Tag Archives: internet

Shirley Sherrod to meet with Vilsack about a job

(CNN) — Shirley Sherrod, who received an apology after being forced to resign from the Agriculture Department, will meet Tuesday with Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack to discuss a job offer, a department official confirmed Saturday.

It will be the first face-to-face meeting between the two since a controversial sequence of events last month culminated in her stepping down.

Sherrod, who was the Agriculture Department’s Georgia Director of Rural Development, has said she is being offered the position of deputy director of the Office of Advocacy and Outreach.

The position includes administration and outreach to improve the Agriculture Department’s civil rights efforts and image nationwide.

The department official who confirmed the meeting asked not to be identified.

Sherrod was forced to resign in July after misleading and incomplete video footage of a speech she gave was posted on the internet and picked up in media reports. Vilsack apologized to her and offered her the promotion.

The flap began after conservative blogger Andrew Breitbart posted a portion of a speech Sherrod gave in which she spoke of not offering her full help to a white farmer. The original post by Breitbart indicated that the incident Sherrod mentioned occurred when she worked for the Agriculture Department, and news outlets quickly picked up on the story.

However, the incident took place decades before she joined the department, and her speech in its unedited form made the point that people should move beyond race. In addition, the white farmer who Sherrod mentioned has told reporters that she helped him save his farm.

Sherrod spoke about the incident Saturday at a meeting of the Federation of Southern Cooperatives Land Assistance Fund in Epes, Alabama.

She said her work with other agencies to help poor counties in south Georgia was overlooked during the controversy.

Sherrod said Saturday she has no criticism of President Obama and believes the NAACP, which also urged her to resign before learning the video had misconstrued her comments, was tricked.

NAACP President Ben Jealous spoke Saturday at the Alabama meeting.

Repeated calls to Sherrod were not returned Saturday.

Shirley Sherrod to meet with Vilsack about a job

Obama talks with USDA employee forced out of her job

(CNN) — Shirley Sherrod got her wish Thursday: a conversation with President Barack Obama about her forced resignation from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

The president and Sherrod spoke by telephone after Obama apparently had some trouble getting through to her. Afterward, Sherrod told CNN that the call was “very, very good.”

Obama offered his support and said the two had faced similar issues in their pasts, Sherrod said.

However, she said they didn’t discuss whether the White House had a role in her ouster by Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack, which came after misleading and incomplete video footage of a speech she gave was posted on the internet and picked up in media reports.

“He didn’t go into that,” Sherrod said. “He wanted to reassure me that Secretary Vilsack was truly sincere … with his efforts to rid the agency of discrimination.”

Asked how it felt to talk to the president, Sherrod said: “Oh, gosh, you know, it was great.

“He’s the president of the United States of America. I respect him as that. I appreciate him as that,” Sherrod said. “And it felt like talking to someone else just sitting in the front of the car here.”

White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs said Obama personally apologized to Sherrod in the phone call but did not lobby for her to take another job at the Department of Agriculture, as offered by Vilsack.

“This was not, ‘Hey, Shirley, take this job,’ ” Gibbs said at the White House. “That was not the specific purpose of the call.”

The president’s office sent Sherrod a text message indicating that Obama had been trying to get in touch with her, Sherrod told CNN producer Julie O’Neill.

Sherrod said she called the White House and was given another number to call. She dialed that number a few minutes later and spoke with the president.

According to O’Neill, Sherrod declined to have the phone call videotaped by CNN.

A White House statement said the two spoke for seven minutes.

“The president expressed to Ms. Sherrod his regret about the events of the last several days,” the statement said. “He emphasized that Secretary Vilsack was sincere in his apology yesterday, and in his work to rid USDA of discrimination.”

According to the statement, Obama also told Sherrod “that this misfortune can present an opportunity for her to continue her hard work on behalf of those in need, and he hopes that she will do so.”

The flap began after conservative blogger Andrew Breitbart last week posted a portion of a speech Sherrod gave in which she spoke of not offering her full help to a white farmer. The original post by Breitbart indicated that the incident Sherrod mentioned occurred when she worked for the Agriculture Department, and news outlets quickly picked up on the story.

However, the incident took place decades before she joined the department, and her speech in its unedited form made the point that people should move beyond race. In addition, the white farmer who Sherrod mentioned has told reporters that she helped him save his farm.

Sherrod was forced to resign Monday, but when the full story came out Tuesday, the White House pressured Vilsack to reconsider. Both Vilsack and Gibbs issued apologies to Sherrod on Wednesday, and Vilsack said he offered her another job in the Agriculture Department.

At the same time, White House aides said Wednesday on condition of not being identified by name that Obama was unlikely to call Sherrod or personally interject himself in the race-tinged controversy.

One aide said there wouldn’t be any more “beer summits,” a reference to the White House meeting Obama held last year amid the controversy over the arrest of Harvard law professor Henry Louis Gates Jr.

Gates, who is African-American, was arrested at his home by police Sgt. James Crowley, who is white, in what amounted to a misunderstanding. After Obama criticized the arrest, an ensuing uproar led to the White House discussion over beer involving Obama, Gates, Crowley and Vice President Joe Biden.

Until Thursday’s phone discussion between Sherrod and Obama, the White House had tried to separate the president from the issue by emphasizing that Obama played no role in the decision to force Sherrod to resign.

None of that mattered to Sherrod on Thursday. She said Obama was so easy to talk to that she invited him to visit south Georgia, where she is from. There was no word on whether the president would accept her invitation.

Obama talks with USDA employee forced out of her job

Mel Gibson and Roman Polanski: Are they tarred forever?

By

Gloria Goodale,

The UK Government finally gets proactive online

uk-flagAt a briefing yesterday, the UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown unveiled the UK National Security Strategy, and for the first time ever, it included a strategy for combating cyber crime.

The plan is to create a centrally controlled agency called the Office of Cyber Security. This office will liaise with industry and law enforcement agencies and co-ordinate research and investigate laws and ethics with regard to online or ‘cybercrime’. At the same time another arm called the Cyber Security Operation Centre, based at GCHQ in Cheltenham, England will take a more active role. GCHQ is the UK’s intelligence gathering headquarters, which is home to most of the analysts and technicians that make intelligence gathering possible.

The Cyber Security Operation Centre or CSOC will start small with only twenty or thirty staff and will begin collating information and evidence on what kind of attacks can be expected now and in the future. In the longer term the team will develop methods and strategies that will combat these kinds of attacks. Part of the remit of CSOC is to actively prevent criminals and terrorists attacking Britain’s online infrastructure. Not only to protect the government but business too. At least ninety percent of UK bank transactions happen online, and although the banks have their own cyber crime teams, they welcome the national scheme. Especially if the CSOC have been given the freedom to actively seek out and take down people who present a risk to the UK. This active component is what everybody is talking about. Unlike traditional law enforcement they aren’t going to wait until something happens before investigating. They are going to be proactive and assess probabilities as well as existing scenarios.

Under this proactive guise investigators will be actively seeking wrongdoers and will have the technology and authority to do something about it. Although the words ‘Denial of service attacks’ were mentioned the spokesman wouldn’t comment on whether that was COSC defending against them or using them offensively.

The team will be made up of a mixture of civil servants from the Ministry of Defence, MI5 and the police. They will also be recruiting leading security specialists from around the world to add badly needed skills to the operation.

When asked this morning about the new elements of the UK National Security Strategy, Prime Minister Gordon Brown said;

“Just as in the 19th century we had to secure the seas for our national safety and prosperity, and the 20th century we had to secure the air, in the 21st century we also have to secure our position in cyber space in order to give people and businesses the confidence they need to operate safely there.”

Although the new strategy is welcomed by everyone, some business analysts have wondered aloud why it has taken so long. After all the internet has been around commercially for almost fifteen years, and only now are the government catching up with the outside world. Nevertheless they welcome the move cautiously, waiting to see if it bears fruit before offering full support.