The first step towards declaring the fully fledged war on TOC - 4:02 PM 12/18/2019 | Qui pro domina justitia sequitur, not qui pro quo!
M.N.: This is the affirmation of full confidence in Mr. Wray and the present day FBI, who deserve it.
This is also the first step towards declaring the fully fledged war on TOC, which should be a two prong strategy, as I shared this thought earlier:
1. General "sanation" and decriminalization, approximately the "Broken Windows Theory", and
2. Specific measures against the "special operations" by Mafia and the hostile Intelligence Services, which recently merged into the same entity.
And this pursuit should be absolutely relentless and determined, as the name of this initiative states. It also has to be Intelligence and Analysis driven, and it should be conducted in close cooperation with the Intelligence agencies other than FBI; the domestic ones, and the allied and cooperating foreign agencies. This initiative was long overdue. This fight will be tough and it has to be adequately financed, and in the later stages it will be self-financed. This is the "life or death" struggle, and we have to understand this fully.
Michael Novakhov | 4:02 PM 12/18/2019 - Post Link
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Michael Novakhov
3 mins ·
The New York Times
·
M.N.: The issue is not the "political bias", the issue is: what percentage of 1,500 FISA warrants, with the "connection to domestic politics" or not, contain significant procedural errors, which open the doors to questioning their validity, and therefore open the issue of FISA abuse and misuse as the systemic problem, pointing to the abuse of the FBI powers, potentially leading to establishing the dictatorship or the similar governing system.
"If the F.B.I. botched its applications for Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act warrants against Mr. Page because of political bias, after all, problems of the sort Mr. Horowitz identified are most likely unique to this case. The bureau obtains about 1,500 FISA warrants each year, and an overwhelming majority have no connection to domestic politics. The solution is also similarly simple: Toss out the bad apples who acted on political motives and add a few layers of safeguards for the tiny fraction of cases that are designated “sensitive investigative matters” because they do intersect with politics."
...
When she asked Mr. Horowitz whether finding mistakes in a FISA application was “a fairly unusual occurrence,” he responded, “I would hope so.”
M.N.: He hopes but he does not know for sure, and he should.
This is the key question, not the idiot Carter Page.
3 mins ·
The New York Times
·
M.N.: The issue is not the "political bias", the issue is: what percentage of 1,500 FISA warrants, with the "connection to domestic politics" or not, contain significant procedural errors, which open the doors to questioning their validity, and therefore open the issue of FISA abuse and misuse as the systemic problem, pointing to the abuse of the FBI powers, potentially leading to establishing the dictatorship or the similar governing system.
"If the F.B.I. botched its applications for Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act warrants against Mr. Page because of political bias, after all, problems of the sort Mr. Horowitz identified are most likely unique to this case. The bureau obtains about 1,500 FISA warrants each year, and an overwhelming majority have no connection to domestic politics. The solution is also similarly simple: Toss out the bad apples who acted on political motives and add a few layers of safeguards for the tiny fraction of cases that are designated “sensitive investigative matters” because they do intersect with politics."
...
When she asked Mr. Horowitz whether finding mistakes in a FISA application was “a fairly unusual occurrence,” he responded, “I would hope so.”
M.N.: He hopes but he does not know for sure, and he should.
This is the key question, not the idiot Carter Page.
HTTP://MICHAEL_NOVAKHOV.NEWSBLUR.COM/
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