I agree, Obama has a motive.....
.....to regulate the Internet to "do something" to stop leaks like this.
WHY didn't the USA jam the website (DOS attack)?
HOW did these leaks get out in the first place?
These leaks will hurt diplomacy because many of the things said and leaked were said in confidence. Now that confidence doesn't exist.
Obama wants to hurt America's place in the world, he has more or less said so.
Obama wants to control people, health care, transportation, energy production, energy use, etc., indicating he is a control freak.
If this was his doing, he HAS further harmed the USA's position in the world and now has the perfect excuse to clamp down on the Internet.
You know, it is so easy to encrypt, that this leak really does seem to be a set up.
I agree, Obama has a motive.....
.....to regulate the Internet to “do something” to stop leaks like this.
WHY didn’t the USA jam the website (DOS attack)?
HOW did these leaks get out in the first place?
These leaks will hurt diplomacy because many of the things said and leaked were said in confidence. Now that confidence doesn’t exist.
Obama wants to hurt America’s place in the world, he has more or less said so.
Obama wants to control people, health care, transportation, energy production, energy use, etc., indicating he is a control freak.
If this was his doing, he HAS further harmed the USA’s position in the world and now has the perfect excuse to clamp down on the Internet.
22 posted on Sunday, December 05, 2010 10:03:03 AM by SteamShovel
There is no doubt that BO is behind WikiLeakds. Just look at the WikiLeaks info that has been released, starting with Sarah Palin’s emails and think who other than BO had a motive to release this info?
September 2008: Republican vice-presidential candidate Sarah Palins Yahoo email account is compromised by a member of Anonymous, an online group of hackers, in the final months of the presidential campaign. Personal emails are posted to WikiLeaks, and questions are raised about whether Palin used the personal account to flout public records laws.
April 2010: A video of a U.S. Apache helicopter killing Iraqi civilians and two Reuters journalists is posted to WikiLeaks. While the U.S. had never denied that the civilians and journalists were killed, the graphic footage of the horrors of war quickly goes viral online.
July 2010: WikiLeaks publishes 92,000 pages of U.S. military memos termed the Afghan War Diaries. Among the dumps contents are reports confirming that members of Pakistans intelligence agency routinely met with Taliban fighters between 2004 and 2009, as well as field notes on mounting civilian casualties throughout Afghanistan.
October 2010: Some 400,000 pages on the Iraq War that the Pentagon called the largest leak of classified documents in its history are posted by WikiLeaks. The groups de facto spokesman, Julian Assange, says the documents show 15,000 civilian deaths previously unreported, as well as numerous instances of abuse of civilians at the hands of Iraqi security forces.
Nov. 28, 2010: Through several mainstream media partners, WikiLeaks releases confidential U.S. diplomatic cables, frank assessment of various American allies, with some incriminating information about U.S. foreign activities. WikiLeaks says the information, to be followed by further releases later in the week, will contain seven times as many documents as October release.
Read more: http://news.nationalpost.com/2010/11/28/a-wikileaks-timeline/#ixzz17Fpsdmlz