Author Archives: Admin

Feinstein: National Security Leaks Coming from White House ‘Ranks’

Sen. Diane Feinstein (D-CA), Chairwoman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, on Monday said the White House appears to be responsible for leaking classified national security information.
 
‘‘I think the White House has to understand that some of this is coming from their ranks,’’ Feinstein said at a World Affairs Council forum, according to the Associated Press (AP).

Republicans, such as Sen. John McCain (R-AZ), have accused the Obama administration of leaking national security information to win votes. Specifically, McCain mentioned the computer virus program that disabled some of Iran’s nuclear facilities — and other sensitive national security matters.

The uproar intensified when the The New York Times ran a story titled, “Obama order sped up wave of cyberattacks against Iran.” The Times has also published stories on Obama’s “kill lists” with sources that were all affiliated with the Obama administration. TheTimes has denied that the Obama administration leaked information to them.
 
Democrat Pat Caddell has pointed the finger at National Security Adviser Tom Donilon as the primary leaker of sensitive national security information. 

Click here for more from BreitBart.com.

Romney on offense

Yesterday Mitt Romney spoke at the Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) National Convention in Reno, Nevada and BreitBart has posted some amazing quotes with analysis writing:  For one of the first times in the campaign … Romney came out swinging. And he hit the mark.

He went right at Obama from the outset:
 
[H]as the American economy recovered?
 
Has our ability to shape world events been enhanced, or diminished?

Have we gained greater confidence among our allies, and greater respect from our adversaries?

And, perhaps most importantly, has the most severe security threat facing America and our friends, a nuclear-armed Iran, become more or less likely?

These clear measures are the ultimate tests of American leadership.  And, by these standards, we haven’t seen much in the President’s first term that inspires confidence in a second.

These are the questions upon which Romney can realistically stake his re-election bid. And Romney didn’t stop there. He delivered body-shot after body-shot:
 
The President’s policies have made it harder to recover from the deepest recession in seventy years … exposed the military to cuts that no one can justify … compromised our national-security secrets … and in dealings with other nations, given trust where it is not earned, insult where it is not deserved, and apology where it is not due.
 
And he posed the contrast between his own vision of American exceptionalism and Obama’s, largely by focusing on the concept that this must be an “American Century”:
 
Like a watchman in the night, we must remain at our post – and keep guard of the freedom that defines and ennobles us, and our friends.  In an American Century, we have the strongest economy and the strongest military in the world.  In an American Century, we secure peace through our strength.  And if by absolute necessity we must employ it, we must wield our strength with resolve.  In an American Century, we lead the free world and the free world leads the entire world.
 
If we do not have the strength or vision to lead, then other powers will take our place, pulling history in a very different direction.  A just and peaceful world depends on a strong and confident America. I pledge to you that if I become commander-in-chief, the United States of America will fulfill its duty, and its destiny.
 
Romney had especially harsh words for Obama’s planned military cuts:
 
Today, we are just months away from an arbitrary, across-the-board budget reduction that would saddle the military with a trillion dollars in cuts, severely shrink our force structure, and impair our ability to meet and deter threats.  Don’t bother trying to find a serious military rationale behind any of this, unless that rationale is wishful thinking. Strategy is not driving President Obama’s massive defense cuts.  In fact, his own Secretary of Defense warned that these reductions would be “devastating.”  And he is right.
 
And Romney ripped Obama for his administration’s national security leaks, which Romney said “betrays our national interest … compromises our men and women in the field … demands a full and prompt investigation by a special counsel, with explanation and consequence … The time for stonewalling is over.”
 
Where President Obama offered nothing but platitudes in his speech to VFW yesterday, Romney laid out a point-by-point attack on Obama’s foreign policy. He started with the “sudden abandonment of friends in Poland and the Czech Republic”; he moved on to Obama’s kowtowing to Russia; he slammed Obama for pooh-poohing Hugo Chavez’s team effort with Hezbollah.

He deconstructed Obama’s attacks on Israel:
 
President Obama is fond of lecturing Israel’s leaders. He was even caught by a microphone deriding them. He has undermined their position, which was tough enough as it was.  And even at the United Nations, to the enthusiastic applause of Israel’s enemies, he spoke as if our closest ally in the Middle East was the problem.
 
The people of Israel deserve better than what they have received from the leader of the free world.  And the chorus of accusations, threats, and insults at the United Nations should never again include the voice of the President of the United States.

 
His comprehensive assault on the Obama record included the usual litany of Obama abuses: the Middle East Islamist Spring, the rising danger of Iran, the bending over backwards for Chinese dictatorship. And he ended with this brutal takedown:
 
This is very simple: if you do not want America to be the strongest nation on earth, I am not your President.  You have that President today.

Click here for more from BreitBart.com.

Navy SEAL on lessons learned from Aurora

As I continue to read about the terrible tragedy in Aurora, Colorado, I can’t help but think there’s some lessons from my time as a Navy SEAL that I can pass on to the average citizen. So here goes…

Don’t Make Yourself an Easy Target
 
When at sporting events, concerts, and the movies, choose seats that give you a tactical advantage always.  What do I mean? Choose seats that allow good and east vantage points and a hasty exit point.  Always stack the odds in your favor. It’s the reason I still combat park (back in to a space) and sit with my back to the wall when I’m eating.
 
Active Shooter Scenario Advice
 
Take cover and not concealment.  Concealment hides, cover hides AND protects.  It’s the difference between hiding behind a movie seat or a concrete wall.
 
Don’t lie there with your eyes closed and get shot. Think and move.  A good decision executed quickly is better than a great one never executed. Violence of action, as we call it in the Spec Ops community, will often change the odds in your favor.
 
For close quarter combat drills we’d draw a gun with someone over 20 feet away running at us.  In most cases you can be on someone before they can draw and take a shot.  I’m not advocating running straight at someone but if you have the tactical advantage (jam, re-loading, distraction or the shooter isn’t paying attention) then take the shooter down or get the hell out of there.  Deal with the situation with your eyes wide open.
 
In Aurora, the shooter was severely weighted down with armor and his helmet would have also limited his vision. You can use all this to your advantage.
 
Flashlight anyone?  I have one for daily carry and take it everywhere with me.  It’s become another extension of me and has diffused at least two potentially violent confrontations in a non-lethal way. I recommend 200+ lumens.
 
How to use it in this situation?
 
I would have pulled my high lumens pocket flashlight and blinded this guy. The high powered beam would have taken away his vision for 3-4 seconds, which is an eternity and enough time to flight or fight. There’s also no shame in surviving and getting you and your loved ones out of harm – especially little ones. Be a Hero to your kids and family for surviving, nobody can expect more of you than that. Like we say in Survival Escape Evasion Resistance (SERE) school, “Survive with Honor.”

To read more click here.  
 

Navy SEAL on lessons learned from Aurora

As I continue to read about the terrible tragedy in Aurora, Colorado, I can’t help but think there’s some lessons from my time as a Navy SEAL that I can pass on to the average citizen. So here goes…

Don’t Make Yourself an Easy Target
 
When at sporting events, concerts, and the movies, choose seats that give you a tactical advantage always.  What do I mean? 

Choose seats that allow good and east vantage points and a hasty exit point.  Always stack the odds in your favor. It’s the reason I still combat park (back in to a space) and sit with my back to the wall when I’m eating.
 
Active Shooter Scenario Advice
 
Take cover and not concealment.  Concealment hides, cover hides AND protects.  It’s the difference between hiding behind a movie seat or a concrete wall.
 
Don’t lie there with your eyes closed and get shot. Think and move.  A good decision executed quickly is better than a great one never executed. Violence of action, as we call it in the Spec Ops community, will often change the odds in your favor.
 
For close quarter combat drills we’d draw a gun with someone over 20 feet away running at us.  In most cases you can be on someone before they can draw and take a shot.  I’m not advocating running straight at someone but if you have the tactical advantage (jam, re-loading, distraction or the shooter isn’t paying attention) then take the shooter down or get the hell out of there.  Deal with the situation with your eyes wide open.
 
In Aurora, the shooter was severely weighted down with armor and his helmet would have also limited his vision. You can use all this to your advantage.
 
Flashlight anyone?  I have one for daily carry and take it everywhere with me.  It’s become another extension of me and has diffused at least two potentially violent confrontations in a non-lethal way. I recommend 200+ lumens.
 
How to use it in this situation?
 
I would have pulled my high lumens pocket flashlight and blinded this guy. The high powered beam would have taken away his vision for 3-4 seconds, which is an eternity and enough time to flight or fight. There’s also no shame in surviving and getting you and your loved ones out of harm – especially little ones. Be a Hero to your kids and family for surviving, nobody can expect more of you than that. Like we say in Survival Escape Evasion Resistance (SERE) school, “Survive with Honor.”

To read more click here.  
 

The good, bad and ugly of Federal Job Training

Updated:  U.S. Senator Tom Coburn, M.D. (R-OK) released an oversight report Tuesday on job training programs in Oklahoma entitled, “What Works (and What Doesn’t): The Good, Bad and Ugly of Federal Job Training in Oklahoma.”  This report was the result of an exhaustive year-long review of job training programs in Oklahoma that included 70 field interviews and meetings with officials. 

The report follows last year’s groundbreaking study from the Government Accountability Office that found taxpayers are spending $18 billion on 47 duplicative job training across 9 federal agencies. 

GAO could not find evidence that any of the job training programs were working.  Since GAO released its report 18 months ago, the Senate has failed to consolidate, streamline or improve job training programs.  

“This study confirms what GAO discovered: Taxpayers are spending billions of dollars employing people in job training programs instead of training unemployed workers for jobs.  Taxpayers should be appalled Congress has done nothing to reform these programs for more than 18 months,” Dr. Coburn said.

“The report also shows that states are vastly more capable of managing job training programs than the federal government,” Dr. Coburn added.  “In Oklahoma, and across America, program administrators and job-seekers are trapped in a system that simply does not work.  Sadly, Washington politicians have been more concerned about protecting their own jobs – and promoting their commitment to job-training programs – rather than providing those in need the actual training necessary to achieve meaningful employment.”

“While programs in Oklahoma were, by and large, hampered by Washington-directed duplication, there are Oklahomans who are defying the odds through their hard-work, ingenuity and compassion.  For instance, Jason Price, the Oklahoma Department of Rehabilitation Services Program Manager, recognized that, in many cases, Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI) beneficiaries had the potential to enter the workforce despite their disabilities.  Price had the compassion and common sense to create incentives for disabled Oklahomans to work up to their potential and developed a program that has helped as many as 3,000 disabled Oklahomans to find work each year – 100 of whom leave the disability program entirely.  Price’s work has honored the dignity of disabled Oklahoma and represents the best values of our nation,” Dr. Coburn said.    

Key findings of the report:

States know what works better than career politicians in Washington (see pg. 32 of report)

Oklahoma’s jobseekers, workers and employers should not have to send their tax dollars to Washington, only to have bureaucrats send the dollars back in the form of regulations and programs that do not successfully serve Oklahoma’s workforce and job training needs. The Sooner State is introducing the most severely disabled Oklahomans (SSDI recipients) back onto the private payroll – through efforts championed by an Oklahoman – not by Washington bureaucrats and politicians.

Duplication and overlap among federal job training programs is rampant and creates problems for the States administering the programs. (see pg. 12 of report)

In Oklahoma there are 40 different job training programs, operated by at least 45 groups, organizations, tribes, state agencies, educational institutions, and quasi-government contractors, across 180 locations with an annual cost of $164 million working separately to develop Oklahoma’s workforce.  One rural Oklahoma town, Ada, has 17 different job training programs serving a population of 16,810.

Administrative costs sometimes consume the bulk of federal job training dollars. (see pg. 22 of report)

In August of 2011, Oklahoma’s Southeast Workforce Investment Board (SEWIB) passed a multi-million dollar budget which allocated only 14 cents of every dollar for actual job training services. The SEWIB’s budget allocated more for “administrative travel” than “dislocated worker services.”

Federal job training dollars are spent on questionable items and activities which do not lead to sustainable employment. (see pg. 15 of report)

Job Corp, Oklahoma’s largest recipient of federal training dollars, spent over $36,000, during a 6 month timeframe, on flowers and billboards. Job Corps also pays students based on length of time in the program—offering higher stipends for longer enrollment. Additionally, Job Corps takes students for weekly bowling trips and other recreational activities.

In another case, Job Corp spent around $76,000 per person to help youth obtain minimum wage jobs.

Individuals, who receive job training, often do not enter related fields of employment. (see pg.18 of report)

Culinary students at Job Corps have been placed as pest-control workers, funeral attendants, baggage porters, concierges, tour guides and telemarketers among other things. Nurse assistant and pharmacy technician students at Job Corps were placed as telephone operators and tax preparers.

Performance metrics for job training programs are severely lacking.(see pg. 21 of report)

Training-related employment is rarely tracked among job training programs. However, federal law prohibits the Department of Labor’s Employment & Training Administration (ETA) from establishing new performance measures apart from what is required in Section 136 of the Workforce Investment Act (WIA).

Too often job training programs are segregated based on race, gender, background, and other demographics instead of being designed to meet labor market demands. (see pg. 12 of report)

Of Oklahoma’s 40 training job training programs there are 8 different programs targeting Native Americans that must be navigated by jobseekers and 7 different programs serving Veterans – some of which require veterans to pursue training for “green skills,” not because of a labor market analysis but because politicians in Washington are imposing ideological agendas on states. 

Click here to read the report.

 

Update: Late Tuesday, CareerTech released a statement on Coburn’s report headlined: CareerTech helps Oklahomans succeed

Referencing the report and noting it is the result of a year-long review of job training programs in Oklahoma that included 70 field interviews and meetings with officials.

The Oklahoma Department of Career and Technology Education, however, the report states, illustrates what Oklahomans can do when they “localize efforts for workforce needs.” They noted Coburn also credits the Governor’s Council on Workforce and Economic Development, of which CareerTech is a part, and the Oklahoma Department of Rehabilitation Services with helping Oklahomans find work.

Coburn cites the local base of CareerTech’s technology centers as a large part of the reason for its success.

"Oklahoma’s CareerTech system works with companies throughout the state to provide the customized training they need," said State Director Phil Berkenbile. One such example is at Western Technology Center in Burns Flat.

Through the training and assistance provided by the technology center, Superior Fabrication of Elk City has been able to add 36 welders to its payroll during the past two years. These jobs represent an increase in the local payroll of more than $1 million per year.

Terry Mores, Superior’s CEO, recognizes Western Tech as the company’s "training partner of choice." The expansion of Superior’s workforce has allowed the company to increase productivity by taking on more contracts. Its primary customers are energy sector companies

“Oklahoma CareerTech’s integration with the school system and local workforce allows for community influence in the training process; such factors have not gone unnoticed by Oklahoma’s employers,” Coburn states in his report.

He also quotes a report from the Governor’s Council on Workforce and Economic Development that said Oklahoma employers believe CareerTech has a “finger on the pulse of Oklahoma’s businesses.”

CareerTech offers education and training for high school students and adults at its 29 technology centers with 57 campuses. High school juniors and seniors living in a technology center’s district attend for free and learn skills that help them move successfully into Oklahoma’s workforce or continue their education at a college or university.

CareerTech offers help to workers moving from one field to another, workers who lost jobs because of layoffs or other reasons and veterans moving from the military to private industry.

Through its 16 skills centers, CareerTech also helps inmates in Oklahoma’s correctional facilities receive training that will help them obtain jobs after release.

In addition, CareerTech works with Oklahoma companies – both new and existing – to give workers the skills they need so they and the companies can be a successful part of Oklahoma’s economy.

“It is interesting that Oklahoma’s major employers find Career Tech is better connected with their needs, considering Career Tech operates nearly autonomously from the federal government – funded predominantly through state and local tax dollars,” Coburn writes in his report.