Rand Paul Crackdown, Gay Rights, NWO Distraction

Media Roots Radio – Rand Paul Crackdown, Gay Rights, Illuminati & NWO Distraction by Media Roots

MEDIA ROOTS – Abby and Robbie Martin talk about Senator Rand Paul’s intimidation games against journalism and his attempt to strip Abby of her press credentials; the distraction of the truth movement focusing on the terms ‘Illuminati’ and ‘New World Order’ instead of the key players and actions; gay rights and homophobia within the patriot and liberty movements.

The above timeline is interactive. Scroll through it to find out more about the show’s music and to resources mentioned during the broadcast. To see a larger version of the timeline with clickable resources go to the soundcloud link below the player.

If you would like to directly download the podcast click the down arrow icon on the right of the soundcloud display. To hide the comments to enable easier rewind and fast forward, click on the icon on the very bottom right.

This Media Roots podcast is the product of many long hours of hard work and love. If you want to encourage our voice, please consider supporting us as we continue to speak from outside party lines. If you donate, we want to thank you with your choice of art from AbbyMartin.org as well as music from RecordLabelRecords.org. Much of the music you hear on our podcasts comes from Robbie’s imprint Record Label Records, and Abby’s art reflects the passion and perspective that lead her to create Media Roots.org.

$40 donation: One 8×10 art print and one RLR release (You choose! Tell us in the Paypal notes.)

$80 donation: Two 8×10 art prints and two RLR releases (You choose!)

$150 donation: Four 8×10 art prints and four RLR releases (You choose!)

Even the smallest donations are appreciated and help us with our operating costs.

Thanks so much for your support!

Listen to all previous episodes of Media Roots Radio here.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Reply

MR Original – CISPA: Laying Siege to Net Freedom

MEDIA ROOTS — The Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA) is the next looming threat to internet freedom, as the American government continues its relentless siege of the digital domain.  Coming on the heels of SOPA, PIPA and ACTA, CISPA sounds more like the final name in a quartet of lovable Disney characters as opposed to draconian internet legislation.  However, this latest incarnation appears to be the internet’s biggest foe to date.  If CISPA becomes law, the risk to civil liberties is greater than all the previous bills combined.

U.S. Representative Mike Rogers (R-MI) is the architect of CISPA, or H.R.3523.  Prior to his political calling, Rogers served as a Federal Bureau of Investigation special agent.  Currently, he serves as the chairman of the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.  This latest effort to undermine the internet focuses less on intellectual property and does not burden private companies with policing their information flow.  Rather, CISPA makes a broader and more sinister reach for power by simply forcing companies to comply with new government regulations, in the name of cyber security.  As Andrew Couts of digitaltrends.com aptly points out, “Whereas SOPA and PIPA were bad for many companies that do business on the Internet, and burdened them with the unholy task of policing the Web (or face repercussions), this bill makes life easier for them; it removes regulations and the risk of getting sued for handing over our information to the law. Not to mention doing what the bill says it’s going to do: protecting them from cyber threats.”

CISPA aims to grant non-civilian agencies unrestricted access to all digital information.  So, it stands, the National Security Agency will benefit the most from the legislation.  If this initiative succeeds, the NSA will have access to emails, social media, library records, online banking and credit card information.  In a letter sent by opposition groups and a number of Democratic lawmakers to CISPA sponsors Mike Rogers and C.A. “Dutch” Ruppersburger (D-MA) these alarming implications are made clear. The letter says, “Without specific limitations, CISPA would, for the first time, grant non-civilian federal agencies, such as the National Security Agency, unfettered access to information about Americans’ Internet activities and allow those agencies to use that information for virtually any purpose.” 

Supporters of the bill say it will allow private companies to easily share customer communications related to “significant” cyber and national security threats with government agencies.  As long as the information meets these two criteria, government agencies can use it on a wide scale.  In turn, private companies would be shielded from lawsuits filed by customers.  A number of Silicon Valley companies have already pledged their support for the bill including: Facebook, Microsoft, Symantec and IBM. 

However, a vocal opposition has developed in an attempt to beat back CISPA.  U.S. Representative Ron Paul (R-TX) has been CISPA’s most notable opponent, calling it “Big Brother writ large.”  RT (formerly known as Russia Today), a cable news station with an American audience of 50 million, was one of the first media outlets to decry CISPA and to use the phrase “worse than SOPA.”  CISPA is particularly dangerous because it would void current privacy laws and create channels for companies to share digital information with government agencies without the need for court orders. 

In addition to this attack on internet privacy, the bill contains numerous other disturbing implications.  One is the erosion of barriers between the private sector, government and military.  Also, like so many bills of the post 9/11 era, the language is ambiguous.  The language describing what can be spied on and how that information can be used is extremely vague.  Moreover, if a private company violates your privacy, the ensuing legal battle to prove liability is a Herculean task.  A complete summary of CISPA’s threats to cyber privacy can be found at Time’s Techland section.

Despite widespread opposition to the legislation, the bill passed the House of Representatives on April 26, 2012.  Whereas SOPA and PIPA squared off Hollywood and Silicon Valley against one another, in a fight over piracy, CISPA goes beyond that and zeroes in on privacy.  As a result, there is much more widespread support for the bill in the tech-community.  Whereas SOPA, PIPA and ACTA would have placed the burden of cyber-policing onto companies, CISPA relieves them of this duty and places the onus government.  According to The Vigilant Citizen “Privacy and free speech are not exactly mutually exclusive. Loss of privacy threatens free speech, and the loss of free speech is inevitably a loss of privacy.” 

As the American government becomes more authoritarian and American people more paranoid, the battles fought over the privacy of the public digital domain will intensify.  Much like the government and the military-industrial complex dumping vast amounts of our America’s wealth into wars abroad, yielding questionable results, the government will continue its aim to control one of the last bastions of free speech.  Only time will tell how successful their surge will be.  Have the shut downs of SOPA, PIPA and ACTA taught Americans to remain vigilant and make their voices heard, or will CISPA prevail?

Learn more about what you can do here.

Adam Miezo for Media Roots, Edited by Eric Aragon

Photo by Rock1997

Rand Paul the Politician, Libertarianism, Stuxnet

Media Roots Radio – Rand Paul the Politician, Libertarianism, Entertainment Dumb Down, Stuxnet by Media Roots

MEDIA ROOTS – Abby and Robbie Martin talk about Rand Paul: catering to the GOP establishment and revealing his true political nature; Libertarianism: what aspects are good and which are bad; entertainment: the current industry dumbing down culture with movies and television; Stuxnet: US covert war against Iran.

This is Abby and Robbies’ second cross country Media Roots Radio broadcast with Abby based in Washington, DC and Robbie at the MR headquarters in Oakland, CA.

The above timeline is interactive. Scroll through it to find out more about the show’s music and to resources mentioned during the broadcast. To see a larger version of the timeline with clickable resources go to the soundcloud link below the player.

If you would like to directly download the podcast click the down arrow icon on the right of the soundcloud display. To hide the comments to enable easier rewind and fast forward, click on the icon on the very bottom right.

This Media Roots podcast is the product of many long hours of hard work and love. If you want to encourage our voice, please consider supporting us as we continue to speak from outside party lines. If you donate, we want to thank you with your choice of art from AbbyMartin.org as well as music from RecordLabelRecords.org. Much of the music you hear on our podcasts comes from Robbie’s imprint Record Label Records, and Abby’s art reflects the passion and perspective that lead her to create Media Roots.org.

$40 donation: One 8×10 art print and one RLR release (You choose! Tell us in the Paypal notes.)

$80 donation: Two 8×10 art prints and two RLR releases (You choose!)

$150 donation: Four 8×10 art prints and four RLR releases (You choose!)

Even the smallest donations are appreciated and help us with our operating costs.

Thanks so much for your support!

Listen to all previous episodes of Media Roots Radio here.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Reply

Rand Paul Confronted on Mitt Romney Endorsement

MEDIA ROOTSLuke Rudkowski of WeAreChange and I got the chance to confront Senator Rand Paul about some of the questions thousands of his supporters have about his endorsement for Presidential candidate Mitt Romney. Luke spots the Senator walking outside and questions him about his endorsement, just days after Mitt was spotted at the Bilderberg Group, according to the London Guardian. He also brings up his previous interview he had with pre-Senate Paul where Paul said that the Bilderberg Group had malintentions and that Goldman Sachs should be audited.  Romney has received over half a million dollars from Goldman Sachs for his 2012 campaign. I then follow up inside the Senate building and ask him why he is supporting a candidate that endorses all the policies Rand claims he is against.

Abby

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Rand Paul Confronted about Romney Endorsement

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Abby on RT TV: Rand Paul’s Endorsement of Mitt Romney

MEDIA ROOTSIn a surprising turn of events last Thursday, Senator Rand Paul came out on the Sean Hannity Show on Fox news to make a special announcement: his endorsement for GOP presidential candidate Mitt Romney.  The announcement was a blow to the Ron Paul liberty movement who are still rallying for Ron Paul until the very end of the game.  Despite his statement of concession in a recent newsletter, many die hard Ron Paul fans are still hoping that there’s a chance for him to win the nomination with unbound delegates in Tampa.  

But what does it say when his own son comes out to endorse his rival?  Many are theorizing that the endorsement signifies Rand Paul “selling out” to the war mongering establishment that has worked to shut out his father’s libertarian ideals for so long.  Others are stating that it’s simply a political strategy to bring the liberty ideas into the mainstream.  I explore the issue in three segments below for RT TV, all with varying guest opinions and theories.

Love him or hate him, Ron Paul is unique in his political authenticity, and that unwavering genuineness of ideals is currently unmatched by any sitting representative.  Above all else, this endorsement further elucidates that the American people cannot count on the members of the political establishment to do the bidding of the people–we can only count on ourselves to change the world around us.  Wasting countless hours and precious energy on electing political representatives with the hope that they will “create change from the inside” may lead to only greater disillusionment, disempowerment and disengagement. 

The political establishment has proven itself time and time again to represent the corporate bottom line of profit maximization, despite the consequences for humanity.  Voting is important, a civic duty if you will, but it is literally the least thing anyone can do to participate.  The votes that truly matter happen in our daily actions: the way in which we choose to live our lives, the businesses we support or don’t support, the dialogue in which we engage with our community.   Finding and voicing your passion will impact the world more than casting a ballot into an inherently flawed political system ever will.  


Abby

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Jack Hunter, official blogger for Ron Paul 2012, argues that the endorsement of Romney was a smart political move by Rand.






Lew Rockwell of the Ludwig Von Mises Institute talks about the need to work outside the system to effect change.




Even though Ron Paul himself sent out a concession letter admitting to not having enough delegates to win the nomination, Paco Elijah of Occupy the Media and Robert Vaughn, CA coordinator for Ron Paul’s campaign, argue that Ron Paul still has a chance to win. The youtube comments against me in this video are vicious, simply for calling out obvious truths.

Photo by flickr user Markn3tel