PDA

View Full Version : There's more than corn in Indiana...


banyon
07-12-2006, 07:58 AM
WASHINGTON, July 11 — It reads like a tally of terrorist targets that a child might have written: Old MacDonald’s Petting Zoo, the Amish Country Popcorn factory, the Mule Day Parade, the Sweetwater Flea Market and an unspecified “Beach at End of a Street.”

http://graphics10.nytimes.com/images/2006/07/12/washington/0712-nat-webASSETS.gif


But the inspector general of the Department of Homeland Security, in a report released Tuesday, found that the list was not child’s play: all these “unusual or out-of-place” sites “whose criticality is not readily apparent” are inexplicably included in the federal antiterrorism database.

The National Asset Database, as it is known, is so flawed, the inspector general found, that as of January, Indiana, with 8,591 potential terrorist targets, had 50 percent more listed sites than New York (5,687) and more than twice as many as California (3,212), ranking the state the most target-rich place in the nation.

The database is used by the Homeland Security Department to help divvy up the hundreds of millions of dollars in antiterrorism grants each year, including the program announced in May that cut money to New York City and Washington by 40 percent, while significantly increasing spending for cities including Louisville, Ky., and Omaha.

“We don’t find it embarrassing,” said the department’s deputy press secretary, Jarrod Agen. “The list is a valuable tool.”

But the audit says that lower-level department officials agreed that some older information in the inventory “was of low quality and that they had little faith in it.”

“The presence of large numbers of out-of-place assets taints the credibility of the data,” the report says.

In addition to the petting zoo, in Woodville, Ala., and the Mule Day Parade in Columbia, Tenn., the auditors questioned many entries, including “Nix’s Check Cashing,” “Mall at Sears,” “Ice Cream Parlor,” “Tackle Shop,” “Donut Shop,” “Anti-Cruelty Society” and “Bean Fest.”

Even people connected to some of those businesses or events are baffled at their inclusion as possible terrorist targets...

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/07/12/washington/12assets.html?_r=1&hp&ex=1152676800&en=6b0502da91a3d945&ei=5094&partner=homepage&oref=slogin

banyon
07-12-2006, 07:59 AM
I'm trying to figure out which Rep/Senator greased the wheels on this one.

For Wisconsin, I'm pretty sure it's Senselessbrenner.

But is it Lugar? I don't know...

Amnorix
07-12-2006, 08:16 AM
Stuff like this drives me absolutely bananas. WTF is so tough about this:

1. PORT facilities;

2. AIRPORTS;

3. places where very large numbers of people gather (downtowns of large cities, large subway systems, and large attractions).

4. Things that if they blow up, will cause horrendous collateral damage (i.e. oil refineries, nuclear reactors, chemical plants).

5. Places that are unusually critical to our nation's economy (Wall Street, etc.)

6. Places that have unusual political, historic or other value (Washington, DC, Pearl Harbor, Statue of Liberty).

SPEND YOUR MONEY THERE. Defend THOSE places. Why is this hard? It's fugging retarded.

And the money allocation -- don't get me started.

Seriously, a 12 year old with a smack of common sense could do better than what these corrupt f**ks in DC are doing, which is treating the whole goddamn thing like a new pork project.

ck_IN
07-12-2006, 08:48 AM
As a resident of Indiana I'm not sure whether to be proud that this state is deemed so essential, scared that people would view us as a target or dumbfounded at the apparent stupidity of it all.

Moooo
07-12-2006, 08:55 AM
As a resident of Indiana I'm not sure whether to be proud that this state is deemed so essential, scared that people would view us as a target or dumbfounded at the apparent stupidity of it all.

You think that's bad, Nebraska is 7th...

Moooo