Saturday, June 23, 2007

TECHNOLOGOS ARCHISTORY: CIA REVEALS SKELETONS IN THE CLOSET

AS CREATIVE FREEDOM OF TECHNOLOGOS EXPERIENTS ON WEB IS THREATENED WITH PROVIDERS ABSURD CENSORSHIP VIEW TECHNOLOGOS ARCHINEWS CINEMASCAPES TECHNOLOGOS MEDIA NeUs: VIEW TECHNOLOGOS AS HOMMAGE HISTORY OF CINEMA VISUAL LANGUAGE AS ABSTRACT COGNITIVE MEDIUM CYBERLOGOS WEB LANGUAGE DESIGN FOCUSED NeUs TECHNOLOGOS CINEMA

CIA Chief M. Hayden will reveal antique CIA sceletons as 147 documents, 11,000 pages of analysis done between 1953 and 1973 would be posted next week on the CIA’s Web site including: —CIA screening programs, beginning in the early 1950s and lasting until 1973, in which mail coming into the United States was reviewed and opened from the Soviet Union and China and testing of electronic equipment on US telephone circuits. - Surveillance of dissident groups between 1967 and 1971 and amassing of files on 9,900-plus Americans related to the antiwar movement along with assassination plots against Castro, Lumumba… "Most of it is unflattering, but it is CIA’s history," Hayden said in a speech to a conference of foreign policy historians. The documents have been sought for decades by historians, journalists and have been the subject of many fruitless Freedom of Information Act requests. In anticipation of the CIA’s release, the National Security Archive at George Washington University on Thursday published a separate set of documents from January 1975 detailing internal government deliberations of the abuses. It’s surely part of (Hayden’s) program now to draw a bright line with the past," said National Security Archive Director Thomas Blanton. "But it’s uncanny how the government keeps dipping into the black bag." Newly revealed details of ancient CIA operations, Blanton said, "are pretty resonant today."

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