Search This Blog

Showing posts with label senator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label senator. Show all posts

Friday, May 8, 2015

Sen. Cory Booker calls for action in online War vs ISIS

Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., backed his colleague’s appeal. “Look at their fancy memes compared to what we’re not doing,” Booker said, displaying examples of jihadist online postings.

“There’s an obvious piece of legislation that we need to start working on,” Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisc., said during a Homeland Security Committee hearing on “Jihad 2.0“.
“Let’s face it: We invented the Internet. We invented the social network sites. We’ve got Hollywood. We’ve got the capabilities… to blow these guys out of the water from the standpoint of communications.”

Booker is a prolific user of Twitter and a former viral sensation in his own right, as mayor of Newark. He said he knows “something about memes,” and added that “there are easy tactics how to get more voice, virality to messaging that we’re not using as a government.”
Instead, he lamented, the U.S. is spending “millions and millions of dollars on old school forms of media,” like Voice of America.

Sen. Cory Booker,, R-N.H., said that the private sector could play a greater role working with the government in any counter-recruitment initiative.
Here’s a clip from the hearing:
Also at the hearing, Peter Bergen, a senior New America Foundation national security expert, testified in favor of more lenient treatment for would-be fighters who reverse course before fully committing themselves.

He noted that Muslim families who see a son or daughter radicalizing online are deterred from reporting the matter to the FBI out of fear that he or she will be thrown in jail for more than a decade.
 “If somebody is not actually indicted for a potential act of terrorism, but merely for trying to go to Syria, we should be thinking about off-ramps that aren’t 15 years in prisons,” Bergen said.
Sam Sacks is a writer and reporter living in Washington, D.C. He is the co-founder of the watchdog 

news site The District Sentinel
Photo: Screengrab of Cory Booker at Senate hearing

Friday, October 12, 2007

John McCain - Videos and Articles

McCain Interview - Fall 2007
I hope you all view these video - PLEASE - John gives a very good insight into Iraq as well as America's important domestic needs, and he has a lot of experience working with other countries around the world. In the Senate they were calling the Surge "McCain's Surge". Trust me this guy not only "gets it" but listening to him you can learn some awesome new things.

John McCain - Video for the Web.mp4 Early 2007

Charlie Rose - U.S. strategy in Iraq - August 2007

Below Video Interview in approx. late 2005

2007 Pig Book - Sen. John McCain

I have been following the presidential debates and the various campaigns. For me there has been one person that stand alone from the pack. He doesn't do things different "just to be different". No the fact is he has ethics and convictions. While other presidential hopefuls are currently catering to public opionion, John McCain is the only one who consistantly ignores the public opionion polls about imigration, the war in Iraq, etc. I think John said it best, he said "I would rather lose the election than lose the war". I hope you view the Videos I have included here and I hope it encourages you to review McCains past achievements which include changing the direction of the Iraq War. In the Senate the Surge was nicknamed "McCain's Surge" by a current democrate presidential nominee. McCain was instrumental in exposing Jack Abramoff. Abramoff was the person who was stealing money from Indian reservations, and the American people. Click here for more details regarding Abramoff scandal.

His republican peers have perhaps been critical about John McCain, since McCain has been hardest on the republic party. He has cut wastefull spending and has worked hard to reform many broken systems in our government. Im my opinion McCain is a humble, kind, straight talker who cares about his country and can do a great job as President.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,301304,00.html

Australian PM John Howard Condemns Indonesian Party for Convicted Terrorists

Thursday, October 11, 2007

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_Wmmr14HKoc&mode=user&search=

http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3239382909827154603

Monday, May 21, 2007

Democrats to fund Iraq war with no pullout date

By Richard Cowan and Susan Cornwell
Tue May 22, 8:16 PM ET

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President George W. Bush won a battle over nearly $100 billion to fund the Iraq war as Democratic leaders in Congress on Tuesday abandoned efforts to withdraw troops for now but pledged to try again in July.

Instead of setting schedules for pulling U.S. troops, it appeared the Democratic-run Congress and the Republican White House agreed for the first time to include conditions prodding Baghdad to make better progress toward quelling violence or risk losing around $1.3 billion in U.S. reconstruction aid.

Bush could waive the provision, however.

Congress wants to deliver by week's end the $100 billion to fund the wars in Iraq and

Afghanistan

SEARCH
News | News Photos | Images | Web

Afghanistan through September.

With the Iraq funding deal, Democrats said the first minimum wage increase in a decade, a high priority for them, would be included. Congress already has approved tax breaks for small businesses to go along with the wage hike.

Democrats also will try to attach about $20 billion in domestic initiatives -- from farm aid and better health care for veterans, to health insurance for poor children and money to continue rebuilding states hit by hurricanes in 2005.

Negotiations between the White House and Congress were continuing on details, however.

House liberals were disappointed by the emerging deal, and House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi (news, bio, voting record), a California Democrat who signed off on the plan, said she opposed the Iraq portion of it.

(full article click here)

Wednesday, May 16, 2007

Clinton won't commit on Iraq deadline

By DEVLIN BARRETT, Associated Press Writer Wed May 16, 8:21 PM ET
WASHINGTON - Sen.

Hillary Rodham Clinton voted Wednesday to advance legislation cutting off money for the Iraq war, then refused to pledge to support the measure if it came to a vote, then said she would.

At lunchtime, the New York senator and presidential candidate was asked repeatedly by reporters whether she favored the troop withdrawal legislation that had just come up for a procedural vote on the Senate floor.

Her answer: "I'm not going to speculate on what I'm going to be voting on in the future. I voted in favor of cloture to have a debate."

By supper time, she had a different answer.

"I support the underlying bill," she said. "That's what this vote on cloture was all about."

A rival Democratic camp quickly criticized Clinton's evolving — and possibly revolving — statements.

"We're as confused as anyone on Senator Clinton's position," said Connecticut Sen. Christopher Dodd (news, bio, voting record)'s campaign spokeswoman, Christy Setzer.

"Frankly, it's hard to know whether it's indecision, miscommunication or simple word games and political gamesmanship we're dealing with. Our troops in Iraq don't have time for poll-tested word games," Setzer said.

http://www.stophillarypac.com/