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Urgent: Senators secretly block anti-corruption bill Email Print

This Friday, telephone your U.S. senators to urge their support for the Whistleblower Act amendments legislation.  (The Capitol switchboard, 202-224-3121, will connect you with your Senator.)

The legislation is in danger of dying if Congress doesn't pass it before they go home for the election.  But, several Senators reportedly are blocking a final vote on the bill with secret holds.

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Senators block anti-corruption bill with secret holds (Call for Action) Email Print

Several senators reportedly are using "secret holds" to block passage of anti-corruption legislation that activists, concerned citizens and more enlightened members of Congress have been working for eight years to pass into law. The identities of the stonewallers are uncertain, but suspects include eight Republicans and the Senate Minority Leader (names provided below the fold.

A bipartisan group of Senate offices has agreed on a reconciliation bill that they are hoping to pass and send to the House of Representatives for final passage. The bill is critical to restoring integrity and fiscal responsibility in our federal government and previous votes indicate that the bill would pass with flying colors - but only if it could be presented for a vote before Congress leaves at the end of the week.

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Prologue to Tragedy: Information Suppression Email Print

James Madison wrote, "A popular government without popular information or the means of acquiring it, is but a prologue to a farce or tragedy, or perhaps both."  The increased suppression of scientific dissent in America in recent years proves the accuracy of Madison's observation.

In a recent diary, I described the lack of adequate and accurate public information on radiation hazards. Unfortunately, the nuclear-proliferation-for-profit crowd has a long history of trying to suppress public dialogue about nuclear safety rather than support their own positions with facts presented openly. Scientists who offer contrary facts and opinions soon find that they have themselves become "radioactive," as one whistleblower described it to me.

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Support the YouTube Homeland Security Whistleblower Email Print

After reading the WaPo article on the YouTube Whistleblower, I hope this statement from the Project on Government Oversight gets the widest dissemination possible:

The formal systems that whistle-blowers are expected to use have failed. That's why you're seeing people be creative like this...This is a tremendous way for someone brave enough to do it to say something directly and not have to go through a filter.


In my humble opinion, "filter" is not a strong enough word: perhaps "impregnable barricade" would be more accurate.

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