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'Web of Meaning', Culture of Nazi Germany does it still exist today?


Constitution of the United States Art. III Section 2

In all Cases affecting Ambassadors, other public Ministers and Consuls, and those in which a State shall be Party, the supreme Court shall have original Jurisdiction. In all the other Cases before mentioned, the supreme Court shall have appellate Jurisdiction, both as to Law and Fact, with such Exceptions, and under such Regulations as the Congress shall make.

Articel 4 Section. 4. The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a Republican Form of Government, and shall protect each of them against Invasion; and on Application of the Legislature, or of the Executive (when the Legislature cannot be convened), against domestic Violence.

"All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside." United States Constitution XIV Sec. 1

AMENDMENT XIV Passed by Congress June 13, 1866. Ratified July 9, 1868.

Section 1. All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside. No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.

The National Archives and Record Administration
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Title 44 USC § 2101 "Archivist" and "function" of duties
Title 44 USC § 3101 Protect legal and financial right of "agency"
Title 44 USC § 3102 (3) "Compliance"

Office of Deputy Inspector General for Intelligence
Department of Defense Office of Inspector General
400 Army Navy Drive
Arlington, VA 22202-4704


3-38. Culture might also be described as an "operational code" that is valid for an entire group of people. Culture conditions the individual's range of action and ideas, including what to do and not do, how to do or not do it, and whom to do it with or not to do it with. Culture also includes under what circumstances the "rules" shift and change. Culture influences how people make judgments about what is right and wrong, assess what is important and unimportant, categorize things, and deal with things that do not fit into exist-ing categories. Cultural rules are flexible in practice.

CULTURE 3-36. Once the social structure has been thoroughly mapped out, staffs should identify and analyze the culture of the society as a whole and of each major group within the society. Social structure comprises the re- lationships among groups, institutions, and individuals within a society; in contrast, culture (ideas, norms, rituals, codes of behavior) provides meaning to individuals within the society. For example, families are a core institutional building block of social structure found everywhere. However, marital monogamy, ex- pectations of a certain number of children, and willingness to live with in-laws are highly variable in dif- ferent societies. They are matters of culture. Social structure can be thought of as a skeleton, with culture being the muscle on the bones. The two are mutually dependent and reinforcing. A change in one results in a change in the other.

3-37. Culture is "web of meaning" shared by members of a particular society or group within a society. (See FM 3-05.301/MCRP 3-40.6A.) Culture is A system of shared beliefs, values, customs, behaviors, and artifacts that members of a society use to cope with their world and with one another. Learned, though a process called enculturation. Shared by members of a society; there is no "culture of one." Patterned, meaning that people in a society live and think in ways forming definite, repeating pat- terns. Changeable, through social interactions between people and groups.

Arbitrary, meaning that Soldiers and Marines should make no assumptions regarding what a society considers right and wrong, good and bad. Internalized, in the sense that it is habitual, taken for granted, and perceived as "natural" by people within the society.

3-6 and 3-7, December 2006 COUNTERINSURGENCY

Marine Corps Warfighting Publication No. 3-33.5 Headquarters
Marine Corps Combat Development Command
Department of the Navy Headquarters
United States Marine Corps, Washington, DC

Field Manual No. 3-24 Headquarters
Department of the Army
Washington, DC

Improving Intelligence Analysis at CIA: Dick Heuer's Contribution to Intelligence Analysis
https://www.cia.gov/library/center-for-the-study-of-intelligence/csi-publications/books-and-monographs/psychology-of-intelligence-analysis/index.html

•Bias in evaluation of Evidence, Chapter 10

•Bias in perception of Cause and Effect, Chapter 11

•Bias in estamation of Probabilities, Chapter 12


Strategic Studies Detachment (FM 3-05.30 PSYOP Operations US Army) 3-28.
http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-05-30.pdf

Facilitate interagency activities. Army Special Operation Forces support and complement U.S. and multinational civilian programs driven by nonmilitary considerations.

1-26. U.S. law and policy, along with international conventions, regulations, and treaties, delineate the boundaries of PSYOP activity.

U.S. public law. Title 10, United States Code (USC), Section 167, Unified Combatant Command for Special Operations Forces, designates PSYOP as an Special Operations activity or force.

Presidential executive order. DOD implementation policies of Executive Order S-12333, United States Intelligence Activities; DOD Instructions S-3321.1, (S) Overt Psychological Operations Conducted by the Military Services in Peacetime and in Contingencies Short of Declared War (U); and National Security Decision Directive (NSDD) 130, U.S. International Information Policy, direct that U.S. PSYOP forces will not target U.S. citizens at any time, in any location globally, or under any circumstances.

The Judge Advocate General (JAG) to ensure that PSYOP support to deception does not violate the fourth Hague Convention that prohibits ruses that constitute “treachery” or “perfidity.”

2-2. PSYOP has traditionally supported public diplomacy by supporting ambassadors and Country Teams with small PSEs. Support is provided for many diplomatic efforts, including counterdrug (CD), humanitarian mine action (HMA), and peace building operations.

3-14. The deputy commanding officer for research, analysis, and civilian affairs (DCO-RACA) manages the PSYOP studies and intelligence research programs that support all PSYOP groups and their subordinate elements. His specific duties are to represent the commander in the intelligence production cycle, direct special projects and analytical responses to contingencies and special actions, supervise intelligence research by civilian analysts, and manage all programs pertaining to civilians. As directed, he conducts special projects assigned by the group commander.

3-15. The resource management officer (RMO) is the special staff officer for budget preparation and implementation and resource management analysis. His specific responsibilities include preparing the command operating budget and program objective memorandum. The RMO also oversees cost capturing for operations.

3-16. A regional Psycological Operations Battalion (POB) has the same fundamental capabilities found in the POG—it plans and conducts PSYOP (Figure 3-3, page 3-4). It is common for a regional POB commander to be designated as the PSYOP component commander, functional component commander, or POTF commander in peacetime and to continue this role in wartime (if a POG does not assume the mission). Each geographic combatant commander requires at least one dedicated regional POB.

3-21. SSD chiefs are the supervisory intelligence research specialists and intelligence experts in PSYOP for the regional POB. Specific duties are supervising the analysts assigned to a regional POB; managing the research and production activities; developing new PSYOP concepts, guidelines, applications, and methodologies; and reviewing and editing PSYOP intelligence documents.

Human Intelligence Collector Operations FM 2-22.3 (FM 34-52)
http://www.fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-05-30.pdf

Tools;

Fig. 12-1 Chronology-time event chart
Fig. 12-2 Association Matrix
Fig. 12-3 Activities Matrix
Fig. 12-4 Link Analysis (semotics)

FM 2-22.3, 12.15 Problem Analysis inductive reasoning

DIA Office of the Competition Advocate
200 Mac Dill Blvd, Bolling AFB
Washington , DC 20050-6563

National Security Act of 1947, TITLE VI PROTECTION OF CERTAIN NATIONAL SECURITY INFORMATION

The term "intelligence agency" means the Central Intelligence Agency, a foreign intelligence component of the Department of Defense, or the foreign counterintelligence or foreign counterterrorism components of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

The term "informant" means any individual who furnishes information to an intelligence agency in the course of a confidential relationship protecting the identity of such individual from public disclosure.

The term "pattern of activities" requires a series of acts with a common purpose or objective.


EXPERTS AND CONSULTANTS
Expert is defined as a person who is specially qualified by education and experience to perform difficult and challenging tasks in a particular field beyond the usual range of achievement of competent persons in that field, and is regarded by others in the field as an authority or practitioner of unusual competence and skill in a professional, scientific, technical or other activity. An expert position is one that requires the services of a specialist with skills superior to others in the same profession, occupation or activity to perform work on a temporary and/or intermittent basis. Consultant is defined as a person who can provide valuable and pertinent advice generally drawn from a high degree of broad administrative, professional, or technical knowledge or experience. A consultant position is one which primarily requires providing advice, views, opinions, alternatives, or recommendations on a temporary and/or intermittent basis.

Rule 701. Opinion Testimony by Lay Witnesses

Rule 702. Testimony by Experts

Rule 705. Disclosure of Facts or Data Underlying Expert Opinion


Andrew Drazdik Jr
UAW Local 1981/ AFL-CIO, ID 92743
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm2397466/resume

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