Saturday, December 15, 2018

A new letter from CIA whistleblower Jeffrey Sterling RootsAction Education Fund

RootsAction Education Fund<info@rootsaction.org>
To    
What’s it like to celebrate Thanksgiving outside of prison walls for the first time in four years?

Below is an illuminating new letter from CIA whistleblower Jeffrey Sterling, who asked us to send it along to you -- with his deep appreciation for the wide range of support that so many people provided during his long ordeal of imprisonment.

Jeffrey went to prison in mid-2015, after prosecution that BBC News called “trial by metadata.” Now, he says, “I would like to address the need for accountability of power.”

You can help Jeffrey do that by supporting his new work as the coordinator of The Project for Accountability. You’ll give him a lift with the project if you make a tax-deductible donation in support of this exciting new venture.

The RootsAction Education Fund is sponsoring this project for the same reason that we’ve actively supported Jeffrey for the last four years, while he withstood the vengeful weight of the “national security” state.

Jeffrey infuriated powerful CIA officials when he sued the agency for racial discrimination, and later when he went through channels to tell Senate Intelligence Committee staffers about a botched and dangerous covert operation by the CIA. In retaliation, the CIA unleashed its unaccountable power against Jeffrey.

You can help The Project for Accountability if you click here and make a tax-deductible contribution. Half of every dollar you donate will go directly to Jeffrey as he works to rebuild his life, while the other half will go to sustaining his project.

If you don’t already know about Jeffrey’s real-life nightmare of harassment, legal threats and persecution by the CIA hierarchy and the Justice Department, please take a look at the Background information we link to at the bottom of this email.

We plan to keep you informed about Jeffrey’s future radio and TV interviews, speaking tours and articles. But for all of that to happen, we need to build The Project for Accountability. A tax-deductible donation of whatever you can afford would be greatly appreciated.

Here is the new letter to you from Jeffrey Sterling:
_____________________________
Thanksgiving, above all, is a time for reflection, to look back and on the aspects of our lives that we cherish and have enriched our lives. This was a most exciting Thanksgiving for me this year because I had and have so much to be thankful for.

This year, I couldn't help but reflect on my last three Thanksgivings as they were all spent in a federal prison, far away from my home and loved ones. During those difficult years, I thought I had nothing to be thankful for, I was after all sitting in prison.

However, and particularly on those seeming bleak days in November, I was reminded of what I had to truly be thankful for. There was my faithful and determined wife Holly, our family and friends who stuck by our sides during the ordeal of being persecuted by my government, and there was the support from so many who expressed solidarity, outrage and compassion for me and my plight.

That benevolence gave me hope when I had none. And only through that hope so wonderfully bolstered by so many, I spent Thanksgiving at home ever grateful and ever hopeful. So, this year, when I looked back, I knew and felt a tremendous feeling of the meaning of Thanksgiving.

Looking forward, I continue to be excited about what can be done with this project for accountability. One area that can be addressed is calling attention to the abusive and disingenuous use of the Espionage Act by the government. Time and again and never more so than demonstrated in my trial, the government has been using the ancient Espionage Act not as a means of combating treasonous actions that truly endanger our national security, but as a tool to quash voices of dissent and accountability.

The dubious nature of the Espionage Act is quite evident in the disparagement in its use. While the Department of Justice is quick to turn to the archaic law to fuel the ongoing witch hunt against whistleblowers, the same prosecutorial enthusiasm does not apply to transgressors in higher levels of government whose indiscretions with classified information pose a far greater threat to national security.

For individuals like General Petraeus, Sandy Berger, John Deutch, General Cartwright and a whole host of others, violations of national security result only in probation to lesser charges and presidential pardons among other slaps on the wrist. For the less powerful, the gauntlet of supposed treason is lowered with the Espionage Act. It is time the Department of Justice is prevented from using the Espionage Act as a hammer against lower-level voices of dissent and as a trump card or panacea to hide governmental ills and improprieties.

The dangers of this unchecked governmental aggression are no more evident than in the ruthless prosecution of whistleblowers. The list of whistleblowers targeted with the Espionage Act continues to grow.

The latest Espionage Act aggression tragedy is Terry Albury. Terry took a brave stand to reveal improprieties at the FBI, and for this he is bound for prison; he will spend his next Thanksgiving much the same way as I had, a victim of the government and country he wanted to serve. Terry will need the same support I received so he too can find hope, especially during the holidays.

If more light is shone on the Espionage Act and its misuse, change can happen. The law should be accountable to and for the people and not the exclusive province of a government that has things to hide. I hope this project for accountability can be a spark to bring much needed light where light is sorely needed.

Jeffrey Sterling
December 7, 2018

_____________________________

PS from the RootsAction Education Fund team:

Jeffrey’s initial work on The Project for Accountability will include telling the American people and the entire world about what happened to him -- and about his refusal to knuckle under to illegitimate power. This all-too-true story can help strengthen a wide range of whistleblowers -- past, present and future.

You can help make that happen with a tax-deductible donation of any amount.

Please do what you can to support Jeffrey’s new work as coordinator of The Project for Accountability.

Thank you!



Please share on Facebook and Twitter.

--- The RootsAction Education Fund team

Background:
>>  BBC News: "Jeffrey Sterling's Trial by Metadata"
>>  John Kiriakou: “CIA Whistleblower Jeffrey Sterling Placed in Solitary Confinement”
>>  ExposeFacts: Special Coverage of the Jeffrey Sterling Trial
>>  Marcy Wheeler, ExposeFacts: "Sterling Verdict Another Measure of Declining Government Credibility on Secrets"
>>  Norman Solomon, The Nation: "CIA Officer Jeffrey Sterling Sentenced to Prison: The Latest Blow in the Government's War on Journalism"
>>  Reporters Without Borders: "Jeffrey Sterling Latest Victim of the U.S.' War on Whistleblowers"
>>  AFP: "Pardon Sought for Ex-CIA Officer in Leak Case"
>>  Documentary film: "The Invisible Man: CIA Whistleblower Jeffrey Sterling"

 
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MAJOR ACTION ANNOUNCED: “4 for Fair Food Tour,” March 2-14, 2019, farmworkers and students to take the Boot the Braids Campaign to the next level! Coalition of Immokalee Workers

Coalition of Immokalee Workers<workers@ciw-online.org>
Coalition of Immokalee Workers
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Now Sponsored by: Apple, Walmart, T-Mobile, and Phillips? VeteransPolicy.org

VeteransPolicy.org<execdirector@veteranspolicy.org>
To   
Apple Update: VA Shadow Rulers Edition
Bruce Moskowitz, Marc Sherman. and Marvel CEO Ike Perlmutter's deep level of influence at the Department of Veterans Affairs continues to be revealedWorth noting? Darin Selnick, now special adviser to VA Sec. Robert Wilkie, is a former high ranking member of the Concerned Veterans for America, a Koch Brothers-funded group. More from Isaac Arnsdorf at Salon.com:

The newly released emails also detail Moskowitz’s effort to get the VA and Apple to adapt his app. As a VA IT official described it in a May 2017 email, “We are utilizing the native iOS mobile app, Emergency Medical Center Tracker, that Dr. Moskowitz developed.”

Darin Selnick, a VA official who previously signed onto a 2016 proposal to dismantle the agency’s government-run health service, agreed with Moskowitz’s low estimation of the VA doctors’ input. “The VA staff has limited knowledge and experience, which is why you and the” academic medical centers “are so important to help the VA move forward,” Selnick wrote.

Selnick, who is now a special adviser to Wilkie, was the point person working with Moskowitz on the app, the emails show. “I like you are the implementer for VA,” he told Moskowitz in March 2017.

When Selnick said the VA’s information technology division could start working on the app, Moskowitz replied, “We need our specialist.” He then connected Selnick with his son Aaron, and Selnick introduced Aaron Moskowitz to Apple. (Aaron Moskowitz’s name is redacted from the emails, but his involvement was confirmed by four people familiar with the matter. He didn’t respond to a request for comment.)

VA officials identified major problems with the app’s usability and functionality. “Some of the code needs to be refactored and even rebuilt,” the IT official said in the May email.

Nevertheless, Moskowitz’s son Aaron joined a June 2017 conference call with executives from top medical systems and from Apple, including CEO Tim Cook. Moskowitz wanted the app discussed for five to seven minutes, according to the emails. After the call, Moskowitz named his son as one of the project’s “mid-level project managers.”

In preparation for the conference call, Apple employees and medical experts circulated a memo that assessed Moskowitz’s proposals, which were identified as coming from “the VA and the White House.” In the memo, Apple’s experts pushed back on Moskowitz’s app, saying that the VA’s website already offered a similar tool and that the national databases needed to make the app accurate didn’t exist. Instead, the memo encouraged pursuing a different idea (giving veterans a way to store their health data on their cellphones), which it said would “achieve the greatest benefit for our veterans in the shortest amount of time.”


Reminder: Apple sees potential profit in Veterans Healthcare Data
From our newsletter two weeks ago: Apple is looking at the Department of Veterans Affairs as its way into a larger healthcare information market. And unlike most private health providers, they’re not cloaking their intentions. Read more at The Verge.

This Week on Capitol Hill Mental Health and the Wounded Warrior
The Wounded Warrior Project released its annual report on veterans mental health and suicide.
 Here’s the press release and several key findings:

To treat mental health concerns, including PTSD, the survey found that warriors:
  • 71% chose a VA medical center as their top place to seek help for mental health concerns.
  • 75% of warriors have healthcare coverage through the VA, up from 59% in 2014.
  • 53% preferred talking to another veteran about their mental health.
  • 47% used prescription medications to treat their mental health.
  • 33% had difficulty getting mental health care, put off getting such care, or did not get the care they needed. Of those warriors:
    • 19% did not seek treatment because they felt they would be considered weak.
    • 19% were concerned that future career plans would be jeopardized.
    • 18% felt they would be stigmatized by peers or family for seeking mental health treatment.
Military Sexual Trauma and suicide among women veterans
Voice of America reports on how women veterans ‘quietly struggle’ with sexual harassment, military sexual trauma, and suicide.
 Read it here.

Is the VA’s National Strategy for Suicide Prevention working?
Analysis from Russell Lemle at the Federal Practitioner:

In June 2018, the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) issued its National Strategy for Preventing Veteran Suicide, 2018-2028. Its 14 goals—many highly innovative—are “to provide a framework for identifying priorities, organizing efforts, and contributing to a national focus on Veteran suicide prevention.”

The National Strategy recognizes that suicide prevention requires a 3-pronged approach that includes universal, selective, and targeted strategies because “suicide cannot be prevented by any single strategy.”1 Even so, the National Strategy does not heed this core tenet. It focuses exclusively on universal, non-VA community-based priorities and efforts. That focus causes a problem because it neglects the other strategies. It also is precarious because in the current era of VA zero sum budgets, increases in 1 domain come from decreases in another. Thus, sole prioritizing of universal community components could divert funds from extant effective VA suicide prevention programs.


VA partners with T-Mobile, Walmart, and Phillips to expand telehealth
Read the Walmart press releaseMore from the Federal News Network:

The department announced Thursday it will partner with three private sector companies and two veterans service organizations to address VA’s access challenges and create more convenient opportunities for veterans to see doctors and health care professionals.

The announcement came at VA’s first-ever “Anywhere to Anywhere Together” summit in Washington. The department gathered its new partners, members of industry, medical professionals and others to solicit their feedback and ideas on how VA could forge a path for telehealth in the future.

The department is partnering with T-Mobile, which will host the VA Video Connect app on all service devices for free. Veterans who already have T-Mobile don’t need to take action to start or continue using the free service, said Mike Katz, executive vice president of T-Mobile for Business.

Video Connect lets VA providers use their mobile devices to see and speak with veterans on their own devices or home computers.

VA also inked new partnerships with Walmart and Philips. The department will work with Philips, the American Legion and the Veterans of Foreign Wars to set up 10 remote examination services at VSO posts across the country. Philips will provide video screens and other remote medical devices, so veterans can go visit their closest VSO post to see a VA medical professional, who, in some cases, may be based hundreds or even thousands miles away.


Our questions:
  • How much data will T-Mobile, Walmart, and Phillips get to keep and use?
  • Will there be any marketing or cross promotion from the private companies while veterans are using the service?
Quick Clicks:
  • Press of Atlantic City: NJ Health Department offers a $250k grant to recreate VA’s care model for first responders and veterans
  • USA Today: A veteran’s spouse discusses the economic, physical, and mental toll of being a caregiver
  • WFLA Tampa: Blue Water Veterans march after continued denials of disability benefits
  • CureToday.com: Myeloma outcomes for Black Veterans differ from non-veterans because of fewer treatment disparities within VA’s integrated system
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Add your name: No border wall-Matt Hildreth

Matt Hildreth<moveon-help@list.moveon.org>
To   
Dear fellow MoveOn member,
Donald Trump bragged that he will be "proud" to shut down the United States government unless Congress gives him $5 billion for his wall.1 Congress should not let Trump take our government hostage.
Trump's obsession with a border wall is a bad idea. Mexico isn't paying for the wall, and we shouldn't have to either. Tell Congress to stand up to Trump and oppose funding for his stupid, wasteful border wall!
The border wall that Donald Trump has demanded for years would be an ecological disaster, an enormous waste of money, and an international symbol of intolerance that doesn't represent America's values.2
Even many Republicans know that the border wall is a bad idea.3 The money could be better spent on projects related to health care, education, and the economy.

Trump is threatening to shut down the government if he doesn't get his way, but Congress needs to check his power trip.
Thanks!
–Matt Hildreth, America's Voice
Sources:
1. "Trump: Proud to shut down government over wall," CNN, December 11, 2018
https://act.moveon.org/go/61544?t=10&akid=222072%2E38417624%2EGfz1Jy
2. "The ecological disaster that is Trump’s border wall: a visual guide," Vox, October 29, 2017
https://act.moveon.org/go/61551?t=12&akid=222072%2E38417624%2EGfz1Jy
3. "Trump demands a border wall but many Republican lawmakers aren’t convinced," The Washington Post,
September 20, 2018
https://act.moveon.org/go/61562?t=14&akid=222072%2E38417624%2EGfz1Jy
You're receiving this petition because we thought it might interest you. It was created on MoveOn.org, where anyone can start their own online petitions. You can start your own petition here.
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