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Destrier
07-05-2012, 19:23
http://pjmedia.com/blog/homeland-security-lexicon-youre-all-militia-extremists-now/


A recently published “lexicon” distributed to thousands of federal, state, and local law enforcement agencies by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) targets citizens concerned about their Second Amendment rights and the steady encroachment of the federal government, categorizing such as “militia extremists.”

The “lexicon,” marked Unclassified/For Official Use Only (FOUO), is dated November 10, 2011, and was sent out by email to law enforcement and homeland security agencies on November 14 by LaJuan E. Washington of the DHS Office of Intelligence and Analysis.

We have exclusively posted the DHS “lexicon” here.

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Its definition of “militia extremists” states:

(U//FOUO) Groups or individuals who facilitate or engage in acts of violence directed at federal, state, or local government officials or infrastructure in response to their belief that the government deliberately is stripping Americans of their freedoms and is attempting to establish a totalitarian regime. These individuals consequently oppose many federal and state authorities’ laws and regulations, (particularly those related to firearms ownership), and often belong to armed paramilitary groups. They often conduct paramilitary training designed to violently resist perceived government oppression or to violently overthrow the US Government. (Page 2 of 3, emphasis added)

So what drives militia extremism according to DHS now is “belief that the government deliberately is stripping Americans of their freedoms.” It is demonstrated by opposing “many federal and state authorities’ laws and regulations, (particularly those related to firearms ownership).” Would writing about those topics (as I am now) fall under “facilitation”? On its face, it’s hard to see how it could be excluded under DHS’s broad definition.

Another indicator, according to DHS, is that militia extremists “often belong to paramilitary groups,” which would mean that there are “militia extremists” who aren’t part of a militia. So if you oppose federal regulations and support the Second Amendment to the Constitution, and though you don’t actually belong to a militia, you can still be branded a “militia extremist” by your own government, and presumably be targeted by law enforcement agencies. The “Reporting Notice” found on Page 3 of 3 of the “lexicon” encourages recipients to do exactly that:

DHS and FBI encourage recipients of this document to report information concerning suspicious or criminal activity to the nearest State and Major Urban Area Fusion Center and to the local FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force.

And for those who would scoff that my reading is over the top and claim that DHS would never target anyone who wasn’t knowingly and willingly involved in “facilitating and engaging in acts of violence,” the DHS lexicon adds another category, “unwitting co-optees”:

(U//FOUO) Groups or individuals who provide support to terrorism without knowing that their actions are contributing to terrorism. Such individuals may suspect that they are being used. Not all unwitting co-optees are engaging in criminal behavior.

Amazingly, the “lexicon” appears to directly violate standards published by DHS just weeks before the document was sent out.

In October 2011, DHS published its “Countering Violent Extremism (CVE) Training Guidance and Best Practices,” which was produced by the DHS Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties and posted on the agency’s website.

Section 2 of that document, titled “Training should be sensitive to constitutional values,” directs:

a) Review the training program to ensure that it uses examples to demonstrate that terrorists and violent extremists vary in ethnicity, race, gender, and religion.
b) Training should focus on behavior, not appearance or membership in particular ethnic or religious communities.
c) Training should support the protection of civil rights and civil liberties as part of national security. Don’t use training that equates religious expression, protests, or other constitutionally protected activity with criminal activity. (emphasis added)

But not only does the “lexicon” target constitutionally protected activity, it specifically targets groups based on race, namely “black supremacist extremists” and “white supremacist extremists.” I have absolutely no problem targeting groups promoting violence based on racial supremacist ideology, but if DHS is going to proscribe the use of such terms and promptly turn around and use such — while in the same breath targeting private citizens for exercising their constitutional rights and freedom of speech in violation of DHS’s own standards — needless to say, that’s a serious problem.

It bears mentioning that an earlier incarnation of the DHS lexicon was the subject of criticism from both Democrats and Republicans in Congress for its targeting of “alternative media” and its shockingly broad definition of the “patriot movement.” A DHS spokesman later claimed that the “lexicon” was sent out prematurely.

Which raises the question of why these various “lexicons” published by the federal government exist in the first place.

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Going back to the Bush administration, these “lexicons” have seemingly had a singular purpose: purging the use of “Islam,” “jihad,” and “Muslim” from any official discussion of terrorism. No one should be surprised that none of those terms can be found in the current DHS “lexicon,” despite the fact that even by the most generous estimates, more than 40 percent of domestic terrorism has come from within the Muslim community, which accounts for less than one percent of the population. In its place, federal bureaucrats have invented and promoted a patently meaningless and undefinable category, “violent extremism.”

The roots of this go back to the end of the Bush administration and a March 2008 “lexicon” published by the National Counterterrorism Center. Titled “Words that Work and Words that Don’t: A Guide for Counterterrorism Communication,” it began the effort to purge the usage of the terms “Islam,” “Muslim,” and “jihad” from the vocabulary of government officials.

The Obama administration has taken those efforts even further, removing those terms from the 2009 National Intelligence Strategy, the Quadrennial Homeland Security Review, the Quadrennial Defense Review, the FBI Counterterrorism Analytical Lexicon, and the DOD Fort Hood report.

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And as seen with the criticism of the previous version of the “lexicon,” this is hardly the first time that the DHS Office for Intelligence and Analysis has come under fire for targeting citizens with no connection whatsoever to terrorism.

In 2009, DHS came under fire for a 10-page report, “Right-wing Extremism: Current Economic and Political Climate Fueling Resurgence in Radicalization and Recruitment,” which classified returning war veterans as potential threats. When government watchdogs submitted FOIAs for the sources used in preparing the report, they found that conspiracy websites and far-left outfits had been used, including the Southern Poverty Law Center, which branded the American Legion veterans organization as a “hate group.” Information also surfaced that the report had been rushed out over the objections of civil liberties officials. DHS Secretary Janet Napolitano was forced to apologize to veterans groups and withdraw the report.

Nor is this the first time that homeland security agencies have pushed the boundaries on defining “militia extremists.”

Just a few weeks prior to DHS coming under fire for that “right-wing” report, the Missouri Information Analysis Center, funded by DHS grants, issued a report titled “The Modern Militia Movement,” which branded pro-life groups and those opposed to illegal immigration as potential domestic terrorists. Indicators identified in the report included support for third-party candidates. Political signs and bumper stickers were also suspect, with the Revolutionary War-era “Gadsden flag” specifically called out as a “militia symbol.” The Missouri fusion center later announced it would stop publishing reports altogether.

In light of the recent publication of the DHS “lexicon” that violates their own guidelines, it seems clear that under Secretary Napolitano, DHS officials are intent on continuing to target innocent citizens merely exercising their constitutional rights.

Meanwhile, groups and individuals that federal prosecutors and even federal judges have identified as supporting foreign terrorist groups are actively courted and legitimized by the Obama administration. Leaders from these terror-tied organizations are even being used to help write the DHS department guidelines on “countering violent extremism.”

Is it any wonder then that just last week it was revealed that a DHS-funded study likened terrorism to “ordinary crime” while omitting any reference to the radicalizing effects of Islamic extremist ideology?

Until Congress pushes back on this malfeasance by DHS and holds Secretary Napolitano accountable, it is likely to continue.

tonyz
07-05-2012, 19:37
Newspeak and crimethink have arrived - or the authors of the DHS drivel reported in the article are suffering from Stockholm Syndrome.

rdret1
07-05-2012, 21:01
If O gets re-elected, Big Sis will be unstoppable! Especially once he finishes choosing two to three more SC justices.

Badger52
07-06-2012, 07:05
Everyone in this thread is now guilty of facilitating.
:munchin

Team Sergeant
07-06-2012, 07:55
If O gets re-elected, Big Sis will be unstoppable! Especially once he finishes choosing two to three more SC justices.

Nothing is unstoppable. :munchin

Team Sergeant
07-06-2012, 07:56
If you cannot stay on topic don't post. You know who you are.

Hand
07-06-2012, 08:36
I just read a DHS report this weekend entitled Hot Spots of Terrorism and Other
Crimes in the United States, 1970 to 2008. Can be found here (http://start.umd.edu/start/publications/research_briefs/LaFree_Bersani_HotSpotsOfUSTerrorism.pdf).

First they establish what terrorism means.

Terrorism
The definition of terrorism used by the GTD is: the threatened or actual use of illegal force by non-state
actors, in order to attain a political, economic, religious or social goal, through fear, coercion or
intimidation.
3
It is important to note that the classification of an event as terrorism depends as much on
threats as the actual use of violence. For example, instances in which individuals seize an aircraft and
threaten to blow it up unless their demands are met are defined as terrorist events. Note also that by
specifying the threatened or actual use of force the definition of terrorism used by the GTD excludes
hoaxes. The requirement that these events be limited to the actions of “non-state actors” means that
considerable violence and terrorism that is directly attributable to states or their militaries is also excluded.
And the requirement that the act have a direct political, economic, religious or social goal means that
ordinary criminal violence is excluded. Thus, the GTD excludes state terrorism and many types of crime
and genocide, topics that are important and complex enough to warrant their own separate analysis.


Then they define the grouping that they use:

Extreme Right-Wing: groups that believe that one’s personal and/or national “way of life” is under
attack and is either already lost or that the threat is imminent (for some the threat is from a specific
ethnic, racial, or religious group), and believe in the need to be prepared for an attack either by
participating in paramilitary preparations and training or survivalism. Groups may also be fiercely
nationalistic (as opposed to universal and international in orientation), anti-global, suspicious of
centralized federal authority, reverent of individual liberty, and believe in conspiracy theories that
involve grave threat to national sovereignty and/or personal liberty.

The report then goes on to define terrorist hot spots and break their data down into the previously established groups. This bothered me in the same way, I believe, as what QP Destrier posted. I often hear people say when discussing new taxes or new restrictions on personal liberties "how does it concern me"? They have this inherit belief that the government has their best interest in mind and would never do anything that would actually affect them negatively. The old adage about "First they came for the communist but I didn't speak out; I wasn't communist" seems to go right over their head.

When I read this article I realized two things, because I am conservative and believe in smaller government and more individual liberty, I am now a right wing extremist.

Every time I told someone - hey, by implementing such and such law, the government only has to change a couple of words and suddenly you are a terrorist yourself - I was right.

Dusty
07-06-2012, 08:44
"'Extreme Right-Wing: groups that believe that one’s personal and/or national “way of life' is under attack and is either already lost or that the threat is imminent ,and believe in the need to be prepared for an attack either by participating in paramilitary preparations and training or survivalism."

lol Sounds like that crowd George Washington hung around with. :D

Barbarian
07-06-2012, 08:53
The government still has to watch its step, regardless of whether or not it's too dumb to know it.

Team Sergeant
07-06-2012, 09:58
Newspeak and crimethink have arrived - or the authors of the DHS drivel reported in the article are suffering from Stockholm Syndrome.

I'm thinking the individuals writing these "papers" have no military or law enforcement background. If you have a gun and had any military training you are probably on the DHS fusion centers list.

Five bucks says every Special Forces soldier, under 65, name and address are currently tucked away somewhere under a Top Secret DHS caveat and the same document lists all their Special Forces "Advanced" skills.

Five bucks.

For the civilians reading this, there are classified Special Forces Advanced skills and training programs that will never be discussed on this website.

The kind of skills that make the leaders of foreign countries afraid .....;)

Paragrouper
07-06-2012, 12:02
Five bucks says every Special Forces soldier, under 65, name and address are currently tucked away somewhere under a Top Secret DHS caveat and the same document lists all their Special Forces "Advanced" skills.

Five bucks.

No bet.

MR2
07-06-2012, 13:03
Five bucks says every Special Forces soldier, under 65, name and address are currently tucked away somewhere under a Top Secret DHS caveat and the same document lists all their Special Forces "Advanced" skills.

Competence does not seem to be a core value of DHS. Me thinks you presume too much.

As for any lists, if they (DHS) were able to compile such - a listing of only those under 65 would be proof of their incompetence. Am I right Teddy? :munchin

Badger52
07-06-2012, 13:12
The kind of skills that make the leaders of foreign countries afraid .....;)Good! That's how it should be. The double-edged blade is that such things make some non-foreign leaders afraid.

You're completely right about already being on lists; minimum quals these days are easy. I recall former CO getting latest spoon-fed threat brief based on DHS-disseminated assessments (y'all remember when that first "vets are on it" list came out). Poor kid got half-way thru the (too many) slides and the Old Man, common-sensical combat leader from North Carolina, said: "Aww, HELL no! This briefing's over; that's 3/4 of the people in this damn room! Go bring me something that's relevant to this neck of the woods - you gonna tell me we got a bunch of Norwegian partisans fixin' to storm the gates? Or should I really worry about how's our backup power during a blizzard?"

I miss that guy.

Team Sergeant
07-06-2012, 16:52
Competence does not seem to be a core value of DHS. Me thinks you presume too much.

As for any lists, if they (DHS) were able to compile such - a listing of only those under 65 would be proof of their incompetence. Am I right Teddy? :munchin

But "fear" is a core competence of the DHS leadership and what currently seems to motivate them.

MR2
07-06-2012, 17:31
But "fear" is a core competence of the DHS leadership and what currently seems to motivate them.

Nailed that one TS. So who are they instilling fear into? Themselves, the left, the right, the people in general, the ruling class, the bourgeois', lumpenproletariat, the proletariat, who?

greenberetTFS
07-06-2012, 17:34
Competence does not seem to be a core value of DHS. Me thinks you presume too much.

As for any lists, if they (DHS) were able to compile such - a listing of only those under 65 would be proof of their incompetence. Am I right Teddy? :munchin

Absolutely..........:p

Big Teddy :munchin

scooter
07-06-2012, 20:04
Five bucks says every Special Forces soldier, under 65, name and address are currently tucked away somewhere under a Top Secret DHS caveat and the same document lists all their Special Forces "Advanced" skills.


USASFC can't do this..... I highly doubt anyone else has this info.

AngelsSix
07-08-2012, 15:57
I'm thinking the individuals writing these "papers" have no military or law enforcement background. If you have a gun and had any military training you are probably on the DHS fusion centers list.

Five bucks says every Special Forces soldier, under 65, name and address are currently tucked away somewhere under a Top Secret DHS caveat and the same document lists all their Special Forces "Advanced" skills.

Five bucks.

For the civilians reading this, there are classified Special Forces Advanced skills and training programs that will never be discussed on this website.

The kind of skills that make the leaders of foreign countries afraid .....;)

I'll see your bet and raise you five.

scooter:
USASFC can't do this..... I highly doubt anyone else has this info.

Now you want to bet on THAT?? I will bet you are wrong about this. Don't be fooled by military vs. civilian agencies and what can and "can't" be done.;)