Sky Dancing

a place to discuss real issues

  • about Sky Dancers

Tuesday Reads: Shirley Temple, The “Hillary Papers,” And The Endless NSA Story

Posted: February 11, 2014 | Author: bostonboomer | Filed under: Barack Obama, Foreign Affairs, morning reads, Republican politics, U.S. Politics | Tags: Bill Clinton, Cryptome.org, Diane Blair, drones, Edward Snowden, First Look, Glenn Greenwald, Hillary Clinton, Jeremy Scahill, metadata, Monica Lewinsky, NSA, Pierre Omidyar, Shirley Temple, signals intelligence, terrorists, The Hillary Papers, The Intercept | 32 Comments

shirley temple reading2

Good Morning!!

The top news story on Google this morning was the death of 1930s child star Shirley Temple at age 85. Later in life, she served the U.S. as an ambassador and was active in Republican politics.

From Reuters:

Shirley Temple Black, who lifted America’s spirits as a bright-eyed, dimpled child movie star during the Great Depression and later became a U.S. diplomat, died late on Monday evening at the age of 85, her family said in a statement.

Temple Black, who lured millions to the movies in the 1930s, “peacefully passed away” at her Woodside, Calif., home from natural causes at 10:57 p.m. local time (0157 ET), surrounded by her family and caregivers, the statement said on Tuesday….

As actress Shirley Temple, she was precocious, bouncy and adorable with a head of curly hair, tap-dancing through songs like “On The Good Ship Lollipop.” As Ambassador Shirley Temple Black, she was soft-spoken and earnest in postings in Czechoslovakia and Ghana, out to disprove concerns that her previous career made her a diplomatic lightweight.

“I have no trouble being taken seriously as a woman and a diplomat here,” Black said after her appointment as U.S. ambassador to Ghana in 1974. “My only problems have been with Americans who, in the beginning, refused to believe I had grown up since my movies.”

BBC News on Temple’s storied career as a child star:

Born in 1928, Temple soon became a major star after getting her first film role at the age of three.

Her singing, dancing and acting won over fans worldwide. She was given a special juvenile Oscar in 1935, when she was just six years old. To this day, she is still the youngest person to receive an Academy Award.

With the nickname “America’s little darling”, she was ranked as Hollywood’s biggest draw for four years running from 1935 to ’38 in an annual poll of US cinema owners.

Her rendition of the song On the Good Ship Lollipop in the film Bright Eyes was among her most famous performances.

Her other films included Curly Top, The Littlest Rebel, Baby Take a Bow and Little Miss Marker.

She was such a hit that US president Franklin Delano Roosevelt dubbed her “Little Miss Miracle” for raising morale during the Great Depression and she was credited with helping save 20th Century Fox from bankruptcy.

Temple starred in a total of 43 feature films – but found it difficult to sustain her career in adulthood and left acting behind in 1950.

Bloomberg Businessweek on Temple-Black’s later life:

Temple’s box-office appeal waned as she grew into adulthood, and she made her last movie in 1949. Her second marriage, to businessman Charles Black, lasted almost 55 years until his death in 2005. They raised two children, plus a daughter from Temple’s brief first marriage.

As Shirley Temple Black, the onetime star became active in Republican Party politics in the 1960s and served in diplomatic posts under four presidents.

“I had an enchanted childhood, a magic childhood, with great memories,” Black told reporters in 1978, when she turned 50. “But I don’t want to live in the past and I don’t live in the past.”

US-AUSTRALIA-POLITICS-CLINTON

In other news, attacks on Hillary Clinton are ramping up, and so far they are truly bizarre. Republicans are still obsessed with Bill Clinton’s sexual fling with White House intern Monica Lewinsky. Why that is supposed to be relevant to Hillary Clinton’s political career, I will never understand. The latest nastiness is about the so-called “Hillary Papers,” which I knew nothing about until this morning.  It turns out these papers aren’t Hillary’s, but those of some friend of the Clinton’s named Diane Blair. I’ve never heard of her.

The LA Times explains:

The papers — a collection of Blair’s diary-like accounts of conversations, campaign memos and the like — are a sometimes wrenching trip via the wayback machine, as she recounts the Clintons’ arduous transition from Arkansas to Washington.  In the most quotable comment, Hillary Clinton is said to have called Lewinsky a “narcissistic loony toon” whose relationship with Bill Clinton resulted from a moral lapse on his part, albeit one driven by the pressures facing the couple in the capital.

The papers also reflect, time after time, Hillary Clinton’s frustration with politics and her view that, while she adopted her husband’s name to stave off criticism in Arkansas, she was not about to change her personality to suit the Washington establishment, the press or, for that matter, voters.

“I gave up my name, got contact lenses, but I’m not going to try to be somebody that I’m not,” Blair quotes Clinton as saying.

That tension has been a recurring theme of the Clintons’ political lives. In the 1992 presidential contest, campaign aides placed much emphasis on humanizing Hillary, or at least forwarding a public version of the human being her friends, including Blair, testified to. Blair’s papers included a confidential campaign memo that said voters believed Hillary Clinton was smart but just couldn’t fully connect with her. (Among other things, as was reported during the campaign, many voters were unaware that the Clintons had a daughter, the then-teenage Chelsea, and thus didn’t see Hillary as particularly motherly.)

She got little credit for the things people liked about the Clintons, and more of the blame for the things they disliked.

“What voters find slick in Bill Clinton, they find ruthless in Hillary,” the memo said.

Diane Blair with Bill and Chelsea Clinton

Diane Blair with Bill and Chelsea Clinton

I still don’t see how this is relevant to Hillary’s political career. Calling Lewinsky “a narcissistic looney-tune?” Why is that a problem? Oh, and she’s “ruthless,” although there’s no evidence for that is offered. Here’s the article in the right wing Washington Free Beacon that started the latest attacks, The Hillary Papers: Archive of ‘closest friend’ paints portrait of ruthless First Lady. It’s long, and frankly only skimmed it. If this garbage is what Republicans are going to focus on in opposing Hillary, I don’t think it’s going to work. Check out more heavy breathing over the “Hillary papers” at CNN and Politico.

The endless NSA leaks story continues onward. According to the latest tally by Cryptome.org, at the current rate, it will take 42 more years for all of the Snowden documents to be released. So far Greenwald and crew have reported on only about 1.8% of the documents Snowden is believed to have stolen.

Yesterday Glenn Greenwald and the gang debuted their new website, “The Intercept,” backed by a $50 million dollar investment by Ebay and Paypal billionaire Pierre Omidyar. For now the site will be entirely focused on the Snowden leaks as well as leaks from other sources who come forward and offer information on methods U.S. uses to gather intelligence. Judging by the first article posted by Greenwald, Jeremy Scahill, and Laura Poitras, which focuses on the NSA’s role in Obama’s drone program, the articles will be aimed at using melodramatic language to inflict maximum damage to the U.S. government’s intelligence agencies, while providing little information that hasn’t been already reported elsewhere.

I assume the substance of the drone article was written by Scahill, who wrote a book, Dirty Wars, that included a great deal of information on the drone program. But you can see Greenwald’s hand in the slanted way in which the story is presented. For example, the first paragraph:

The National Security Agency is using complex analysis of electronic surveillance, rather than human intelligence, as the primary method to locate targets for lethal drone strikes – an unreliable tactic that results in the deaths of innocent or unidentified people.

No evidence is offered to show that human intelligence isn’t used or that drone strikes are “unreliable” or that they kill more civilians than bombs or missiles, and no documents from the Snowden cache are included. Interestingly, the authors do not specifically argue against killing suspected terrorists; they only claim that drones are not the best method. They also present the opinions of two sources who worked in the drone program without any evidence to show that their statements are accurate.

A few more reactions…

Guardian journalist Glenn Greenwald in Rio de Janeiro

Lloyd Grove at The Daily Beast: Welcome to Glenn Greenwald, Inc.? Grove wonders if Greenwald is the best “public face” for a serious news site.

Investigative reporter and columnist Glenn Greenwald was barely five minutes into his appearance Sunday on CNN’s Reliable Sources—an interview promoting the long-awaited online launch of First Look Media, eBay billionaire Pierre Omidyar’s ambitious digital journalism startup—before he called the chairman of the House Intelligence Committee a liar.

“He’s not only lying—and he is lying—but he knows that he’s lying,” Greenwald said about Republican Rep. Mike Rogers of Michigan, who suggested last week that journalists who’ve disseminated classified documents leaked by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden might be guilty of “fencing stolen material.”

“This is what Mike Rogers is notorious for in Washington,” Greenwald went on, “just making things up and smearing political opponents and journalists he doesn’t like.”

The retort was a familiar-sounding one for the 46-year-old Greenwald, a former trial lawyer who tends to treat policy disagreements as blood feuds and is never reluctant to question motives and fling rather personal insults.

Here’s a pointed critique from Ohtarzie, a writer who has long argued that Greenwald and Poitras are hoarding the Snowden documents, dribbling them out slowly in an effort to get maximum attention and income while providing little new information.

If there is anything new here, it’s in the large extent to which the NSA is said to rely on cell phones for identifying and tracking targets for the CIA, which allegedly leads to increases in wrongly identified targets and civilian deaths. This differs somewhat from Gellman’s account, which described a more varied, conceivably more precise approach, using an “arsenal of cyber-espionage tools, secretly seizing control of laptops, siphoning audio files and other messages, and tracking radio transmissions.”  Despite the differences, if there is something revelatory in the Intercept’s story from a technical standpoint, I’m missing it. Tracking by cell phone has been discussed before, includingby Snowden. In light of signature strikes, the apparent recklessness of these methods also seems unsurprising.

Gellman’s story was rightly criticized for being effectively a dick-waving exercise for the U.S. Intelligence apparatus, since it detailed simply how a Bad Guy was killed by the Good Guys with all their sexy technology and savvy. In keeping with their adversarial brand, Scahill and Greenwald mix the NatSec dickwaving with some handwringing over civilians, most of which is provided via quotes from former drone operator and ostensible whistleblower, Brandon Bryant. This passage gives a taste of the overall dickwavey/handwringy mix.

The former JSOC drone operator is adamant that the technology has been responsible for taking out terrorists and networks of people facilitating improvised explosive device attacks against U.S. forces in Afghanistan. But he also states that innocent people have “absolutely” been killed as a result of the NSA’s increasing reliance on the surveillance tactic.

Near the end of the lengthy piece, Bryant even wrings his hands over the assassination program as a whole, at least as it results in the extrajudicial executions of American citizens like Anwar Al Awlaki.  But overwhelmingly, both his emphasis and the emphasis of the piece are simply on the need to kill more precisely, by making greater use of informants and agents on the ground to supplement the NSA’s signal intelligence.

Ryan Goodman asks why Greenwald and Scahill repeatedly describe the use of metadata to target terrorists with drone strikes, but they provide few examples of actual metadata being used in the program. Where’s the “Metadata”?: What Greenwald and Scahill (Don’t) Say about NSA Metadata Collection and Lethal Targeting. Read all about it at the link.

Finally, the second scoop at The Intercept yesterday was a series of what they call “exclusive” photographs of the “surveillance state,” but a number of writers noted that these same photos can be found on the NSA website and by Googling. Here’s Bob Cesca:

Glenn Greenwald’s new website, The Intercept, launched today and….the first news article at the Pierre Omidyar-funded site, titled “New Photos of the NSA and Other Top Intelligence Agencies Revealed for First Time,” was utterly bizarre.

It was literally nothing more than three aerial photographs of the National Security Agency’s headquarters in Fort Meade, Maryland; the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) in Chantilly, Virginia; and the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency (NGA) in Springfield, Virginia.

That’s all. It’s treated like a major scoop and appeared as the first big revelation on the site, prior to a separate article by Greenwald and Jeremy Scahill.

I’m out of space, so I’ll add a few more links in the comment thread. I hope you’ll do the same. What stories are you focusing on today?

Did you like this post? Please share it with your friends:

  • Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Click to share on Reddit (Opens in new window) Reddit
  • Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window) Pinterest
  • Click to share on Tumblr (Opens in new window) Tumblr
  • Click to share on Mastodon (Opens in new window) Mastodon
  • Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
  • Click to print (Opens in new window) Print
  • Click to share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Click to share on Threads (Opens in new window) Threads
  • Click to share on Bluesky (Opens in new window) Bluesky
  • More
  • Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
Like Loading...

COVID-19 LINKS

Johns Hopkins Coronavirus Resource Center

WHO Covid 2019 Situation

Links to individual State Health Departments via CDC

Tulane Outbreak Center

Covid Act Now

CDC CoronaVirus

MIT CoronaVirus Articles

United States CoronaVirus Worldometer

Recent Comments

dakinikat's avatardakinikat on Mostly Monday Reads: Suppressi…
dakinikat's avatardakinikat on Mostly Monday Reads: Suppressi…
Mama Lopez's avatarMama Lopez on Mostly Monday Reads: Suppressi…
dakinikat's avatardakinikat on Mostly Monday Reads: Suppressi…
dakinikat's avatardakinikat on Sunday Cartoons: Looney T…
dakinikat's avatardakinikat on Sunday Cartoons: Looney T…
dakinikat's avatardakinikat on Sunday Cartoons: Looney T…

Recent Posts

  • Mostly Monday Reads: Suppression and Lies
  • Sunday Cartoons: Looney Tunes
  • Lazy Caturday Reads: Epstein Files, Brown U. Shooter, and Trump Insanity
  • Finally Friday Reads:
  • Thursday Cartoons: Jaws
  • Wednesday Reads: Is Trump’s Power Waning?
  • Tuesday Cartoon Overload
  • Mostly Monday Reads: Meathead
  • Sunday Cartoons: RIP Stanley Baxter

Follow us on Bluesky! @skydancingblog.bsky.social

— Sky Dancing Blog (@skydancingblog.bsky.social) 2025-01-18T20:23:16.939Z

Grab our RSS Feed

RSS Feed RSS - Posts

RSS Feed RSS - Comments

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Like Sky Dancing on Facebook

Like Sky Dancing on Facebook

The Front Page Team

  • peej's avatar peej
  • Carissa's avatar Carissa
  • bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer
  • dakinikat's avatar dakinikat
  • ecocatwoman's avatar ecocatwoman
  • mablue2's avatar mablue2
  • Mama Lopez's avatar Mama Lopez
  • peggysue22's avatar peggysue22
  • quixote's avatar quixote
  • skydancingguestblogger's avatar skydancingguestblogger
  • Mona (aka Wonk the Vote)'s avatar Mona (aka Wonk the Vote)

Contact us

We are on Facebook! Leave a message on our wall...

Email us: SkyDancingBlog@gmail.com

We are now on Mastodon!

Come follow us at:

https://mstdn.social/@SkyDancingBlog

@SkyDancingBlog@mstdn.social

RSS Memeorandum

  • Mass Recall of U.S. Ambassadors Leaves Unprecedented Global Vacancies (Wall Street Journal)
  • Bari Weiss's Audience of One (Jonathan Chait/The Atlantic)
  • Breaking: Cully Stimson and Hans von Spakovsky Resign From Heritage (Josh Blackman/Reason)
  • Flock Exposed Its AI-Powered Cameras to the Internet. We Tracked Ourselves (Jason Koebler/404 Media)
  • Nearly two dozen states sue the Trump administration over funding for CFPB (Rafael Nam/NPR)
  • Bill Clinton spokesperson says they don't need 'protection,' asks for release of all Epstein files (Max Rego/The Hill)
  • Former FDA chief sounds alarm over HHS childhood vaccine overhaul (Max Rego/The Hill)
  • Katie Miller Gives '60 Minutes' a Bonkers Lecture After Pro-Trump Censorship (Will Neal/The Daily Beast)
  • Senate Democrats cut off permitting talks after Trump's newest 'assault' on wind (Politico)
  • Ex-C.I.A. Chief Wants to Block Judge Cannon From Inquiry Pushed by Trump's Allies (Charlie Savage/New York Times)

RSS Crooks and Liars

  • ICE Now Reportedly Questioning And Detaining Native Americans
  • UPDATED: Bari Weiss Destroyed The 60 Minutes Brand In One Day
  • MAGA Hosts Say Trump Should Die Before Renaming Kennedy Center
  • Kash Patel Just Ordered Himself A New Fancy Pants Fleet Of BMWs
  • Jasmine Crockett Claps Back At JD Vance In The Best Way
  • JD Vance Goes Full White Nationalist At TPUSA Event
  • Are Contempt Of Congress Charges Coming For Pam Bondi?
  • Wormbrain Rep Begs Jebus Johnson To Install Charlie Kirk Statue At US Capitol
  • McGovern Brings All The Receipts On GOP's Health Care Failure
  • Most Damning Epstein Photo Of All: Disinformation On Bill Clinton. UPDATED

RSS Democracy NOW

  • "Destroying Knowledge": Michael Mann on Trump's Dismantling of Key Climate Center in Colorado
  • Israel Approves 19 New West Bank Settlements as State-Sponsored Violence Escalates
  • Rep. Ro Khanna on Venezuela Strikes, Zohran Mamdani, Trump-Kennedy Center & More
  • "Who Are They Protecting?": Rep. Ro Khanna Urges Contempt Charges over AG Bondi's Epstein Redactions
  • Headlines for December 22, 2025
  • "Terror & Fear": Trump Moves to Denaturalize Citizens, End Birthright Citizenship, Halt Visa Lottery
  • Kilmar Ábrego García Reunites with Family, But Trump Admin Threatens to Jail & Deport Him Again
  • Doctors in Jail? Hospitals Stripped of Fed Funding? The Criminalization of Trans Youth Healthcare
  • Headlines for December 19, 2025
  • "No Military Solution": Is Peace Possible in Sudan as "Proxy War" Expands?

RSS The UK Guardian

  • The best art and photography of 2025
  • My big night out: I was hungover and locked in an apartment. The only escape? A high, narrow window ledge
  • Let me tell you the good things the government has done in 2025 – because it certainly won’t | Polly Toynbee
  • The best outfits to wear on New Year’s Eve – whatever your plans
  • ‘Unashamedly capitalist’ rewilders claim ‘Moneyball’ approach could make millions – but experts sceptical
  • The best design and architecture of 2025
  • Keir Starmer told closer EU trade ties ‘strategic necessity’ for UK firms
  • Chris Rea, rock and blues singer-songwriter, dies aged 74
  • Prosecutions for strangulation in England and Wales increase sixfold in three years
  • Man in UK charged alongside five others with sexual offences against his wife

About our Banner

The Sky Dancing banner headline uses a snippet from a work by artist Tashi Mannox called 'Rainbow Study'. The work is described as a" study of typical Tibetan rainbow clouds, that feature in Thanka painting, temple decoration and silk brocades". dakinikat was immediately drawn to the image when trying to find stylized Tibetan Clouds to represent Sky Dancing. It is probably because Tashi's practice is similar to her own. His updated take on the clouds that fill the collection of traditional thankas is quite special.

You can find his work at his website by clicking on his logo below. He is also a calligraphy artist that uses important vajrayana syllables. We encourage you to visit his on line studio.

Categories

Archives

Find it here!

Blog Stats

  • 4,051,051 hits
Mastodon
Mastodon
Mastodon
Mastodon
Mastodon
Mastodon
Mastodon
Website Built with WordPress.com. Mid Mo Design.
  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sky Dancing
    • Join 4,539 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • Sky Dancing
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

    %d