http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkamZg68jpk
PLEASE WATCH THIS VIDEO! IT’S TIME THE AMERICAN PEOPLE STOOD UP FOR WHATS RIGHT!
Russia and China have warned against our attacks on Syria and WILL take military action to defend their allies!!
Here are some of the documents and revelations Manning leaked to the world from the small, sensitive, compartmented information facility in Iraq where she worked as an intelligence analyst from 2009 to 2010.
1. The ‘Collateral Murder’ Apache helicopter video
Manning released this graphic video of a U.S. Apache helicopter attack on a group of people gathered in Baghdad. Two were employees of the Reuters news agency. A member of the helicopter crew refers to the “dead bastards” he killed, and the crew lights up a passing van that stopped to help victims of the first round of gunfire.
Reuters unsuccessfully requested a copy of the video under the Freedom of Information Act, but only Manning revealed it to the world. An Army investigation into the attack, released only after Manning’s leak was published, concluded that the helicopter crew had followed the rules of engagement.
2. The Reykjavik-13 cable
Far less known than the Apache video was this classified 2010 cable from the U.S. Embassy in Reykjavik released on Feb. 18, 2010. The first of Manning’s leaks to be published, it caused an immediate sensation in Iceland for its frank discussion of U.S. indifference toward problems in the small island nation’s banking sector.
The cable’s release energized the activists in Iceland who edited “Collateral Murder.”
3. The Iraq War Logs
As part of her work as an Army intelligence analyst, Manning had access to a wealth of sensitive Army documents about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Called SIGACTS (significant activities), in military parlance, they detailed nighttime raids and improvised explosives attacks with intimate on-the-ground reports from U.S. troops.
Manning gave WikiLeaks nearly 400,000 SIGACTS from Iraq. They were published in October 2010. The Pentagon had always maintained that it did not keep track of civilian casualties in Iraq, but the independent Iraq Body Count website used the SIGACTS to confirm and update its count of deaths in the conflict.
As of this month, the Iraq Body Count’s Josh Dougherty related, the organization had added 4,000 deaths to its database as a result of Manning’s leaks and was likely to add another 10,000.
"These and thousands of others like them are known to the world today only because Bradley Manning could no longer in good conscience collude with an official policy of the Bush and Obama administrations to abuse secrecy and ‘national security’ to erase them from history," Dougherty wrote on the group’s website. "If Manning deserves any punishment at all for this, certainly her three years already served, and the disgraceful abuse she was made to suffer during it, is more than enough."
4. The Afghanistan War Logs
On July 25, 2010, just a month after Manning was arrested, WikiLeaks published 75,000 SIGACTS from the Afghanistan battlefield. The New York Times, which participated in their publication, said they offered “an unvarnished, ground-level picture of the war in Afghanistan that is in many respects more grim than the official portrayal.”
5. Detention, abuse and torture
Manning’s leaks included more than 700 Guantanamo detainee files, many revealingthat the U.S. had little reason to continue holding its prisoners. The 250,000 State Department cables he leaked detailed U.S. diplomatic pressure on foreign countries to ignore or excuse extraordinary renditions carried out by the CIA in apparent violation of international law. They also showed that the U.S. routinely failed to investigate reports of prisoner abuse and summary execution by the Iraqi military.
"It brought this issue back into public consciousness again, which is a great thing," Shane Kadidal, a lawyer at the Center for Constitutional Rights who represents Guantanamo detainees, told HuffPost in June.
"And then with everything that Manning released, to some extent the volume of the material is part of the story," Kadidal said. "It’s one thing to tell a few anecdotes based on a few items being leaked, but to be able to say across the board that most of the men who are there shouldn’t be there, were people that could be safely released … that is pretty staggering."
6. U.S. complicity with repressive Arab regimes
It was no surprise to many living in the Arab world that the United States routinely collaborated with Arab dictators behind closed doors while proclaiming its commitment to democracy in public. Manning’s leaks of sensitive State Department cables, however, laid bare the American hypocrisy in the Middle East. By some accounts, they served as a catalyst for the regime changes around the region that would come to be known as the Arab Spring.
In particular, the cables highlighted corruption within the regime of former Tunisian president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. The first batch of cables about Tunisia was released in November 2010, two months before Ben Ali fled the country.
"Whether it’s cash, services, land, property, or yes, even your yacht, President Ben Ali’s family is rumored to covet it and reportedly gets what it wants," the U.S. embassy reported in a June 2008 cable classified secret. “With Tunisians facing rising inflation and high unemployment, the conspicuous displays of wealth and persistent rumors of corruption have added fuel to the fire.”
Meet Peter Brabeck, former CEO, now Chairman of the Nestle food coorporation.
The Nestle foodstuff coorporation is the largest of its kind in the modernworld, with turnovers of about 65 billion dollars and a mere 275,000 workers world wide.
That should give you a picture of just how wealthy this man is.
Now Mr. Brabeck believes that ALL of our water should be owned and sold by major coorporations, like Nestle. Furthermore, he believes that water should not be considered a natural right, that Nature has always proven to be "pitiless", and that there has never been one case of illness that occured from eating genetically modified foods. This man is the embodiment of everything I hate in society. I disagree with him on all three fronts, as I'm sure many of you do as well.
Brabeck's sociopathic tendencies have led him to fund attacks against GMO labeling, completely destroy struggling rural areas without any means of compensation, and even conduct business with slavery rings. All of which is stated in the reports below:
“Nestlé production of mineral water involves the abuse of vulnerable water resources. In the Serra da Mantiqueira region of Brazil, home to the “circuit of waters” park whose groundwater has a high mineral content and medicinal properties, over-pumping has resulted in depletion and long-term damage.”
“In 2001, Nestlé faced criticism for buying cocoa from the Ivory Coast and Ghana, which may have been produced using child slaves.[58] According to an investigative report by the BBC, hundreds of thousands of children in Mali, Burkina Faso and Togo were being purchased from their destitute parents and shipped to the Ivory Coast, to be sold as slaves to cocoa farms.”
So is water a natural right?
Or should it be sold to us by major coorporations?
I'll leave that up to you, but im currently cleansing my house of everything Nestle. I suggest you do the same.
I really think Florida should just not be part of the United States anymore. I mean clearly it’s legal to kill people there because Zimmerman and Anthony were able to get away with it and y’know you can steal elections too as demonstrated by Bush in 2000.
It’s amazing that republicans suck on government perks, but are the first ones to complain about someone else trying to get help. Cancer patients Gov? Think there is no war on women? Maybe he should concentrate on something else since his state is 49th in job creation.
People were curious about my last post, I figured I’d show you which states are contributing to Rape Culture. Make your state hear you voice. We don’t have to stay silent.