Neil A. Carousso produces and co-hosts WCBS Newsradio 880’s Small Business Spotlight series with Joe Connolly. Click here to watch the weekly video segments featuring advice for business owners on survival, recovery and growth opportunities.

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  • “I Don’t Think She’s Trustworthy.” America’s Millennials on Hillary Clinton’s Integrity

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    By Neil A. Carousso

    Millennials, defined as individuals who reach adulthood around year 2000, have been closely watching the 2016 presidential campaigns. Many were mobilized by Senator Bernie Sanders’ (I-VT) message of a “future to believe in” while not trusting now Presumptive Democratic Presidential Nominee Hillary Clinton because of her history taking large sums of money from corporations and countries for the Clinton Foundation and for speeches.

    On July 5, FBI Director Jim Comey laid out a scathing report of the agency’s investigation of Hillary Clinton’s private e-mail server, actually multiple servers, which Comey revealed, to the American people.

    “One hundred and ten emails in 52 e-mail chains have been determined by the owning agency to have contained classified information at the time they were sent or received,” Comey said in front of a national television audience. “Eight of those chains contained information.”

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    KEVIN LAMARQUE/AP

    Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton has denied using a private e-mail server multiple times including a March 10 press conference, two Democratic presidential debates and under oath in front of the U.S. House Select Committee on Benghazi on October 22, 2015

    “There was nothing marked classified on my e-mails, either sent or received,” Clinton said under oath in response to questioning from Representative Jim Jordan (R-OH).

    Clinton had also been caught in hostile questioning from Rep. Jordan regarding her blaming of the September 11, 2012 Benghazi attack on a video when she told her daughter, Chelsea, and the Egyptian Prime Minister Hisham Kandil within 24 hours that it was, in fact, a terrorist attack. Four Americans including U.S. Ambassador J. Christopher Stevens died in Benghazi, Libya. 

    Millennials react to the campaign, specifically discuss whether or not they trust Mrs. Clinton. A recent New York Times/CBS News Poll indicates Clinton’s “not honest and untrustworthy” numbers are at an all-time high 67 percent, up 5 percent from last month.

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  • GOP Ticket Punched: Donald Trump Introduces Gov. Mike Pence as Running Mate

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    By Neil A. Carousso

    New York, NY — Donald Trump introduced Governor Mike Pence (R-IA) on Saturday morning at the New York Hilton Midtown. Trump said Pence was his “first choice” because he was impressed by Pence’s record in Indiana which includes over 150,000 new private sector jobs, 32,000 school choice scholarships and the 2nd lowest unemployment among veterans in the nation.

    The Republican National Convention begins Monday in Cleveland, OH where Trump and Pence are expected to be officially billed on the Republican ticket.

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  • EXCLUSIVE: Former FBI Secret Agent Says You’re Vulnerable to Hackers around the World

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    By Neil A. Carousso

    Earlier, the Washington Post reported that Russian government hackers infiltrated the Democratic National Committee computer network, gaining access to their entire database, including Democrats’ opposition research on GOP presumptive nominee Donald Trump.

    “This cyber crime is huge,” said Robert Strang, a security expert on terrorism, personal and corporate security as well as investigative matters. “There’s really no limits to what’s happening in the world right now.”

     

    Robert Strang is the CEO of Investigative Management Group. (Courtesy: invesigativemanagement.com)
    Robert Strang is the CEO of Investigative Management Group.

    Strang has seen security breaches in both the private and public sector throughout his career. He started as a special agent for the Federal Bureau of Investigation, working for the United States Justice Department for about 10 years before founding Investigative Management Group, a unit of Strang Holdings Corp., for which he is the Chief Executive Officer.

    Strang says many cases that his company investigates involve individual hackers in the Philippines, China and Eastern Europe who steal American companies’ information from outside the U.S.

    “There are not enough bad guys to buy all the available information that’s out there on the black market,” said Strang, continuing, “It would be like we’re flooded with drugs, there’s not enough drug users and you’re giving it away, almost. It’s so cheap. There’s so much, yet, there aren’t enough bad guys to buy it.”

    The security expert points out the only positive thing about new technology, which makes personal, corporate and government information “vulnerable,” is the fact that it will become antiquated in a short period of time. New technology is emerging too quick in order to effectively secure.

    “If you’re connected to the internet, you’re vulnerable; there’s no question about it,” said Strang.

    Citing today’s Washington Post report, the DNC network has been compromised for about a year. “The intruders so thoroughly compromised the DNC’s system that they also were able to read all email and chat traffic, said DNC officials and the security experts,” journalist Ellen Nakashima wrote.

    While the DNC claims no donor or personal information “appears to be accessed or taken,” this intrusion is “one of several targeting American political organizations,” writes Nakashima. Both Hillary Clinton and Trump were targeted by Russian spies. Republican political action committees were targeted, too, according to U.S. officials. Further information on those cases are not public.

    Strang ensures that corporations he secures around the world have top-notch security and intelligence gathering services through the IMG platform, a company that has been successful in the high-end investigative market because of the resources of a large firm without the bureaucracy of the largest firms and government agencies.

    Even with the best security systems, Strang emphasizes the importance of being selective in content included in electronic communication. Conducting business through the Internet, including e-mail, is risky. Sensitive and confidential material is best to be presented in person.

    “I’m certain the government must do it as well,” said Strang adding, “You know common sense and the fact that we are being hacked and these kinds of thefts do take place on a regular basis.”

     

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  • It’s More Complicated than “Just Pee”

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    By Neil A. Carousso

    As we mourn the tragic loss of life in the aftermath of the worst mass shooting in United States history in Orlando, FL early Sunday morning in a gay nightclub, Americans react to the unfortunate, continued intolerance by some individuals of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. Debate over transgender rights remains in the forefront of conversation and controversy.

    On June 3, Cyndi Lauper and Harvey Fierstein, along with the cast of the Broadway musical Kinky Boots, published a re-written performance titled “Just Pee,” a symbol of support to their LGBTQ fanbase.

    In a humorous, Broadway-esque performance, the Kinky Boots cast dances in a bathroom at the Threshold Recording Studios in New York City while singing “Just Pee,” with the message that “you can change the world when you change your mind.” However, the word “hate” gets thrown around when LGBT advocates speak about those who oppose the controversial HB2 law, commonly referred to as the “bathroom bill.”

    Hate, like comparisons to Adolf Hitler or calling someone racist, has been thrown around without much thought, stifling dialogue about issues in favor of an attempt to prove one is not hateful, Hitler or racist. People who oppose HB2 do not necessarily oppose LGBT rights; in fact, many people have friends who are lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender. However, lawmakers must be vigilant when accommodating such a small percentage of the population that may compromise the vast majority of Americans. The most commonly cited number of transgender people living in the U.S. is 700,000, which is about 0.2 percent of the population.

    In addition, it must be decided definitively how someone is classified as transgender. President Barack Obama made a sweeping directive to public schools on May 13 in regards to transgender students using bathrooms matching gender identification. The president’s letter threatened to remove federal funding for schools who did not comply. School concerns and policy is generally left to individual states to handle as opposed to the federal government. Most liberals, including Obama, clearly define transgender as one who identifies as a gender regardless of one’s reproductive organs. One can see the problems this may cause in single-sex college dormitories where college campus assault is rampant with the most common statistic being that 1 in 3 women are sexually assaulted at some point during college. People are concerned that the wrong people will gain access to single-sex dorms, or other venues, because they state that they “identify” as a particular gender without having to provide medical documentation. Others argue that one is transgender when they have gone through the medical procedure to change one’s gender or at the very least, commit to that process, verified by a medical professional.

     

    President Obama issued a mandate to public schools to allow students to use the bathroom that matches their gender identity. (Courtesy: Flickr/Statsministerens kontor and iStockphoto)
    President Obama issued a mandate to public schools to allow students to use the bathroom that matches their gender identity. (Courtesy: Flickr/Statsministerens kontor and iStockphoto)

    The other concern people, including many parents, have are the use of locker rooms. If an elementary school student, born a male but identifies as a female, gains access to female locker rooms, the student would be changing and potentially, showering with females who have different reproductive organs than the born-male student. Parents are rightfully concerned about how to approach such a complex situation with their children and whether they should be exposed and subjected  to deep, complicated issues with which they never had to grapple.

    So while we have become more of a tolerant society and the country stands with the LGBTQ community in the wake of the carnage in Orlando over the weekend, there are still concerns about allowing those who identify as transgender into single-sex, bathrooms, locker rooms, dorm rooms and others where people may feel uncontrollably uncomfortable. Perhaps, all bathrooms should be individual; while expensive, this could easily solve the debate to move on to more serious national security issues.

     

    Cyndi Lauper at a red carpet event. (Courtesy: ABC News)
    Cyndi Lauper at a red carpet event. (Courtesy: ABC News)

    While notable musicians like Bruce Springsteen, Nick Jonas and Demi Lovato have canceled performances in North Carolina to protest the bathroom bill, Lauper performed in Raleigh, NC after the above video was published online while planning to donate the funds to Equality North Carolina, which is a LGBT-rights group.

    The LGBTQ community was targeted at Orlando’s Pulse nightclub by 29-year-old terrorist Omar Mateen, an American citizen, born in New York and raised in Florida. The Federal Bureau of Investigation is investigating specific motives and Mateen’s radicalization.

     

    Featured image courtesy of Jason Szenes, European Pressphoto Agency.

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  • EXCLUSIVE: Congressman Peter King on Donald Trump “He says things with no filter.”

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    By Neil A. Carousso

    Representative Peter King (R-NY) in an exclusive with Neil A. Carousso and Dr. Gregory Beroza, part of a longer interview for WRHU’s Morning Wake-Up Call Special Live from the Belmont Stakes, discusses the presidential campaign and comments on his recent phone call with GOP presumptive nominee Donald Trump.

    Trump called him in which they discussed issues pertaining to the general election campaign against Democrat presumptive nominee Hillary Clinton, according to Rep. King. This phone call was prior to the start of a firestorm when Trump referred to Judge Gonzalo Curiel’s Mexican heritage in explaining how Curiel may be biased in the Trump University case.

    “I don’t believe he’s a racist or bigot,” King said. “He says things with no filter.”

    King originally endorsed Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) for president. The New York representative voted for Governor John Kasich (R-OH) in his home state’s primary on April 19 since Rubio had dropped out after losing the Florida primary on March 15. King, in the interview, says he is now endorsing and supporting Republican nominee Trump.

     

    Featured image courtesy of Politico.

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