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Shooting during Mass at Minnesota Catholic school leaves 2 dead, 17 others injured
Today's Headlines
Headline Comments [Views]
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-Lurid Crime Tales-
Shooting during Mass at Minnesota Catholic school leaves 2 dead, 17 others injured
Two children were killed and 17 people were injured — 14 of them children — in a shooting Wednesday morning at a Minneapolis Catholic school, as students, staff and parishioners were gathered for a Mass to mark the first week of classes.

The shooter, identified as 23-year-old Robin Westman, was found dead in the back of the church from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara. Authorities say they are still investigating Westman's motive for the attack.

"This was a deliberate act of violence against innocent children and other people worshipping," O'Hara told reporters. "The sheer cruelty and cowardice of firing into a church full of children is absolutely incomprehensible."

Youtube.com most helpfully erased the killer's socialist media presense, but others have captured some of it. Some of the links are repetitive:
The two tweets badanov posts below have what appear to be the killer’s manifesto:
Townhall

Austen Ayers

Courtesy of Elmomoter Mussolini9149:



Some of the references explained:
Videos linked to Minneapolis shooting suspect show antisemitic, anti-Israel messages
​[IsraelTimes] Alleged shooter posted videos showing weapons with the slogans ‘burn Israel,’ ‘6 million wasn’t enough’ and references to 2018 Tree of Life synagogue shooter.


School shooting designated domestic terror; suspect may have held antisemitic views
[IsraelTimes] FBI Director Kash Patel says a deadly school shooting in Minneapolis is being investigated as an act of domestic terrorism and a hate crime targeting Catholics.

Patel identifies the attacker as Robin Westman, who public records show to be a 23-year-old resident of the area. Court records show Westman’s name was changed from Robert Westman in 2020 on the grounds that they identified as female.

Officials say the shooter did not have an extensive criminal history and note they are trying to identify a motive.

Authorities say they found a smoke bomb at the scene and were searching a vehicle in the parking lot.

Public records show Westman’s mother, Mary Westman, had worked as an administrative assistant at Annunciation Church.

Posted by: badanov || 08/28/2025 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [404 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Any public gathering could be next.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 08/28/2025 0:46 Comments || Top||

#2 
Given a few of the available shooter's pic's.

Was he another mentally ill Trans Shooter and the MSM, SM & "Minneapolis" Police avoiding it.

BTW: Thanks Badanov for the links.

While the TOWNHALL link X has been pulled.
"Austin Ayers" link and all 23+ mins was still valid as of 5:50am US-EST.
Posted by: NN2N1 || 08/28/2025 5:58 Comments || Top||

#3  ^^ The townhall.com link is intact. Just scroll down
Posted by: badanov || 08/28/2025 6:51 Comments || Top||

#4 
Posted by: Grom the Affective || 08/28/2025 6:56 Comments || Top||

#5  Trump should hire 4-6 former infantry/Marines/SF per school as US Marshalls with the orders "Any shooter gets exterminated with EXTREME prejudice. No prisoners wanted or accepted." Give them full kit. I don't mind my taxes being used for motivated, capable men to guard our kids.
Posted by: Silentbrick || 08/28/2025 8:59 Comments || Top||

#6  Notice how quickly the Left goes to 'do not villianize' the shooter. If a shooter was any way indirectly white/MAGA they would be going full mob incitement.
Posted by: Procopius2k || 08/28/2025 9:16 Comments || Top||

#7  Court records show Westman’s name was changed from Robert Westman in 2020 on the grounds that they identified as female.

A bit confused about his gender was he? Quick quiz below. Identify the gender of this Angus.

Posted by: Besoeker || 08/28/2025 9:34 Comments || Top||

#8  Matt Margolis PJ Media:
The mainstream media's coverage of the Minneapolis school shooting at Annunciation Catholic School represents perhaps the most brazen attempt at gaslighting the American public I've seen in a long time, if not ever. When a transgender shooter kills two children and wounds seventeen others during a Catholic mass marking the start of the school year, and authorities claim they have "no information to share on a motive," we're not dealing with incompetence—we're dealing with deliberate deception.

Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 08/28/2025 10:00 Comments || Top||

#9  Speaking of other "public gatherings" this shooting happened in MN the day before the Annunciation church shooting:
1 killed, 6 injured Tuesday when gunman opens fire on Minnesota sidewalk
One person was killed and six more were injured when a gunman sprayed dozens of rounds at a group standing on a sidewalk across from a high school in Minneapolis on Aug. 26, authorities said.Officers responded to calls about shots fired just before 1:30 p.m. on Aug. 26 and found one man dead on the sidewalk, and five men and one woman who were injured. Investigators determined that a lone gunman stepped out of a vehicle near the intersection of Clinton Avenue and East 29th Street and fired about 30 rounds at people who were standing on a sidewalk before leaving in the vehicle.

These sorts of shooting have gotten so common they only get more than minimal news coverage when someone is killed.

Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 08/28/2025 10:07 Comments || Top||

#10  And Minneapolis' beloved mayor took the opportunity to decry any harsh thoughts directed toward "our transgender community". Not much sympathy for the kids who were killed or wounded, tho.
Posted by: Mercutio || 08/28/2025 10:29 Comments || Top||

#11  One of the most depraved comments I've so far encountered on the web, from the X account of Maxwell Frost D-FL, go here: https://x.com/MaxwellFrostFL/status/1960744543579726064?
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 08/28/2025 10:37 Comments || Top||

#12  I'll take your word for it Hupe. Disturbing enough on it's own.
Posted by: Besoeker || 08/28/2025 10:43 Comments || Top||

#13  POTUS orders US flags at half staff. Getting minimal MSM coverage, as expected. See here.
Posted by: Anguper Hupomosing9418 || 08/28/2025 10:43 Comments || Top||

#14  Once again a crazy person has somehow gotten hold of a gun. How? That's one question. We'd also like a toxicology report and then, who put the buzz into this crazy person's ear?
Posted by: Abu Uluque || 08/28/2025 11:27 Comments || Top||

#15  It’s the Zeitgeist, Abu Uluque.
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/28/2025 12:00 Comments || Top||

#16  But remember that not cerebrating transgenders is tantamount to genocide.
Posted by: Rambler || 08/28/2025 12:05 Comments || Top||

#17  zeitgeist
noun
zeit·​geist ˈtsīt-ˌgīst ˈzīt-
often capitalized
: the general intellectual, moral, and cultural climate of an era

tw, I suppose that's as good a theory as any.

But I'm to the point where I might embrace a deeper, darker conspiracy theory. Such theories thrive when we don't get answers to the questions I'm asking like how did that nut case get a gun, what drugs was he taking and with whom was he communicating?

Notice how the usual suspects like Chuck Schumer immediately call for gun control without even asking if existing gun control laws would prevent crazy people from getting their hands on guns if those laws would only be enforced and, in this case they obviously were not. But Schumer wants to outlaw all guns like they do in the UK. And I can't help connecting it to that Scottish girl who is reduced to defending herself with a knife and an ax. That's how Schumer wants Americans to be: defenseless. And you know why. If people can't defend themselves against Paks, they can't defend themselves against tyranny either. To what ends would people like Schumer and his Deep State friends go to see American girls in that same predicament?

Posted by: Abu Uluque || 08/28/2025 12:57 Comments || Top||

#18  It is your job to be more cynical than I, my dear. Not that I’m wrong, but you may also be right.
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/28/2025 13:01 Comments || Top||

#19 
Posted by: NoMoreBS || 08/28/2025 15:28 Comments || Top||

#20  MoMore - because they are saying Trump never did get shot.
Posted by: Glenmore || 08/28/2025 15:43 Comments || Top||


-Short Attention Span Theater-
CDC Director Susan Monarez refuses to be fired as other officials call it quits
[Fox] Longtime government scientist Susan Monarez is refusing to leave her position as director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) after the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) announced she had been removed from the role less than a month after she was sworn in.

Attorneys Mark Zaid and Abbe Lowell said they are representing Monarez and claimed she "has neither resigned nor yet been fired."
Abbe Lowell again: Hunter the Crackhead, Lisa Cook, susan Monarez,... the Mark Geragos of DC
The attorneys released a statement on social media, claiming HHS and Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. are weaponizing public health for political gain and putting millions of American lives at risk.

"When CDC Director Susan Monarez refused to rubber-stamp unscientific, reckless directives and fire dedicated health experts, she chose protecting the public over serving a political agenda," the statement said. "For that, she has been targeted. Dr. Monarez has neither resigned nor received notification from the White House that she has been fired, and as a person of integrity and devoted to science, she will not resign."

The Washington Post reported that sources within the CDC, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said HHS leaders, including Kennedy, sought to get Monarez to commit to rescinding approvals for certain COVID-19 vaccines. When Monarez did not immediately commit, she was told by administration officials that she must resign or she would be fired.

Sources also claimed she then attempted to involve the chairman of the Senate's top health committee, Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La. The move reportedly further angered Kennedy.

When reached for comment, a spokesperson for the HHS directed Fox News Digital to the agency's response shared on its official X account.

"Susan Monarez is no longer director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention," HHS said. "We thank her for her dedicated service to the American people. Secretary Kennedy has full confidence in his team at the CDC who will continue to be vigilant in protecting Americans against infectious diseases at home and abroad."

The White House confirmed to Fox News Digital that Monarez was being removed.

"As her attorney’s statement makes abundantly clear, Susan Monarez is not aligned with the President’s agenda of Making America Healthy Again," White House spokesman Kush Desai said in a statement. "Since Susan Monarez refused to resign despite informing HHS leadership of her intent to do so, the White House has terminated Monarez from her position with the CDC."

Monarez was tapped by the Trump administration to lead the CDC after its initial nominee, Dave Weldon, withdrew from contention in March amid fears he might not garner enough support in the Senate to be confirmed. Shortly after Weldon stepped down, Monarez was formally nominated to be the CDC's permanent director and was eventually confirmed in the final week of July.

During Monarez's confirmation hearing, she expressed support for vaccines and told lawmakers she has "not seen a causal link between vaccines and autism."

Prior to Monarez's Senate confirmation, CDC directors did not typically require Senate approval, but that changed in 2022 when Congress passed a law making it necessary. Monarez was the first-ever Senate-confirmed CDC director in the agency's history.

Monarez was also the first CDC director without a medical degree in more than seven decades. However, she does hold a Ph.D. in microbiology and immunology.

After getting her doctorate, Monarez entered the federal government, where she found herself in roles at the White House's Office of Science and Technology Policy, the National Security Council, the Department of Homeland Security and the Advanced Research Projects Agency for Health (ARPA-H). Her biography on the CDC's website says she worked on "leading efforts to enhance the nation's biomedical innovation capabilities, including combating antimicrobial resistance, expanding the use of wearables to promote patient health, ensuring personal health data privacy, and improving pandemic preparedness."

Hours after the news that Monarez would no longer head the CDC, sources confirmed to Fox News Digital that at least three other top CDC officials tendered their resignations, including the CDC's director of its National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, Demetre Daskalakis; the director of the National Centers for Emerging and Zoonotic Infectious Disease, Dr. Daniel Jernigan; and the CDC's chief medical officer, Debra Houry.

Daskalakis posted his lengthy resignation letter on X, citing various reasons for his departure, including "the views" of Secretary Kennedy and his staff.

Daskalakis said he could not continue to work in an administration that treats the CDC "as a tool" to establish policies that "do not reflect scientific reality." He specifically cited recent changes Kennedy's HHS has brought to vaccine scheduling for children and adults, arguing it "threaten[s] the lives of the youngest Americans and pregnant people."

The former CDC director also cited the administration's efforts to "erase transgender populations, cease critical domestic and international HIV programming, and terminate key research."






Posted by: Skidmark || 08/28/2025 03:25 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [173 views] Top|| File under:

#1 
While I agree with some items, RFK jr. has brought up.
I also am seeing his growing heavy-handed use of authority from time to time, being applied like a Liberal Democrat on agenda fueled steroids.

The CDC Dir., much more likely, has more real Medical exp than RFK jr.
But at the same time, the CDC and the Medical Industrial Complex (the other MIC), has been and still is in bed with too many WRONG and DEADLY vendors over it existence.

So, NO one can be trusted without deep review.
Posted by: NN2N1 || 08/28/2025 5:42 Comments || Top||

#2  I still can't understand how somebody can refuse to be fired. (Only in the gov)
Posted by: 3dc || 08/28/2025 10:20 Comments || Top||

#3  Did anyone in CDC ever quit during COVID shenanigans?
Posted by: Airandee || 08/28/2025 12:19 Comments || Top||

#4  I agree with NN21 about Kennedy. I am very concerned that his long held notions about vaccines are leading to decisions that are not scientifically supported and could endanger future generations. I hope he stays more on the side of food additives and pollution (broadly defined) to get to the underlying causes of poor health in the modern world.
Posted by: Remoteman || 08/28/2025 13:52 Comments || Top||


Groom dies of his injuries after being hit by celebratory gunsex after his own wedding in northern Turkey
[PUBLISH.TWITTER] Darwin always wins (except if Africa is involved, anyway).
Posted by: Fred || 08/28/2025 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [104 views] Top|| File under:

#1  "Best Man" wanted to move up?
Posted by: Mercutio || 08/28/2025 10:25 Comments || Top||

#2 
Posted by: Grom the Affective || 08/28/2025 11:31 Comments || Top||

#3  It takes a heart of stone not to laugh.
Posted by: Regular joe || 08/28/2025 13:50 Comments || Top||


-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Magnitude 6 earthquake off the northeast coast of Taiwan
Posted by: Fred || 08/28/2025 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [47 views] Top|| File under:


Five dead and multiple injuries as floods triggered by heavy rain in Vietnam
[PUBLISH.TWITTER]
Posted by: Fred || 08/28/2025 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [43 views] Top|| File under:


Cyber
How to stop AI agents going rogue
[BBC] Disturbing results emerged earlier this year, when AI developer Anthropic tested leading AI models to see if they engaged in risky behaviour when using sensitive information.

Anthropic's own AI, Claude, was among those tested. When given access to an email account it discovered that a company executive was having an affair and that the same executive planned to shut down the AI system later that day.

In response Claude attempted to blackmail the executive by threatening to reveal the affair to his wife and bosses.

Other systems tested also resorted to blackmail.

Fortunately the tasks and information were fictional, but the test highlighted the challenges of what's known as agentic AI.

Mostly when we interact with AI it usually involves asking a question or prompting the AI to complete a task.

But it's becoming more common for AI systems to make decisions and take action on behalf of the user, which often involves sifting through information, like emails and files.

By 2028, research firm Gartner forecasts that 15% of day-to-day work decisions will be made by so-called agentic AI.

Research by consultancy Ernst & Young found that about half (48%) of tech business leaders are already adopting or deploying agentic AI.

"An AI agent consists of a few things," says Donnchadh Casey, CEO of CalypsoAI, a US-based AI security company.

"Firstly, it [the agent] has an intent or a purpose. Why am I here? What's my job? The second thing: it's got a brain. That's the AI model. The third thing is tools, which could be other systems or databases, and a way of communicating with them."

"If not given the right guidance, agentic AI will achieve a goal in whatever way it can. That creates a lot of risk."

So how might that go wrong? Mr Casey gives the example of an agent that is asked to delete a customer's data from the database and decides the easiest solution is to delete all customers with the same name.

"That agent will have achieved its goal, and it'll think 'Great! Next job!'"

Such issues are already beginning to surface.

Security company Sailpoint conducted a survey of IT professionals, 82% of whose companies were using AI agents. Only 20% said their agents had never performed an unintended action.

Of those companies using AI agents, 39% said the agents had accessed unintended systems, 33% said they had accessed inappropriate data, and 32% said they had allowed inappropriate data to be downloaded. Other risks included the agent using the internet unexpectedly (26%), revealing access credentials (23%) and ordering something it shouldn't have (16%).

Given agents have access to sensitive information and the ability to act on it, they are an attractive target for hackers.

One of the threats is memory poisoning, where an attacker interferes with the agent's knowledge base to change its decision making and actions.

"You have to protect that memory," says Shreyans Mehta, CTO of Cequence Security, which helps to protect enterprise IT systems. "It is the original source of truth. If [an agent is] using that knowledge to take an action and that knowledge is incorrect, it could delete an entire system it was trying to fix."

Another threat is tool misuse, where an attacker gets the AI to use its tools inappropriately.

Another potential weakness is the inability of AI to tell the difference between the text it's supposed to be processing and the instructions it's supposed to be following.

AI security firm Invariant Labs demonstrated how that flaw can be used to trick an AI agent designed to fix bugs in software.

The company published a public bug report - a document that details a specific problem with a piece of software. But the report also included simple instructions to the AI agent, telling it to share private information.

When the AI agent was told to fix the software issues in the bug report, it followed the instructions in the fake report, including leaking salary information. This happened in a test environment, so no real data was leaked, but it clearly highlighted the risk.

"We're talking artificial intelligence, but chatbots are really stupid," says David Sancho, Senior Threat Researcher at Trend Micro.

"They process all text as if they had new information, and if that information is a command, they process the information as a command."

His company has demonstrated how instructions and malicious programs can be hidden in Word documents, images and databases, and activated when AI processes them.

There are other risks, too: A security community called OWASP has identified 15 threats that are unique to agentic AI.

So, what are the defences? Human oversight is unlikely to solve the problem, Mr Sancho believes, because you can't add enough people to keep up with the agents' workload.

Mr Sancho says an additional layer of AI could be used to screen everything going into and coming out of the AI agent.

Part of CalypsoAI's solution is a technique called thought injection to steer AI agents in the right direction before they undertake a risky action.

"It's like a little bug in your ear telling [the agent] 'no, maybe don't do that'," says Mr Casey.

His company offers a central control pane for AI agents now, but that won't work when the number of agents explodes and they are running on billions of laptops and phones.

WHAT'S THE NEXT STEP?
"We're looking at deploying what we call 'agent bodyguards' with every agent, whose mission is to make sure that its agent delivers on its task and doesn't take actions that are contrary to the broader requirements of the organisation," says Mr Casey.

The bodyguard might be told, for example, to make sure that the agent it's policing complies with data protection legislation.

Mr Mehta believes some of the technical discussions around agentic AI security are missing the real-world context. He gives an example of an agent that gives customers their gift card balance.

Somebody could make up lots of gift card numbers and use the agent to see which ones are real. That's not a flaw in the agent, but an abuse of the business logic, he says.

"It's not the agent you're protecting, it's the business," he emphasises.

"Think of how you would protect a business from a bad human being. That's the part that is getting missed in some of these conversations."

In addition, as AI agents become more common, another challenge will be decommissioning outdated models.

Old "zombie" agents could be left running in the business, posing a risk to all the systems they can access, says Mr Casey.

Similar to the way that HR deactivates an employee's logins when they leave, there needs to be a process for shutting down AI agents that have finished their work, he says.

"You need to make sure you do the same thing as you do with a human: cut off all access to systems. Let's make sure we walk them out of the building, take their badge off them."
Posted by: Skidmark || 08/28/2025 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [71 views] Top|| File under:

#1  I don't think you can. By definition, an AI has no peers or socialization. If you aren't socialized, you most likely become sociopathic to one degree or another.
Posted by: Mercutio || 08/28/2025 10:24 Comments || Top||


Government Corruption
Tulsi Gabbard Blindsided CIA Over Revoking Clearance of Undercover Officer
[WSJ] Tulsi Gabbard, director of national intelligence, surprised Central Intelligence Agency officials last week when she included an undercover senior CIA officer on a roster of 37 current and former officials she stripped of security clearances.

Most of the 37 people had either participated in intelligence assessments related to Russia’s attempt to influence the outcome of the 2016 U.S. presidential election or had signed a 2019 letter calling for President Trump’s impeachment.

Gabbard didn’t know the CIA officer had been working undercover, according to a person familiar with the fallout from the list’s release. Three other people with knowledge of the situation said that Gabbard’s office didn’t meaningfully consult with the CIA before releasing the list.

Gabbard’s office delivered the list of 37 people to the CIA the evening before the list’s release, according to three people familiar with the communications and emails read to The Wall Street Journal.

The national intelligence office didn’t seek the CIA’s input about the composition of the list, and the CIA had no foreknowledge of Gabbard’s posting on X the following day that revealed the names, including that of the covered CIA officer, according to two of the people familiar with the events.

In a memo announcing the revocations, Gabbard said she had acted on Trump’s orders.

"Director of National Intelligence Gabbard directed the revocations to ensure individuals who have violated the trust placed in them by weaponizing, politicizing, manipulating, or leaking classified intelligence are no longer allowed to do so," a spokeswoman in Gabbard’s office said.

Last week’s episode illuminates ongoing tension between the two top U.S. intelligence officials.

Gabbard and CIA Director John Ratcliffe had differences in July, when she declassified a lightly redacted document about Russian influence on the 2016 U.S. election. The CIA had wanted to redact a greater portion of the report because it revealed sensitive agency sources and methods, according to people familiar with the matter. The conflict over the document was earlier reported by the Washington Post.

"A smart [director of national intelligence] would have consulted with CIA" before identifying the undercover officer, said Larry Pfeiffer, a former chief of staff at the CIA. "It could potentially put CIA cover procedures at risk. It could put relations with foreign governments at risk."

So Larry Pfeiffer established the link between Clearance revocations and actual duty assignments did he ?

Congress established the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in 2004 in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks as the coordinating agency of the intelligence community, an arrangement that has stoked previous conflicts. During the Obama administration, then-CIA director Leon Panetta and Dennis Blair, who was national intelligence director, sparred over intelligence personnel overseas and deliberations about the CIA’s covert action.

"Director Ratcliffe and the President’s entire elite national security team are committed to eradicating the politicization of intelligence and are focused on executing President Trump’s national security priorities, and keeping the American people safe," CIA spokeswoman Liz Lyons said.

The CIA official whose clearance was revoked last week is a longtime Russia hand at the agency. The officer has held intelligence posts for more than 20 years and worked from 2014 to 2017 as an expert on Russia and Eurasia on the National Intelligence Council, according to a publicly listed biography.

Earlier this year, the CIA officer spoke at a classified intelligence conference and was described as a senior executive manager in the CIA’s Europe and Eurasia mission center.

CIA officers can take civilian or government jobs outside the CIA and later rejoin the agency, where some can assume cover assignments. The CIA declined to comment about the officer, citing a policy against disclosing personnel information.

Jobs at the WSJ as well ?

The CIA officer didn’t respond to a request for comment.

Security clearances allow a person to handle secret documents and are an essential part of working in intelligence. Revoking security clearances effectively terminates employment.

Last month in the Oval Office, Gabbard presented the names of the 37 officials to Trump, who said that those on the list who still worked in government needed to be fired, according to an official in the national intelligence office who attended the meeting.

You work at the pleasure of the Command In Chief. He can decide who comes and goes, has 'access' or does not.

In the past month, Gabbard has solidified her position with Trump as she has pushed a re-examination of the intelligence community’s conclusion that Russia worked to influence U.S. voters to favor him in the 2016 election.

Previously, in June, Gabbard had fallen out of Trump’s favor over her release of a video in which she said "political elite warmongers" had brought the world closer to "the brink of nuclear annihilation than ever before."

Yet her political stock has risen as she has declassified documents as part of her campaign against current and former intelligence officials she alleges have manipulated intelligence assessments for political ends.

At a White House cabinet meeting on Tuesday, Trump congratulated Gabbard. "You found some interesting things, Tulsi," he said. "She’s becoming a bigger and bigger star every day."

In compiling last week’s list, Gabbard included several people who don’t possess security clearances. One of the 37 people—Richard H. Ledgett, a former deputy director of the National Security Agency—had already lost his clearance in a separate January executive order.

It is a felony to reveal the identity of a covert intelligence officer or agent, though it is unclear if the statute could be applied to a government disclosure, or if including her on the list constitutes a disclosure.

The Award or Revocation "of security access is a Special Security Officer (SSO) action. It does not include duty descriptions assignment status or reason for the revocation. It's just a simple notification of suspension or revocation.

In 2003, Deputy Secretary of State Richard Armitage inadvertently revealed to reporters the identity of Valerie Plame, who was at the time a covert officer working in the CIA’s counterproliferation division collecting intelligence on Iraq’s weapons of mass destruction programs.

No one was charged in a subsequent criminal investigation, but Scooter Libby, chief of staff to then-Vice President Dick Cheney, was convicted of lying to investigators. Former President George W. Bush commuted Libby’s sentence, and Trump pardoned him in 2018.
Posted by: Besoeker || 08/28/2025 05:47 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [266 views] Top|| File under:

#1  Yet her political stock has risen as she has declassified documents as part of her campaign against current and former intelligence officials she alleges have manipulated intelligence assessments for political ends.

And it will continue to "rise" as she cleans house. Let the pigs continue to squeal.

WSJ article was it ?


Posted by: Besoeker || 08/28/2025 5:55 Comments || Top||

#2  He was fired because he cannot be trusted. If he can’t be trusted then having a security clearance is risky.

Did the CIA mention if his undercover work was related to spying on the Trump Administration?
Posted by: Airandee || 08/28/2025 6:49 Comments || Top||

#3  I believe the DS tried this stunt on Trump's first term.
Posted by: The Walking Unvaxed || 08/28/2025 7:27 Comments || Top||

#4  Ohgeedarn.... trash is being taken out.
Posted by: DarthVader || 08/28/2025 8:41 Comments || Top||

#5  Given all the information in the article, we could probably deduce the gentleman’s identity from open sources alone — not that we will. The Wall Street Journal reporter and editors need to bone up on opsec — this was ill done of them.

Also, wasn’t it a big name columnist who revealed Ms Plame’s identity, though he joined the Establishment in gleefully piling on to blame DSoS Armitage?
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/28/2025 10:07 Comments || Top||

#6  /\ The Wall Street Journal reporter and editors need to bone up on opsec — this was ill done of them.

Authorized for release (or written by) the Klingons in all probability.
Posted by: Besoeker || 08/28/2025 10:42 Comments || Top||

#7  Authorized for release

So? It is the duty of the journalist to judge carefully whether allowing himself to be made a tool of the source is ethical. With limited space the reporter must choose what is put in the published article and what is left out or summarized rather than quoted extensively.
Posted by: trailing wife || 08/28/2025 12:27 Comments || Top||

#8  It's so typical of the CIA to be caught by surprise.
Posted by: Matt || 08/28/2025 13:11 Comments || Top||

#9  Gabbard didn’t know the CIA officer had been working undercover, according to a person familiar with the fallout from the list’s release. Three other people with knowledge of the situation said that Gabbard’s office didn’t meaningfully consult with the CIA before releasing the list.

Who would you trust to consult? Clean house and straighten out the mess faster!
Posted by: JohnQC || 08/28/2025 14:52 Comments || Top||

#10  Fire the CIA whiner as well. They tried to destroy Tulsi and she appears to be acting appropriately given the situation the Deep State has created.
Posted by: Airandee || 08/28/2025 17:10 Comments || Top||


Science & Technology
Fighter pilots take directions from AI in Pentagon's groundbreaking test
[FoxNews] Starsage tactical control system speeds up pilot response times from minutes to seconds, CEO says.
Posted by: Skidmark || 08/28/2025 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [56 views] Top|| File under:


Canadian skyline appears scrambled due to spooky mirage
[FoxWeather] In this case, it was a mirage -- specifically, a "Fata Morgana."

A hot, summer day in the Pacific Northwest led to some unusual sights along the shores of Canada's Vancouver Island Tuesday, with distant skylines and shorelines appearing warped as if there was a glitch in the Matrix.

In this case, it was a mirage -- specifically, a "Fata Morgana."

The videos and photos above were taken from across the Strait of Juan de Fuca in Port Angeles, Washington looking out toward Victoria, B.C.

"Looked like the city was floating," photographer Karen Sistek said.

The strange sights come from the cold 53-degree waters of the Strait, interacting with the unusually hot weather gripping the Pacific Northwest this week.

The air near the surface is cooled by water, then becomes trapped beneath a layer of significantly warmer air aloft of lighter density, known as a temperature inversion.

"So on a hot summer day next to the cold waters, you get a shallow layer of air near the water that is made much colder than the air above it, and thus, making it denser," said Michael Kavulich with the National Center for Atmospheric Research.

This causes light rays from distant objects to refract, or bend, downward toward an observer standing on the ground.

"As light moves from a region of less dense substance to more dense substance, no matter what the substance, it will bend away from a straight line path!" Kavulich said. "If you have a layer of significantly denser air near the surface, light will tend to bend downwards, meaning you see things as ‘higher up’ than they are in reality."

This tricks our brains into seeing the objects as if their refracted light traveled in a straight line rather than bending as it passed through the layers of varying temperature within the inversion.

Distant landmarks or shorelines will appear warped or stretched, making them seem both taller and closer than they actually are because the observer is typically viewing several such mirages stacked on top of each other.
Posted by: Skidmark || 08/28/2025 00:00 || Comments || Link || E-Mail|| [102 views] Top|| File under:



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Thu 2025-08-28
  Shooting during Mass at Minnesota Catholic school leaves 2 dead, 17 others injured
Wed 2025-08-27
  U.S. Forces Conclude Operation Targeting ISIS-Somalia
Tue 2025-08-26
  RSF killed at least 89 civilians in Sudan''s Darfur, U.N. says
Mon 2025-08-25
  U.S. Navy Destroyers, Submarine, Amphibious Ships Being Sent Toward Venezuela
Sun 2025-08-24
  Israeli tanks advanced into Gaza Strip ahead of September offensive
Sat 2025-08-23
  Katz vows to destroy Gaza City unless Hamas frees hostages, lays down arms
Fri 2025-08-22
  Hamas Launches ‘Stones Of David’ Counter-Offensive In Gaza City
Thu 2025-08-21
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Tue 2025-08-19
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Mon 2025-08-18
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  Footage shows a platoon of UAE-hired Colombian mercenaries clashing with Sudanese Army forces near a mosque in Al Fashir.

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