2007, the NSA began collecting information from Internet and technology companies under the so-called PRISM program. In essence, it was a pipes-bending operation. The NSA gets access to the companies' raw data--including e-mails, video chats, and messages sent through social media--and analysts then mine it for clues about terrorists and other foreign intelligence subjects. Similar to how Alexander wanted the NSA to feed him with intelligence at INSCOM, now some of the world's biggest technology companies -- including Google, Microsoft, Facebook, and Apple -- are feeding the NSA. But unlike Hayden, the companies cannot refuse Alexander's advances. The PRISM program operates under a legal regime, put in place a few years after Alexander arrived at the NSA, that allows the agency to demand broad categories of information from technology companies. Never in history has one agency of the U.S. government had the capacity, as well as the legal authority, to collect and store so much electronic information.

Leaked NSA documents show the agency sucking up data from approximately 150 collection sites (http://www.documentcloud.org/documents/743252-nsa-pdfs-redacted-ed.html#document/p1) on six continents. The agency estimates that 1.6 percent (http://www.nsa.gov/public_info/_files/speeches_testimonies/2013_08_09_the_nsa_story.pdf) of all data on the Internet flows through its systems on a given day -- an amount of information about 50 percent larger (http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2013/08/the-1-6-percent-of-the-internet-that-nsa-touches-is-bigger-than-it-seems/) than what Google processes in the same period. When Alexander arrived, the NSA was secretly investing in experimental databases to store these oceans of electronic signals and give analysts access to it all in as close to real time as possible. Under his direction, it has helped pioneer new methods of massive storage and retrieval. That has led to a data glut.

The agency has collected so much information that it ran out of storage capacity at its 350-acre headquarters at Fort Meade, Maryland, outside Washington, D.C. At a cost of more than $2 billion, it has built a new processing facility in the Utah desert, and it recently broke ground (http://slashdot.org/topic/datacenter/nsa-building-massive-datacenter-in-maryland/) on a complex in Maryland. There is a line item in the NSA's budget just for research on (http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/black-budget-summary-details-us-spy-networks-successes-failures-and-objectives/2013/08/29/7e57bb78-10ab-11e3-8cdd-bcdc09410972_story_4.html) "coping with information overload." Yet it's still not enough for Alexander, who has proposed installing the NSA's surveillance equipment on the networks of defense contractors, banks, and other organizations deemed essential to the U.S. economy or national security. Never has this intelligence agency -- whose primary mission is espionage, stealing secrets from other governments -- proposed to become the electronic watchman of American businesses.

This kind of radical expansion shouldn't come as a surprise. In fact, it's a hallmark of Alexander's career.

During the Iraq war, for example, he pioneered a suite of real-time intelligence analysis tools that aimed to scoop up every phone call, email, and text message in the country in a search for terrorists and insurgents. Military and intelligence officials say it provided valuable insights that helped turn the tide of the war. It was also unprecedented in its scope and scale. He has transferred that architecture to a global scale now, and with his responsibilities at Cyber Command, he is expanding his writ into the world of computer network defense and cyber warfare. As a result, the NSA has never been more powerful, more pervasive, and more politically imperiled. The same philosophy that turned Alexander into a giant -- acquire as much data from as many sources as possible -- is now threatening to undo him.

Alexander today finds himself in the unusual position of having to publicly defend once-secret programs and reassure Americans that the growth (http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/black-budget-summary-details-us-spy-networks-successes-failures-and-objectives/2013/08/29/7e57bb78-10ab-11e3-8cdd-bcdc09410972_story.html) of his agency, which employs more than 35,000 people, is not a cause for alarm. In July, the House of Representatives almost approved a law to constrain the NSA's authorities -- the closest Congress has come to reining in the agency since the 9/11 attacks. That narrow defeat for surveillance opponents has set the stage for a Supreme Court ruling on whether metadata -- the information Alexander has most often sought about Americans -- should be afforded protection under the Fourth Amendment (http://www.archives.gov/exhibits/charters/bill_of_rights_transcript.html)'s prohibition against "unreasonable searches and seizures," which would make metadata harder for the government to acquire.

Alexander declined Foreign Policy's request for an interview, but in response to questions about his leadership, his respect for civil liberties, and the Snowden leaks, he provided a written statement. "The missions of NSA and USCYBERCOM are conducted in a manner that is lawful, appropriate, and effective, and under the oversight of all three branches of the U.S. government," Alexander stated. "Our mission is to protect our people and defend the nation within the authorities granted by Congress, the courts and the president. There is an ongoing investigation into the damage sustained by our nation and our allies because of the recent unauthorized disclosure of classified material. Based on what we know to date, we believe these disclosures have caused significant and irreversible harm to the security of the nation." In lieu of an interview about his career, Alexander's spokesperson recommended a laudatory profile about him that appeared in West Point magazine. It begins: "At key moments throughout its history, the United States has been fortunate to have the right leader -- someone with an ideal combination of rare talent and strong character -- rise to a position of great responsibility in public service. With General Keith B. Alexander ... Americans are again experiencing this auspicious state of affairs."

Lawmakers and the public are increasingly taking a different view. They are skeptical about what Alexander has been doing with all the data he's collecting -- and why he's been willing to push the bounds of the law to get it. If he's going to preserve his empire, he'll have to mount the biggest charm offensive of his career. Fortunately for him, Alexander has spent as much time building a political base of power as a technological one. * * *

Those who know Alexander say he is introspective, self-effacing, and even folksy. He's fond of corny jokes and puns and likes to play pool, golf, and Bejeweled Blitz (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/bejeweled-blitz/id469960709?mt=8), the addictive puzzle game, on which he says he routinely scores more than 1 million points. Alexander is also as skilled a Washington knife fighter as they come. To get the NSA job, he allied himself with the Pentagon brass, most notably Donald Rumsfeld, who distrusted Hayden and thought he had been trying to buck the Pentagon's control of the NSA. Alexander also called on all the right committee members on Capitol Hill, the overseers and appropriators who hold the NSA's future in their hands. When he was running the Army's Intelligence and Security Command, Alexander brought many of his future allies down to Fort Belvoir for a tour of his base of operations, a facility known as the Information Dominance Center.


It had been designed by a Hollywood set designer to mimic the bridge of the starship (http://www.nbcnews.com/science/get-set-again-man-star-trek-enterprise-bridge-6C9658696)Enterprise (http://www.nbcnews.com/science/get-set-again-man-star-trek-enterprise-bridge-6C9658696) from Star Trek,


complete with chrome panels, computer stations, a huge TV monitor on the forward wall, and doors that made a "whoosh" sound when they slid open and closed. Lawmakers and other important officials took turns sitting in a leather "captain (http://www.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTRDoc?AD=ADA468421)'s chair (http://www.dtic.mil/cgi-bin/GetTRDoc?AD=ADA468421)" in the center of the room and watched as Alexander, a lover of science-fiction movies, showed off his data tools on the big screen. "Everybody wanted to sit in the chair at least once to pretend he was Jean-Luc Picard (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Luc_Picard)," says a retired officer in charge of VIP visits. Alexander wowed members of Congress with his eye-popping command center. And he took time to sit with them in their offices and explain the intricacies of modern technology in simple, plain-spoken language. He demonstrated a command of the subject without intimidating those who had none. "Alexander is 10 times the political general as David Petraeus," says the former administration official, comparing the NSA director to a man who was once considered a White House contender. "He could charm the paint off a wall." Alexander has had to muster every ounce of that political savvy since the Snowden leaks started coming in June. In closed-door briefings, members of Congress have accused him of deceiving them about how much information he has been collecting on Americans. Even when lawmakers have screamed at him from across the table, Alexander has remained "unflappable," says a congressional staffer who has sat in on numerous private briefings since the Snowden leaks. Instead of screaming back, he reminds lawmakers about all the terrorism plots that the NSA has claimed to help foil. "He is well aware that he will be criticized if there's another attack," the staffer says. "He has said many times, 'My job is to protect the American people. And I have to be perfect.'" There's an implied threat in that statement. If Alexander doesn't get all the information he wants, he cannot do his job. "He never says it explicitly, but the message is, 'You don't want to be the one to make me miss,'" says the former administration official. "You don't want to be the one that denied me these capabilities before the next attack." Alexander has a distinct advantage over most, if not all, intelligence chiefs in the government today: He actually understands the multibillion-dollar technical systems that he's running. "When he would talk to our engineers, he would get down in the weeds as far as they were. And he'd understand what they were talking about," says a former NSA official. In that respect, he had a leg up on Hayden, who colleagues say is a good big-picture thinker but lacks the geek gene that Alexander was apparently born with. "He looked at the technical aspects of the agency more so than any director I've known," says Richard "Dickie" George, who spent 41 years at the NSA and retired as the technical director of the Information Assurance Directorate. "I get the impression he would have been happy being one of those guys working down in the noise," George said, referring to the front-line technicians and analysts working to pluck signals out of the network. Alexander, 61, has been a techno-spy since the beginning of his military career. After graduating from West Point in 1974, he went to West Germany, where he was initiated in the dark arts of signals intelligence. Alexander spent his time eavesdropping on military communications emanating from East Germany and Czechoslovakia. He was interested in the mechanics that supported this brand of espionage. He rose quickly through the ranks. "It's rare to get a commander who understands technology," says a former Army officer who served with Alexander in 1995, when Alexander was in charge of the 525th Military Intelligence Brigade at Fort Bragg, North Carolina. "Even then he was into big data. You think of the wizards as the guys who are in their 20s." Alexander was 42 at the time. At the turn of the century, Alexander took the big- (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/08/big_data)data approach (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2012/10/08/big_data) to counterterrorism. How well that method worked continues to be a matter of intense debate. Surely discrete interceptions of terrorists' phone calls and emails have helped disrupt plots and prevent attacks. But huge volumes of data don't always help catch potential plotters. Sometimes, the drive for more data just means capturing more ordinary people in the surveillance driftnet. When he ran INSCOM and was horning in on the NSA's turf, Alexander was fond of building charts that showed how a suspected terrorist was connected to a much broader network of people via his communications or the contacts in his phone or email account. "He had all these diagrams showing how this guy was connected to that guy and to that guy," says a former NSA official who heard Alexander give briefings on the floor of the Information Dominance Center. "Some of my colleagues and I were skeptical. Later, we had a chance to review the information. It turns out that all [that] those guys were connected to were pizza shops." A retired military officer who worked with Alexander also describes a "massive network chart" that was purportedly about al Qaeda and its connections in Afghanistan. Upon closer examination, the retired officer says, "We found there was no data behind the links. No verifiable sources. We later found out that a quarter of the guys named on the chart had already been killed in Afghanistan." Those network charts have become more massive now that Alexander is running the NSA. When analysts try to determine if a particular person is engaged in terrorist activity, they may look at the communications of people who are as many as three (http://killerapps.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2013/07/17/3_degrees_of_separation_is_enough_to_have_you_watc hed_by_the_nsa) steps, or "hops," removed from the original target. This means that even when the NSA is focused on just one individual, the number of people who are being caught up in the agency's electronic nets could easily be in the tens of millions. According to an internal audit (http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/nsa-broke-privacy-rules-thousands-of-times-per-year-audit-finds/2013/08/15/3310e554-05ca-11e3-a07f-49ddc7417125_story.html), the agency's surveillance operations have been beset by human error (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/08/16/spying_blind_nsa_intelligence) and fooled by moving targets. After the NSA's legal authorities were expanded and the PRISM program was implemented, the agency inadvertently collected Americans' communications thousands of times each year, between 2008 and 2012, in violation of privacy rules and the law. Yet the NSA still pursued a counterterrorism strategy that relies on ever-bigger data sets. Under Alexander's leadership, one of the agency's signature analysis tools was a digital graph that showed how hundreds, sometimes thousands, of people, places, and events were connected to each other. They were displayed as a tangle of dots and lines. Critics called it the BAG -- for "big ass graph" -- and said it produced very few useful leads. CIA officials in charge of tracking overseas terrorist cells were particularly unimpressed by it. "I don't need this," a senior CIA officer working on the agency's drone program once told an NSA analyst who showed up with a big, nebulous graph. "I just need you to tell me whose ass to put a Hellfire missile on." Given his pedigree, it's unsurprising that Alexander is a devotee of big data. "It was taken as a given for him, as a career intelligence officer, that more information is better," says another retired military officer. "That was ingrained." But Alexander was never alone in his obsession. An obscure civilian engineer named James Heath has been a constant companion for a significant portion of Alexander's career. More than any one person, Heath influenced how the general went about building an information empire. Several former intelligence officials who worked with Heath described him as Alexander's "mad scientist." Another called him the NSA director's "evil genius." For years, Heath, a brilliant but abrasive technologist, has been in charge of making Alexander's most ambitious ideas a reality; many of the controversial data-mining tools that Alexander wanted to use against the NSA's raw intelligence were developed by Heath, for example. "He's smart, crazy, and dangerous. He'll push the technology to the limits to get it to do what he wants," says a former intelligence official. Heath has followed Alexander from post to post, but he almost always stays in the shadows. Heath recently retired from government service as the senior science advisor to the NSA director -- Alexander's personal tech guru. "The general really looked to him for advice," says George, the former technical director. "Jim didn't mind breaking some eggs to make an omelet. He couldn't do that on his own, but General Alexander could. They brought a sense of needing to get things done. They were a dynamic duo." Precisely where Alexander met Heath is unclear. They have worked together since at least 1995, when Alexander commanded the 525th Military Intelligence Brigade and Heath was his scientific sidekick. "That's where Heath took his first runs at what he called 'data visualization,' which is now called 'big data,'" says a retired military intelligence officer. Heath was building tools that helped commanders on the field integrate information from different sensors -- reconnaissance planes, satellites, signals intercepts -- and "see" it on their screens. Later, Heath would work with tools that showed how words in a document or pages on the Internet were linked together, displaying those connections in the form of three-dimensional maps and graphs. At the Information Dominance Center, Heath built a program called the "automatic ingestion manager." It was a search engine for massive sets of data, and in 1999, he started taking it for test runs on the Internet. In one experiment, the retired officer says, the ingestion manager searched for all web pages linked to the website of the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). Those included every page on the DIA's site, and the tool scoured and copied them so aggressively that it was mistaken for a hostile cyberattack. The site's automated defenses kicked in and shut it down. On another occasion, the searching tool landed on an anti-war website while searching for information about the conflict in Kosovo. "We immediately got a letter from the owner of the site wanting to know why was the military spying on him," the retired officer says. As far as he knows, the owner took no legal action against the Army, and the test run was stopped. Those experiments with "bleeding-edge" technology, as the denizens of the Information Dominance Center liked to call it, shaped Heath and Alexander's approach to technology in spy craft. And when they ascended to the NSA in 2005, their influence was broad and profound. "These guys have propelled the intelligence community into big data," says the retired officer. Heath was at Alexander's side for the expansion of Internet surveillance under the PRISM program. Colleagues say it fell largely to him to design technologies that tried to make sense of all the new information the NSA was gobbling up. But Heath had developed a reputation for building expensive systems that never really work as promised and then leaving them half-baked in order to follow Alexander on to some new mission. "He moved fairly fast and loose with money and spent a lot of it," the retired officer says. "He doubled the size of the Information Dominance Center and then built another facility right next door to it. They didn't need it. It's just what Heath and Alexander wanted to do." The Information Operations Center, as it was called, was underused and spent too much money, says the retired officer. "It's a center in search of a customer." Heath's reputation followed him to the NSA. In early 2010, weeks after a young al Qaeda terrorist with a bomb sewn into his underwear tried to bring down a U.S. airliner over Detroit on Christmas Day, the director of national intelligence, Dennis Blair, called for a new tool that would help the disparate intelligence agencies better connect the dots about terrorism plots. The NSA, the State Department, and the CIA each had possessed fragments of information about the so-called underwear bomber's intentions, but there had been no dependable mechanism for integrating them all and providing what one former national security official described as "a quick-reaction capability" so that U.S. security agencies would be warned about the bomber before he got on the plane. Blair put the NSA in charge of building this new capability, and the task eventually fell to Heath. "It was a complete disaster," says the former national security official, who was briefed on the project. "Heath's approach was all based on signals intelligence [the kind the NSA routinely collects] rather than taking into account all the other data coming in from the CIA and other sources. That's typical of Heath. He's got a very narrow viewpoint to solve a problem." Like other projects of Heath's, the former official says, this one was never fully implemented. As a result, the intelligence community still didn't have a way to stitch together clues from different databases in time to stop the next would-be bomber. Heath -- and Alexander -- moved on to the next big project. "There's two ways of looking at these guys," the retired military officer says. "Two visionaries who took risks and pushed the intelligence community forward. Or as two guys who blew a monumental amount of money." As immense as the NSA's mission has become -- patrolling the world's data fields in search of terrorists, spies, and computer hackers -- it is merely one phase of Alexander's plan. The NSA's primary mission is to protect government systems and information. But under his leadership, the agency is also extending its reach into the private sector in unprecedented ways. Toward the end of George W. Bush's administration, Alexander helped persuade Defense Department officials to set up a computer network defense project to prevent foreign intelligence agencies --mainly China's -- from stealing weapons plans and other national secrets from government contractors' computers. Under the Defense Industrial Base initiative, also known as the DIB, the NSA provides the companies with intelligence about the cyberthreats it's tracking. In return, the companies report back about what they see on their networks and share intelligence with each other. Pentagon officials say the program has helped stop some cyber-espionage. But many corporate participants say Alexander's primary motive has not been to share what the NSA knows about hackers. It's to get intelligence from the companies -- to make them the NSA's digital scouts. What is billed as an information-sharing arrangement has sometimes seemed more like a one-way street, leading straight to the NSA's headquarters at Fort Meade. "We wanted companies to be able to share information with each other," says the former administration official, "to create a picture about the threats against them. The NSA wanted the picture." After the DIB was up and running, Alexander proposed going further. "He wanted to create a wall around other sensitive institutions in America, to include financial institutions, and to install equipment to monitor their networks," says the former administration official. "He wanted this to be running in every Wall Street bank." That aspect of the plan has never been fully implemented, largely due to legal concerns. If a company allowed the government to install monitoring equipment on its systems, a court could decide that the company was acting as an agent of the government. And if surveillance were conducted without a warrant or legitimate connection to an investigation, the company could be accused of violating the Fourth Amendment. Warrantless surveillance can be unconstitutional regardless of whether the NSA or Google or Goldman Sachs is doing it. "That's a subtle point, and that subtlety was often lost on NSA," says the former administration official. "Alexander has ignored that Fourth Amendment concern." The DIB experiment was a first step toward Alexander's taking more control over the country's cyberdefenses, and it was illustrative of his assertive approach to the problem. "He was always challenging us on the defensive side to be more aware and to try and find and counter the threat," says Tony Sager, who was the chief operating officer for the NSA's Information Assurance Directorate, which protects classified government information and computers. "He wanted to know, 'Who are the bad guys? How do we go after them?'" While it's a given that the NSA cannot monitor the entire Internet on its own and that it needs intelligence from companies, Alexander has questioned whether companies have the capacity to protect themselves. "What we see is an increasing level of activity on the networks," he said (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/06/general-keith-alexander-cyberwar/all/) recently at a security conference in Canada. "I am concerned that this is going to break a threshold where the private sector can no longer handle it and the government is going to have to step in." * * * Now, for the first time in Alexander's career, Congress and the general public are expressing deep misgivings about sharing information with the NSA or letting it install surveillance equipment. A Rasmussen poll of likely voters taken in June found that 68 percent (http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/general_politics/june_2013/despite_obama_s_assurance_68_think_it_s_likely_gov _t_listening_to_their_conversations) believe it's likely the government is listening to their communications, despite repeated assurances from Alexander and President Barack Obama that the NSA is only collecting anonymous metadata about Americans' phone calls. In another Rasmussen poll, 57 percent (http://www.rasmussenreports.com/public_content/politics/general_politics/june_2013/57_fear_government_will_use_nsa_data_to_harass_pol itical_opponents) of respondents said they think it's likely that the government will use NSA intelligence "to harass political opponents." Some who know Alexander say he doesn't appreciate the depth of public mistrust and cynicism about the NSA's mission. "People in the intelligence community in general, and certainly Alexander, don't understand the strategic value of having a largely unified country and a long-term trust in the intelligence business," says a former intelligence official, who has worked with Alexander. Another adds, "There's a feeling within the NSA that they're all patriotic citizens interested in protecting privacy, but they lose sight of the fact that people don't trust the government." Even Alexander's strongest critics don't doubt his good intentions. "He's not a nefarious guy," says the former administration official. "I really do feel like he believes he's doing this for the right reasons." Two of the retired military officers who have worked with him say Alexander was seared by the bombing of the USS Cole in 2000 and later the 9/11 attacks, a pair of major intelligence failures that occurred while he was serving in senior-level positions in military intelligence. They said he vowed to do all he could to prevent another attack that could take the lives of Americans and military service members. But those who've worked closely with Alexander say he has become blinded by the power of technology. "He believes they have enough technical safeguards in place at the NSA to protect civil liberties and perform their mission," the former administration official says. "They do have a very robust capability -- probably better than any other agency. But he doesn't get that this power can still be abused. Americans want introspection. Transparency is a good thing. He doesn't understand that. In his mind it's 'You should trust me, and in exchange, I give you protection.'" On July 30 in Las Vegas, Alexander sat down for dinner with a group of civil liberties activists and Internet security researchers. He was in town to give a keynote address the next day at the Black Hat security conference (http://www.blackhat.com/us-13/). The mood at the table was chilly, according to people who were in attendance. In 2012, Alexander had won plaudits for his speech at Black Hat's sister conference, Def Con (http://www.defcon.org/), in which he'd implored the assembled community of experts to join him in their mutual cause: protecting the Internet as a safe space for speech, communications, and commerce. Now, however, nearly two months after the first leaks from Snowden, the people around the table wondered whether they could still trust the NSA director. His dinner companions questioned Alexander about the NSA's legal authority to conduct massive electronic surveillance. Two guests had recently written a New York Times op-ed (http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/28/opinion/the-criminal-nsa.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0) calling the NSA's activities "criminal." Alexander was quick to debate the finer points of the law and defend his agency's programs -- at least the ones that have been revealed -- as closely monitored and focused solely on terrorists' information. But he also tried to convince his audience that they should help keep the NSA's surveillance system running. In so many words, Alexander told them: The terrorists only have to succeed once to kill thousands of people. And if they do, all of the rules we have in place to protect people's privacy will go out the window. Alexander cast himself as the ultimate defender of civil liberties, as a man who needs to spy on some people in order to protect everyone. He knows that in the wake of another major terrorist attack on U.S. soil, the NSA will be unleashed to find the perpetrators and stop the next assault. Random searches of metadata, broad surveillance of purely domestic communications, warrantless seizure of stored communications -- presumably these and other extraordinary measures would be on the table. Alexander may not have spelled out just what the NSA would do after another homeland strike, but the message was clear: We don't want to find out. Alexander was asking his dinner companions to trust him. But his credibility has been badly damaged. Alexander was heckled at his speech the next day at Black Hat. He had been slated to talk at Def Con too, but the organizers rescinded their invitation after the Snowden leaks. And even among Alexander's cohort, trust is flagging. "You'll never find evidence that Keith sits in his office at lunch listening to tapes of U.S. conversations," says a former NSA official. "But I think he has a little bit of naiveté about this controversy. He thinks, 'What's the problem? I wouldn't abuse this power. Aren't we all honorable people?' People get into these insular worlds out there at NSA. I think Keith fits right in." One of the retired military officers, who worked with Alexander on several big-data projects, said he was shaken by revelations that the agency is collecting all Americans' phone records and examining enormous amounts of Internet traffic. "I've not changed my opinion on the right balance between security versus privacy, but what the NSA is doing bothers me," he says. "It's the massive amount of information they're collecting. I know they're not listening to everyone's phone calls. No one has time for that. But speaking as an analyst who has used metadata, I do not sleep well at night knowing these guys can see everything. That trust has been lost." SAUL LOEB/AFP/Getty Images http://www.foreignpolicy.com/sites/all/themes/fp/images/arr-indent.gif SUBJECTS: SECURITY (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/category/topic/security), OBAMA ADMINISTRATION (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/Obama), NSA (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/taxonomy/term/4812)









http://warnewsupdates.blogspot.com/2013/09/a-replica-of-starship-enterprise-bridge.html
http://gizmodo.com/nsa-chiefs-former-war-room-was-modeled-after-the-stars-1277508181
NSA Chief Keith Alexander Used To Woo Politicians At A 'Star Trek' Command Center (http://www.businessinsider.com/nsa-chief-keith-alexander-and-star-trek-2013-9) -- Business Insider
NSA chief’s intelligence center designed like Starship Enterprise (http://www.salon.com/2013/09/09/nsa_chiefs_intelligence_center_designed_like_stars hip_enterprise/singleton/) -- Salon
Replica Enterprise bridge used to sell surveillance to Congress (http://boingboing.net/2013/09/09/replica-enterprise-br.html)-- Boing Boing

Uriel999
09-14-2013, 08:37 AM
Spy on the American people at warp 5, engage!

muzzled dogg
09-14-2013, 08:43 AM
damn picard looks old in that

HOLLYWOOD
09-14-2013, 08:53 AM
The American people are stuck with; Debt, Inflation, lower standard of living... as the "Enterprise" has absolutely evolved into the "Borg". BTW, former 4 star USAF general Michael Hayden is a fuckin NAZI.

Dominance Center, REALLY? That's more Dr Evil and his Moon based laser than it is Capt. Picard and the Enterprise.


Information Dominance Center


Bridge of the starship Enterprise from Star Trek, complete with chrome panels, computer stations, a huge TV monitor on the forward wall, and doors that made a "whoosh" sound when they slid open and closed.


Air Force Gen. Michael Hayden had been running the NSA since 1999


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r4W0t_fWJoE

KEEF
09-14-2013, 09:59 AM
NSA director modeled war room after Star Trek's EnterpriseBY: NEWS DESK (http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/author/news-desk/)
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/images/primary2/icons/share.gif

http://newshour.s3.amazonaws.com/photos/2013/09/13/102304487_blog_main_horizontal.jpg
Congressional leaders already have a lot of power, but do they secretly want to captain the USS Enterprise? In an in-depth profile of NSA Director Keith B. Alexander, Foreign Policy reveals that one of the ways the general endeared himself to lawmakers and officials was to make them feel like Jean-Luc Picard (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/09/08/the_cowboy_of_the_nsa_keith_alexander?page=full), captain of the starship Enterprise from the TV series "Star Trek: The Next Generation."

"When he was running the Army's Intelligence and Security Command, Alexander brought many of his future allies down to Fort Belvoir for a tour of his base of operations, a facility known as the Information Dominance Center. It had been designed by a Hollywood set designer to mimic the bridge of the starship Enterprise from Star Trek, complete with chrome panels, computer stations, a huge TV monitor on the forward wall, and doors that made a 'whoosh' sound when they slid open and closed. Lawmakers and other important officials took turns sitting in a leather 'captain's chair' in the center of the room and watched as Alexander, a lover of science-fiction movies, showed off his data tools on the big screen.'Everybody wanted to sit in the chair at least once to pretend he was Jean-Luc Picard,' says a retired officer in charge of VIP visits."

H/T Marc Sollinger

https://twitter.com/G_fasciatus/status/378910730948333568

HOLLYWOOD
09-14-2013, 10:06 AM
First the Military
Then the IRS
Now the NSA, FBI, CIA, DEA, ATF, SS, DIA, DARPA, DOJ,


You're Tax Dollars at Work... Pay Up Serfs!

http://www.agoracosmopolitan.com/news-img/maximum/8852.jpg
USS Fuckin Borg

FindLiberty
09-14-2013, 10:07 AM
...more like this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtHM77IRkus

KEEF
09-14-2013, 10:12 AM
...more like this
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VtHM77IRkus
Or this since our government officials are all NWO puppets anyway.

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/tto/multimedia/archive/00380/3900205__01_380657c.jpg
http://www.blastr.com/sites/blastr/files/styles/blog_post_media/public/Thunderbirds5_0.jpg?itok=ZsesX59h

IndianaPolitico
09-14-2013, 10:16 AM
Captain, we are comin apart at the seams, we cannot take much more of this!

CaseyJones
09-14-2013, 10:24 AM
well then follow the Prime Directive!

Barrex
09-14-2013, 10:38 AM
How could he be so wrong?
http://dudespaper.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/thisaggressionwillnotstand.jpghttp://media3.giphy.com/media/x4vMKWXxkSA9i/original.gif

How could we be so wrong? It stands!
(wrong movie reference? Well screeeeew youuuuuuu.)

HOLLYWOOD
09-14-2013, 10:40 AM
I wonder how much the "Wooshing" sound cost the US taxpayers? I could of won that contract dirt cheap, huge profits with this... I'll even throw in RED ALERT and Communication hailing~!
http://a.tgcdn.net/images/products/additional/large/e9b8_star_trek_electronic_door_chime_closeup.jpg


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_luEO__8lg

KEEF
09-14-2013, 10:49 AM
I wonder how much the "Wooshing" sound cost the US taxpayers? I could of won that contract dirt cheap, huge profits with this... I'll even throw in RED ALERT and Communication hailing~!
http://a.tgcdn.net/images/products/additional/large/e9b8_star_trek_electronic_door_chime_closeup.jpg


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_luEO__8lg

I know, I would do it for them for a fraction of what they probably spent by simply hiding behind the door with a mega phone saying WOOSH every time the door opens and closes.

Natural Citizen
09-14-2013, 10:51 AM
Heh. Figgers it'd be something like that. :cool:

green73
09-15-2013, 10:05 AM
Greenwald:


Inside the mind of NSA chief Gen Keith Alexander
A lavish Star Trek room he had built as part of his 'Information Dominance Center' is endlessly revealing


It has been previously reported that the mentality of NSA chief Gen. Keith Alexander is captured by his motto "Collect it All". It's a get-everything approach he pioneered first when aimed at an enemy population in the middle of a war zone in Iraq, one he has now imported onto US soil, aimed at the domestic population and everyone else.

But a perhaps even more disturbing and revealing vignette into the spy chief's mind comes from a new Foreign Policy article describing what the journal calls his "all-out, barely-legal drive to build the ultimate spy machine". The article describes how even his NSA peers see him as a "cowboy" willing to play fast and loose with legal limits in order to construct a system of ubiquitous surveillance. But the personality driving all of this - not just Alexander's but much of Washington's - is perhaps best captured by this one passage, highlighted by PBS' News Hour in a post entitled: "NSA director modeled war room after Star Trek's Enterprise". The room was christened as part of the "Information Dominance Center":

"When he was running the Army's Intelligence and Security Command, Alexander brought many of his future allies down to Fort Belvoir for a tour of his base of operations, a facility known as the Information Dominance Center. It had been designed by a Hollywood set designer to mimic the bridge of the starship Enterprise from Star Trek, complete with chrome panels, computer stations, a huge TV monitor on the forward wall, and doors that made a 'whoosh' sound when they slid open and closed. Lawmakers and other important officials took turns sitting in a leather 'captain's chair' in the center of the room and watched as Alexander, a lover of science-fiction movies, showed off his data tools on the big screen.

"'Everybody wanted to sit in the chair at least once to pretend he was Jean-Luc Picard,' says a retired officer in charge of VIP visits."

continues w/ pictures.
http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/sep/15/nsa-mind-keith-alexander-star-trek

Brian4Liberty
09-15-2013, 10:52 AM
Nothing like spending taxpayer on money on personal fantasies.

muh_roads
09-15-2013, 12:48 PM
Taking your money to make the Enterprise...so you can't do it for yourself.

MoneyWhereMyMouthIs2
09-15-2013, 01:23 PM
Shameless attempt to get the internet geeks and nerds on board?

Carson
09-15-2013, 02:03 PM
I think this all goes way beyond anything taxpayers could afford. Only counterfeiters can produce this quantity of power over us.

It is a tax of sorts though. I think of it as a socialist stealth back-door tax that's without representation.

There are people inside and outside of the country with the ability to fire up the fake money presses and print up what ever amount it takes to dictate their will.

http://photos.imageevent.com/stokeybob/followthemoney/Supersingle640x537.jpg

VIDEODROME
09-15-2013, 02:12 PM
http://i367.photobucket.com/albums/oo114/TheRedFather/The%20Best/1169573208102.jpg

Occam's Banana
09-15-2013, 09:13 PM
... beam me the hell outta here, Scotty!!

h/t Lew Rockwell @ LRC: http://www.lewrockwell.com/lrc-blog/dr-evil/

Dr. Evil

NSA commissar has tax-paid Star Trek “war room (http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/sep/15/nsa-mind-keith-alexander-star-trek).” (Thanks to Robert Blumen)

FTA (more at link, emphasis mine): http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/sep/15/nsa-mind-keith-alexander-star-trek

Inside the mind of NSA chief Gen. Keith Alexander
A lavish Star Trek room he had built as part of his 'Information Dominance Center' is endlessly revealing

It has been previously reported (http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/jul/15/crux-nsa-collect-it-all) that the mentality of NSA (http://www.theguardian.com/world/nsa) chief Gen. Keith Alexander is captured by his motto "Collect it All". It's a get-everything approach he pioneered first when aimed at an enemy population in the middle of a war zone in Iraq, one he has now imported onto US soil, aimed at the domestic population and everyone else.

But a perhaps even more disturbing and revealing vignette into the spy chief's mind comes from a new Foreign Policy article (http://www.foreignpolicy.com/articles/2013/09/08/the_cowboy_of_the_nsa_keith_alexander?page=full) describing what the journal calls his "all-out, barely-legal drive to build the ultimate spy machine". The article describes how even his NSA peers see him as a "cowboy" willing to play fast and loose with legal limits in order to construct a system of ubiquitous surveillance. But the personality driving all of this - not just Alexander's but much of Washington's - is perhaps best captured by this one passage, highlighted by PBS' News Hour in a post entitled (http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/2013/09/nsa-director-modelled-war-room-after-star-treks-enterprise.html): "NSA director modeled war room after Star Trek's Enterprise". The room was christened as part of the "Information Dominance Center":


When he was running the Army's Intelligence and Security Command, Alexander brought many of his future allies down to Fort Belvoir for a tour of his base of operations, a facility known as the Information Dominance Center. It had been designed by a Hollywood set designer to mimic the bridge of the starship Enterprise from Star Trek, complete with chrome panels, computer stations, a huge TV monitor on the forward wall, and doors that made a 'whoosh' sound when they slid open and closed. Lawmakers and other important officials took turns sitting in a leather 'captain's chair' in the center of the room and watched as Alexander, a lover of science-fiction movies, showed off his data tools on the big screen.

"'Everybody wanted to sit in the chair at least once to pretend he was Jean-Luc Picard,' says a retired officer in charge of VIP visits.

Numerous commentators remarked yesterday on the meaning of all that (note, too, how "Total Information Awareness" was a major scandal in the Bush years, but "Information Dominance Center" - along with things like "Boundless Informant" (http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jun/08/nsa-boundless-informant-global-datamining) - are treated as benign or even noble programs in the age of Obama).

[...]

http://i468.photobucket.com/albums/rr50/alexis111394/wtfisthisshit.jpg

Occam's Banana
09-15-2013, 09:20 PM
FTA: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2013/sep/15/nsa-mind-keith-alexander-star-trek

(... continued from OP article...)

But now, on the website of DBI Architects, Inc. (http://www.dbia.com/) of Washington and Reston, Virginia, there are what purports to be photographs of the actual Star-Trek-like headquarters (http://www.dbia.com/projectpage/LIWA.pdf) commissioned by Gen. Alexander that so impressed his Congressional overseers. It's a 10,740 square foot labyrinth in Fort Belvoir, Virginia. The brochure touts how "the prominently positioned chair provides the commanding officer an uninterrupted field of vision to a 22'-0" wide projection screen":


http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2013/9/15/1379247148112/dbi.png

The glossy display further describes how "this project involved the renovation of standard office space into a highly classified, ultramodern operations center." Its "primary function is to enable 24-hour worldwide visualization, planning, and execution of coordinated information operations for the US Army and other federal agencies." It gushes: "The futuristic, yet distinctly military, setting is further reinforced by the Commander's console, which gives the illusion that one has boarded a star ship":

http://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2013/9/15/1379247182946/dbi2.png

Other photographs of Gen. Alexander's personal Star Trek Captain fantasy come-to-life (courtesy of public funds) are here (http://www.dbia.com/projectpage/LIWA.pdf). Any casual review of human history proves how deeply irrational it is to believe that powerful factions can be trusted to exercise vast surveillance power with little accountability or transparency. But the more they proudly flaunt their warped imperial hubris, the more irrational it becomes.

CPUd
09-15-2013, 09:23 PM
http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?427755-NSA-director-modeled-war-room-after-Star-Trek-s-Enterprise

VoluntaryAmerican
09-15-2013, 09:27 PM
Just creepy

Carson
09-15-2013, 11:17 PM
I remember back when taxes were used for paying for things.

Back then we had a say. The government came to the people to get them on board for spending their money for things. For that matter the hard earned dollar itself had a certain power for those that possessed them.

They need not concern themselves anymore it seems. Then again they have to watch every conversation.

Cutlerzzz
09-15-2013, 11:22 PM
I remember back when taxes were used for paying for things.

Back then we had a say. The government came to the people to get them on board for spending their money for things. For that matter the hard earned dollar itself had a certain power for those that possessed them.

They need not concern themselves anymore it seems. Then again they have to watch every conversation.

Nobody has ever had a say on what happens with their tax dollars. If they could decide it wouldn't be a tax.

fr33
09-15-2013, 11:44 PM
379480203396775936


379480481361690624

heavenlyboy34
09-16-2013, 12:05 AM
No holodeck in which to live out fantasies? WTF?

HOLLYWOOD
09-16-2013, 12:19 AM
This was "dolled-up" futuristic 30 years ago... Now they just spend like there's no end to the taxpayer's money train today.

http://popdose.com/wp-content/uploads/wargames3.jpg

DGambler
09-16-2013, 07:19 AM
Fucking parasites

fisharmor
09-16-2013, 07:29 AM
Congressional leaders already have a lot of power, but do they secretly want to captain the USS Enterprise?

Well, it's a fictional society where there's total state control and they've supposedly abolished war (yet everyone is fighting all the time), they fly around in the ultimate naval war machine (capable of leveling entire cities in one attack), there are never any family ties to stop you going on months-long missions, everyone is always sleeping around, and there are not only clearly defined enemy societies which present a real military threat and are basically space nazis, there are also constant internal threats to root out.

What government spook isn't going to be sniffing his own socks while watching that show?


This was "dolled-up" futuristic 30 years ago... Now they just spend like there's no end to the taxpayer's money train today.

http://popdose.com/wp-content/uploads/wargames3.jpg

I've been in IT "war rooms" at private companies that actually look exactly like this.
(But they paid for it with their own money.)

presence
09-16-2013, 07:35 AM
Thread: NSA Sells Congress the USS ENTERPRISE (http://www.ronpaulforums.com/showthread.php?427744-NSA-Sells-Congress-the-USS-ENTERPRISE)
09-14-2013 10:20 AM by presence







Mod merge?

presence
09-16-2013, 07:38 AM
bump for mod merge

BarryDonegan
09-20-2013, 03:18 PM
The NSA brought in an expensive Hollywood set designer to build a custom Star Trek themed war room, crafted to be an exact replica of the bridge of the Starship Enterprise.

The NSA’s Star Trek play set is referred to as the “Information Dominance Center.” From a captain’s chair just like Jean-Luc Picard’s, Director Keith Alexander issues unlawful orders, stealing private data from the very taxpayers that funded the agency’s pricey toy. Meanwhile, Congress is struggling to come up with an agreement to continue funding the government, which is suffocating under trillions of dollars worth of debt.

http://silverunderground.com/2013/09/nsas-star-trek-war-room-is-a-replica-of-the-starship-enterprise/

acptulsa
09-20-2013, 03:58 PM
Is it just me, or is this exactly the sort of thing you'd expect the Dictator-For-Life of a starving Central American banana republic to do with his plund--er, I mean tax revenues?

I don't have to win the lotto to play out all my fantasies--I'm a G-14 level bureaucrat!

Lucille
09-21-2013, 03:15 PM
http://powerofnarrative.blogspot.com/2013/09/dying-for-control-i-neurosis-and-terror.html


These pathetic people are the political leaders of the United States. I implore you to remember that these damaged, terrified individuals possess the power to destroy you, me, and millions of other people -- and I remind you that they have, in fact, murdered a great many people, and mostly entirely innocent people, over the last decade. It is almost impossible to grasp that people who have powers we once attributed to gods reveal themselves to be arrested adolescents, devoid of a genuine sense of independence and worth, who derive their world view and their operating political philosophy from science fiction movies and cool gadgets. And seriously, what the fuck? Alexander hired a Hollywood set designer -- paid for with your tax dollars -- so that when he went to work, he'd go onto the set of one of his favorite movies? The doors even make a "whoosh" sound?!?!? And all the VIPs love this shit and are "wowed" by it??? WHAT THE FUCK.

So remember: when these deformed monstrosities increasingly destroy your lives and deprive you as fully as they can of any opportunity for happiness and joy, they do so because Jennifer won't go out on a date with them, and their acne got worse, and Mom grounded them for a month. They can't control things, and they are pissed! Tragically, they now possess immense power -- and they want revenge.

angelatc
09-21-2013, 04:34 PM
No holodeck in which to live out fantasies? WTF?

I think that's why they have their conferences in Las Vegas.

HOLLYWOOD
09-21-2013, 05:11 PM
I think that's why they have their conferences in Las Vegas.I was thinking of the "STAR TREK" experience when it was at the Hilton, in Vegas. It was a lot of fun, and we drank a lot of Romulan Ale (Blue colored Beer)at the Star Trek (Quark's cafe). It was actually good, and bought a case to go. The US Government intelligence community is turn-key tyranny, with sharing of data with all agencies, collecting everything, and having a rigged "JUST US" judicial system to backup all illegal oppression. It's the Illusion of Freedom... freedom for the Money Masters and Government to remain complete control of the people, country, and world.

http://www.bestlasvegaswebsite.com/star109.jpg
http://theeatenpath.com/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/quarks_bar_romulan_ale.jpghttp://www.roadsideamerica.com/attract/images/nv/NVLVEstartrek_3063.jpg