Thursday, October 01, 2015

Sandy Hook




http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/3.htm

The Corbomite Maneuver [ Star Trek: The Original Series ]

Stardate: 1512.2

Original Airdate: 10 Nov, 1966


KIRK: This is the Captain of the Enterprise. Our respect for other lifeforms requires that we give you this warning. One critical item of information that has never been incorporated into the memory banks of any Earth ship.
























http://vignette4.wikia.nocookie.net/memoryalpha/images/b/b3/Balok_puppet.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20110331033507&path-prefix=en










From 11/29/2010 To 12/14/2012 ( the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting by Corbis Gates Foundation Microsoft Bill Gates ) is 746 days

746 = 373 + 373

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 11/10/1966 ( premiere US TV series episode "Star Trek"::"The Corbomite Maneuver" ) is 373 days





http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=88755

The American Presidency Project

Barack Obama

XLIV President of the United States: 2009 - present

Remarks on Fiscal Responsibility

November 29, 2010

Good morning, everybody. Let me begin by pointing out that although Washington is supposed to be a town of sharp elbows, it's getting a little carried away. For those of you who are worried about my lip, I should be okay. The doctor has given me a clean bill of health, and I will continue to be playing basketball whenever I get a chance. In fact, I played yesterday with Sasha and Malia, and they took it easy on me because they were feeling pity.

I hope everybody had a great Thanksgiving, but now it's time to get back to work. Congress is back in town this week. And I'm looking forward to sitting down with Republican leaders tomorrow to discuss many issues, foremost among them the American people's business that remains to be done this year. My hope is that tomorrow's meeting will mark a first step towards a new and productive working relationship. Because we now have a shared responsibility to deliver for the American people on the issues that define not only these times, but our future, and I hope we can do that in a cooperative and serious way.

Our two most fundamental challenges are keeping the American people safe and growing our economy, and it's in that spirit that I look forward to sitting down tomorrow and talking about urgent matters like the ratification of the new START Treaty, which is so essential to our safety and security, and the status of the Bush-era tax cuts that are set to expire at the end of this year. And this is just one of the many economic issues we've got to tackle together in the months ahead.

As I said a few weeks ago, the most important contest of our time is not the contest between Democrats and Republicans, it's between America and our economic competitors all around the world. And winning that contest means that we've got to ensure our children are the best educated in the world, that our research and development is second to none, and that we lead the globe in renewable energy and technological innovation.

It also means making sure that in the future we're not dragged down by long-term debt. This is a challenge that both parties have a responsibility to address: to get Federal spending under control and bring down the deficits that have been growing for most of the last decade.

Now, there's no doubt that if we want to bring down our deficits, it's critical to keep growing our economy. More importantly, there's still a lot of pain out there, and we can't afford to take any steps that might derail our recovery or our efforts to put Americans back to work and to make Main Street whole again. So we can't put the brakes on too quickly.










http://www.chakoteya.net/StarTrek/3.htm

The Corbomite Maneuver [ Star Trek: The Original Series ]

Stardate: 1512.2

Original Airdate: 10 Nov, 1966

[Bridge]

SPOCK: One degree to overlap. Stand by to photograph. Now.

BAILEY: Three days of this now, sir. Other ships must have made star maps of some of this.

SPOCK: Negative, Lieutenant. We are the first to reach this far.

SULU: Sir, contact with an object. It's moving toward us. No visual contact yet.

SPOCK: Deflectors, full intensity.

SULU: It's coming at light speed.

BAILEY: Collision course.

SPOCK: Evasive maneuvers, Mister Sulu.

SULU: Object changing direction, too, sir. Keeps coming at us.

UHURA: I'm getting no signal from it, sir.

BAILEY: Still collision course. Deflectors aren't stopping it.

SPOCK: Sound alarm.

SULU: It's slowing down, Mister Spock.

SPOCK: Countermand alarm. All engines full stop.

BAILEY: Visual contact.

SPOCK: Ahead slow. Steer a course around it, Mister Sulu.

BAILEY: It's blocking the way!

SPOCK: Quite unnecessary to raise your voice, Mister Bailey. All engines stop. Sound the alert.

SULU: Bridge to all decks. Condition alert. All decks, condition alert. Captain Kirk to the Bridge.

Captain's Log, star date 1512.2. On our third day of star mapping, an unexplained cubical object blocked our vessel's path. On the Bridge, Mister Spock immediately ordered general alert. My location, Sickbay. Quarterly physical check.










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=102750

The American Presidency Project

Barack Obama

XLIV President of the United States: 2009 - present

946 - Remarks on the Shootings in Newtown, Connecticut

December 14, 2012

This afternoon I spoke with Governor Malloy and FBI Director Mueller. I offered Governor Malloy my condolences on behalf of the Nation and made it clear he will have every single resource that he needs to investigate this heinous crime, care for the victims, counsel their families.

We've endured too many of these tragedies in the past few years. And each time I learn the news, I react not as a President, but as anybody else would: as a parent. And that was especially true today. I know there's not a parent in America who doesn't feel the same overwhelming grief that I do.










http://www.chakoteya.net/movies/movie8.html

Star Trek: First Contact (1996)


LILY: Liar!










http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/latimes/access/30913702.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=current&date=Jul+2%2C+1998&author=PAUL+D.+COLFORD&pub=Los+Angeles+Times&edition=&startpage=3&desc=Cornwall%2C+Clancy+Leading+Summer+Charge

Los Angeles Times ARCHIVES


L.A. Times Archives


Cornwall, Clancy Leading Summer Charge


Los Angeles Times - Los Angeles, Calif.

Author: PAUL D. COLFORD

Date: Jul 2, 1998


Abstract (Document Summary)

Tom Clancy's "Rainbow Six" (Putnam) will be available starting Aug. 3.










http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1509/27/cnr.06.html

CNN


TRANSCRIPTS

CNN NEWSROOM

Pope Francis Prepares to Depart the U.S. Aired 7-8p ET

Aired September 27, 2015 - 19:00 ET

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

[19:00:06] CAROL COSTELLO, CNN ANCHOR: All right. You're looking live at the Philadelphia International Airport.

Welcome back. I'm Carol Costello along with Poppy Harlow.

And the Pope is in that motorcade. We believe he's driving to another building where he'll meet privately with Vice President Joe Biden and his family. We know his wife, Jill, is along with him; his son, hunter and his family.

And then we believe the Pope will be on board that plane, a special American Airlines plane called Shepherd One. And then he'll be on his way back to Rome. We expect that plane to take off at 8:00 p.m. Eastern sharp.

But Poppy, before we talk more about the Pope's departure, we have some very special guests.










From 3/28/1950 ( Harry Truman - Letters Regarding Disclosure of Confidential Files on Employee Loyalty ) To 9/27/2015 is 23924 days

23924 = 11962 + 11962

From 11/2/1965 ( my birth date in Antlers Oklahoma USA and my birthdate as the known official United States Marshal Kerry Wayne Burgess and active duty United States Marine Corps officer ) To 8/3/1998 ( Tom Clancy "Rainbow Six" ) is 11962 days





http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIPTS/1509/27/cnr.06.html

CNN


TRANSCRIPTS

CNN NEWSROOM

Pope Francis Prepares to Depart the U.S. Aired 7-8p ET

Aired September 27, 2015 - 19:00 ET


HARLOW: Father Kesicki, to you, this is a Pope who chose his name after St. Francis of Assisi. You know, clearly an indication of what he cares about the most, the poor, the needy, those in the margins, those in the periphery, what do you believe he will take away from his week here in the United States meeting with some of those most in need, what he will take home with him to the Vatican, how it will affect his papacy going forward?

FATHER TIMOTHY KESICKI, S.J., PRESIDENT, JESUIT CONFERENCE: Well, as we look at the touching image of his plane taking off, all of us feel in our heart a sense that we're going to miss him. We know that he knows us now. He's met us. He's been in our cities. He's eaten our food. He's heard our music. He's seen us laugh. He's seen many of us cry. He knows that the United States has great potential to help the world and it also faces the temptation that all nations face, the temptation to turn in on itself.

I have to think that he's looking down from that plane right now, looking down at the lights of our country as they begin to fade away thinking, the American people are good, they're faithful, they're loving, and he now has their hearts and their will to help him with his mission.

COSTELLO: That was so well said, Father. So beautiful. And even as we look at this plane flying off to Rome, you know, the lighted tail and the red, white, and blue. It's just - the whole visit has been such a beautiful spectacle.

HARLOW: It certainly has. And, you know, for each of us, the experience has been different. It has certainly touched me in a way that I don't know that I thought that it would. I know it's touched you, Carol, very much.










http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/index.php?pid=13753

The American Presidency Project

Harry S. Truman

XXXIII President of the United States: 1945-1953

79 - Letters Regarding Disclosure of Confidential Files on Employee Loyalty.

March 28, 1950

Dear Senator Tydings:

This is in reply to your letter of March 22, 1950, in which you have asked for the production before your Subcommittee of the investigative files relating to Government employees who are or have been employed in the Department of State and against whom charges of disloyalty have been made before your Subcommittee by Senator McCarthy. The question raised by your request is one of grave concern, and I have given very careful consideration to the response contained herein.

In March of 1948, I issued a Directive to all officers and employees in the Executive Branch of the Government, directing that all reports, records, and files relating to the employee loyalty program be kept in strict confidence, even in instances where subpoenas were received. As you know, this Directive was dearly within the power of the President, and I issued it only after the most careful consideration, and after I had satisfied myself beyond any doubt that any other decision would have resulted in the collapse of the loyalty program.

At that time, I issued a release in which I pointed out the long-standing precedents regarding the production of confidential files and the reasons for my decision. I referred, among other things, to a letter from former Attorney General Robert H. Jackson, dated April 30, 1941, to the Chairman of the House Committee on Naval Affairs, declining to furnish that Committee with certain reports of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which letter was written with the approval and at the direction of President Roosevelt. That letter forcefully pointed out the serious consequences that would have resulted from compliance with the request of the House Naval Affairs Committee.

Among other things, Attorney General Jackson stated:

"Moreover, disclosure of the reports would be of serious prejudice to the future usefulness of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. As you probably know, much of this information is given in confidence and can only be obtained upon pledge not to disclose its sources. A disclosure of the sources would embarrass informants--sometimes in their employment, sometimes in their social relations, and in extreme cases might even endanger their lives. We regard the keeping of faith with confidential informants as an indispensable condition of future efficiency.

"Disclosure of information contained in the reports might also be the grossest kind of injustice to innocent individuals. Investigative reports include leads and suspicions, and sometimes even the statements of malicious or misinformed people.

"Even though later and more complete reports exonerate the individuals, the use of particular or selected reports might constitute the grossest injustice, and we all know that a correction never catches up with an accusation."

These three elements--the serious prejudice to the effectiveness of the Federal Bureau of Investigation as an investigative agency, the resulting embarrassment and danger to confidential informants, and injustice and unfairness to innocent individuals-led me to the inescapable conclusion that the single most important element in an effective and at the same time just and fair loyalty program was the preservation of all files in connection therewith in the strictest confidence. I cannot over-emphasize this point.

During the last month, I have been reexamining with utmost care this entire problem, and in this connection I have asked the Attorney General, the Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Mr. Seth Richardson, Chairman of the Loyalty Review Board, to give their careful consideration to this matter. They have unanimously advised me that disclosure of loyalty files would be contrary to the public interest, and would do much more harm than good. The Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in a report to the Attorney General has outlined the very serious consequences that would result from any such disclosure. The Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation stated:

1. The public disclosure of F.B.I. reports will reveal investigative procedures and techniques. If publicized, criminals, foreign agents, subversives, and others would thus be forewarned and seek ways and means to carry out their activities, thus avoiding detection and hampering the efficiency of an investigative agency. The underground operations of criminals and subversives already are most difficult of detection, and I do not believe the security of the Nation would be furthered by applying any additional shackles to the F.B.I.

2. For the last 25 years, the F.B.I. has represented to the American public that the F.B.I. would maintain their confidences. To make public F.B.I. reports would be to break confidences, and persons interviewed in the future might be even more reluctant to furnish information. In recent months, on numerous occasions, some citizens, shirking their responsibilities, have refused to furnish information on the grounds that it might be misused, and have gone so far as to decline to furnish information, even in application investigations, claiming they would do so only if forced by a subpoena.

3. A public disclosure of F.B.I. reports would reveal the identity of sources of information, and in some cases, at least, would place in jeopardy the lives of confidential sources of information.

4. Disclosure of information contained in F.B.I. reports might result in an injustice to innocent individuals, who find themselves entwined in a web of suspicious circumstances, which can be explained only by further investigation, and disclosures might be made under circumstances which would deny the aggrieved the opportunity to publicly state their positions.

5. A public disclosure could warn persons whose names appear in F.B.I. reports of the investigation, and serve as an effective means of enabling them to avoid detection, to approach witnesses, to bring about the destruction of evidence, or permit them to flee the country.

6. Public disclosure of F.B.I. reports could contribute to blackmail of persons investigated, or could result in degrading persons who have made a mistake or fallen prey to false propaganda.

7. Disclosure might reveal highly restricted information vital to the national security and of considerable value to a foreign power.

8. F.B.I. reports set forth full details secured from a witness, and if disclosed, could be subject to misinterpretation, quoting out of context, or used to thwart truth, distort half-truths, and misrepresent facts.

It is my desire, however, that the charges of disloyalty made before your Subcommittee be given the most thorough and complete investigation, and it is my purpose to cooperate with your Subcommittee to the greatest extent possible, bearing in mind at all times my responsibility to take care that the investigative activities and efficiency of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and other investigative agencies remain unimpaired, that innocent people--both those under investigation and those who have provided information--not be unnecessarily injured, and that the effectiveness of the employee loyalty program as a whole not be interfered with.

I am, therefore, asking Mr. Seth Richardson, Chairman of the Loyalty Review Board, to have the Board arrange for a complete and detailed review, as soon as possible, of the cases in which charges of disloyalty have been made before your Subcommittee (including cases heretofore reviewed by the Board), and am asking him to give me a full and complete report after review.

This review will include reports of loyalty investigation made by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the files of the State Department and the Civil Service Commission relating to these cases, as well as all other evidence of disloyalty made available to the Loyalty Review Board, including, of course, any evidence produced before your Subcommittee.

Upon receipt of Mr. Richardson's report, I will advise your Subcommittee further.

For your information, I am attaching hereto a list of the Members of the Loyalty Review Board.

Sincerely yours,

HARRY S. TRUMAN

[Honorable Millard E. Tydings, United States Senate, Washington, D.C.]

Dear Mr. Richardson:

I am enclosing herewith a copy of a letter which I am sending to Senator Tydings, with reference to the investigation now being conducted by the Subcommittee of the Senate Committee on Foreign Relations of Government employees who are or have been employed in the Department of State and against whom charges of disloyalty have been made. I believe the letter is self-explanatory.

In accordance with the letter, I would appreciate it if the Loyalty Review Board would arrange for a complete and detailed review, as soon as possible, of the cases in which charges of disloyalty have been made before Senator Tyding's Subcommittee. This review should include cases which have heretofore been reviewed by the Board, and should include a review of reports of loyalty investigations made by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and files of the State Department and the Civil Service Commission relating to such cases, as well as a review of all other evidence of disloyalty made available to you, including of course any evidence produced before the Subcommittee.

Would you please furnish me with a full and complete report after completion of the Board's review ?

Sincerely yours,

HARRY S. TRUMAN

[Honorable Seth W. Richardson, Chairman, Loyalty Review Board, United States Civil Service Commission, Washington, D.C.]

Note: Senator Tydings, in his letter to the President
of March 22, requested that his committee be permitted to examine the files of the State Department, the Loyalty Board, and the FBI "as to what these files contain concerning nine persons named by
Senator McCarthy in opening hearings and eighty persons named by number against whom charges of one kind or another were made by Senator McCarthy in a speech on the Senate floor on February no, 1950."
For a further letter to Senator Tydings, dated April 3, again refusing to disclose confidential information on employee loyalty, see Item 82.

Senator Tydings' subcommittee report states that on May 4, "upon ascertaining that the cases with respect to the individuals named by Senator McCarthy were identical with individuals whose loyalty files had previously been reviewed by four committees of the Eightieth Congress, the President... agreed to make the loyalty files available for review by our subcommittee with respect to such individuals, on the theory that to do so would not establish a precedent for subsequent exceptions in violation of his March 13, 1948, directive" (Senate Report 2108, State Department Employee Loyalty Investigation, p. 9). The President's directive of March 13, 1948, is Item 50, 1948 volume, this series.

On April 5, 1950, Seth Richardson, Chairman of the Loyalty Review Board, stated before the Tydings' subcommittee that "not one single case or evidence directing towards a case of espionage has been disclosed in the record .... I say it is an extraordinary thing that not one single syllable of evidence has been found by the FBI, efficient as they are, indicating that a particular case involves a question of espionage" (State Department Employee Loyalty Investigation, Hearings, subcommittee of the Committee on Foreign Relations, Senate, 81st Cong., ad sess. pt. 1, p. 409).

The President's letters to Senator Tydings and Mr. Richardson were released at Key West, Fla.










http://www.e-reading.org.ua/bookreader.php/71211/Clancy_-_Rainbow_Six.html


Tom Clancy

Rainbow Six


CHAPTER 38

NATURE RESORT


By this time, Clark was on a shuttle flight to Reagan National Airport across the river from Washington. It landed on time, and Clark was met by a CIA employee whose "company" car was parked outside for the twenty-minute ride to Langley and the seventh floor of the Old Headquarters Building. Dmitriy Popov had never expected to be inside this particular edifice, even wearing a VISITOR - ESCORT REQUIRED badge. John handled the introductions.

"Welcome," Foley said in his best Russian. "I imagine you've never been here before."

"As you have never been to Number 2 Dzerzhinsky Square."

"Ah, but I have," Clark responded. "Right into Sergey Nikolay'ch's office, in fact."

"Amazing," Popov responded, sitting down as guided.

"Okay, Ed, where the hell are they now?"

"Over northern Venezuela, heading south, probably for central Brazil. The FAA tells us that they filed a flight plan-it's required by law-for Manaus. Rubber-tree country, I think. A couple of rivers come together there."

"They told me that there is a facility there, like the one in Kansas, but smaller," Popov informed his hosts.

"Task a satellite to it?" Clark asked the DCI.

"Once we know where it is, sure. The AWACS lost a little ground when it refueled, but it's only a hundred fifty miles back now, and that's not a problem. They say the four business jets are just flying normally, cruising right along."

"Once we know where they're going… then what?"

"Not sure," Foley admitted. "I haven't thought it through that far."

"There might not be a good criminal case on this one, Ed."

"Oh?"

"Yeah," Clark confirmed with a nod. "If they're smart, and we have to assume they are, they can destroy all the physical evidence of the crime pretty easily. That leaves witnesses, but who, you suppose, is aboard those four Gs heading into Brazil?"

"All the people who know what's been happening. You'd want to keep that number low for security reasons. wouldn't you-so, you think they're going down there for choir practice

"What?" Popov asked.

"They need to find and learn a single story to tell the FBI when the interrogations begin," Foley explained. "So, they all need to learn the same hymn, and learn to sing it the same way every time."

"What would you do in their place, Ed?" Rainbow Six asked reasonably.

Foley nodded. "Yeah, that's about it. Okay, what should we do?"

Clark looked the DCI straight in the eye. "Pay them a little visit, maybe?"

"Who authorizes that?" the Director of Central Intelligence asked.



- posted by H.V.O.M - Kerry Wayne Burgess 12:01 PM Pacific Time Spokane Valley Washington USA Thursday 01 October 2015