Oh, and NIMBY guy? Cool your jets. You’re not going to protest your way out of this. It’s done. The bulldozers are coming, and there ain’t a lawsuit in the world that can be filed to stop them. It might suck, but then this is what you get when the Supreme Court affirms immient domain for the state. Perhaps that’ll learn you not to vote for morons based on insignificant singular issues, or iggy the political process because you’re comfortable in your shell. It’s kind of late in the game to start protesting now. The time to do it was in 2002. You didn’t. This is your consequence.
Archive for May, 2006
Introducing: The Parris N. Glendening Turnpike.
May 31, 2006
Hit the Bricks, Morons
May 31, 2006
I hope the VA (along with the FBI, who just wasted all our time and a bunch of money searching for a guy who ain’t going to be found) turns their focus into vigorously searching for the felon that has this information. If they find out that he sold that to some loser across the border (or the pond, for that matter), they ought to lock him up for the rest of his natural life. When the financial security of up to 26.5 million of our veterans is at stake, this search shouldn’t be a passive one. If anything, this is a true matter of National Security. Find this clown; find the clowns he sold the info to, and put them all in jail.
Another Fine Mess
May 28, 2006
So to recap: an employee who gets paid $90,000-$120,000 took home information that shouldn’t have ever left the front door; it gets stolen, and he reports it. Yet it takes four people in a hierarchy in a period of two weeks to inform the #1 person at the VA, who then takes five additional days to finally get around to informing the American public?
I think it’s clear to me what should happen, here. Every single one of these morons—the GS-14 dope, and everyone else down the line—needs to be fired. It’s unfathomable it would take that long for something like that to get to the higher-ups. If there’s an ID theft in a government agency, would it not behoove somebody to contact the person in charge of said agency immediately?
If these dopes weren’t so busy trying to cover their collective asses, maybe they’d be well on the way to, perhaps, actually finding out where this data is. Now, because of the fact that everyone tried to stay out of trouble, some jerk has a deal on the table to sell this data to thieves in Bangalore, Romania, Montreal, China, Nigeria, or wherever else these thieves operate. Eighteen days of incompetence by a federal agency is going to cost people their figurative lives—some who cannot afford to deal with this kind of crap either way.