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“Words to avoid” mere eye candy for public consumption

By Douglas J. Hagmann

29 May 2012: Last week, the U.S. Department of Homeland Security released a document containing certain keywords to avoid using when posting to social networking as reported by the UK Mail Online. Obvious words one would expect that appear to legitimize the massive governmental cyber-spying program to ostensibly keep the U.S. safe from terror threats. Such surveillance of certain keywords should be considered reasonable. There is, however, another aspect to this cyber-surveillance program that no one is talking about and no FOIA request will ever address.

The more nefarious side of the U.S. government’s cyber surveillance includes not only physical or cyber-terror threats and from where they originate, but those who have been labeled as “political dissidents.” According to sources close to such programs, the government is monitoring all cyber communications and maintaining a database of individuals and entities merely critical of government operations.

Putting it bluntly, our security apparatus has been turned inward against its own citizens. The threat has been widened to include political adversaries and has nothing to do with actual or perceived terror threats, but those who oppose the current course of operations of our government. Interestingly, the data being collected also includes those who are exposing matters such as U.S. radiation levels from Fukushima, the coming economic collapse of the U.S., and those who are involved in informing the public of factual misrepresentations of conditions and events perpetuated by official government sources.

“The so-called words to avoid is merely for public consumption and not the only or actual list maintained through government surveillance. The hole goes much deeper,” according to a source close to this agency.The data currently being collected is much broader, and is being categorized.

Expect more information about this “explosive” topic (pun intended) to be coming soon.

We will be talking about the depth of this surveillance program, what we learned about the breadth of this program, and who is behind the operation and the ultimate intent tonight on The Hagmann & Hagmann Report.

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