Morning links

The FDA won’t allow vaping companies to tell their customers the obvious truth that vaping is far safer than cigarettes.  This blatant censorship is just one in a string of new regulations designed to suffocate the industry that could have been the preeminent extinction-level event for combustible tobacco.  It’s a tragedy that will be measured in the lives lost to deadly cigarettes that, absent the regulation, would have been saved through vaping.

There’s a civil war being waged within the U.S. military.  A military needs enemies if it wants a bigger budget, and who better to take that place than the Russians?  Senior military officials want the gold to keep flowing uninterrupted, so they hype a nonexistent threat from Putin.  But how many U.S. troops would be willing to die so that the gravy train can keep rolling?  Some within the military establishment are beginning to call BS on the endless fear-mongering.

Hillary isn’t the only State Dept. official careless with classified communication.  It’s everyone.

A thoughtful essay, accompanied with video, of why it’s probably bad in the long run for cops to lose their cool so easily and slap around teenagers.  Some may watch the video of the cop smacking the kid and feel a catharsis of the “he got what he deserved!” variety, but what is lost is the remnants of goodwill that police have with the young and the poor.  But hey, for some, it just feels too good to watch a mouthy youth get punched.

This suspect might be imprisoned indefinitely for not decrypting hard drives.  This is scary.  The suspect hasn’t even been charged with a crime, but prosecutors just know that there’s child porn on this guy’s hard drives, which he’s refusing to decrypt.  So he’s been locked up for seven months, held in contempt of court for refusing.  So, should government be able to jail someone indefinitely for refusing to decrypt?  Just one battle in the Surveillance State’s war on encryption.

Canada to allow prescription heroin.  Voices of reason were able to cut through the cacophony of the drug warriors’ paranoia long enough to get something positive accomplished.

Three US states are down to only one Obamacare insurer.  Vox’s Sarah Kliff ponders what would happen if that number dropped to zero.

Remember: The cancerous growth of the medical bureaucracy didn’t begin with Obamacare.  It’s roots are far deeper, and far older.

Max Hill offers excellent reasons we should be getting paid in Bitcoin.  Decentralized, anonymous, digital money is a black eye for the Surveillance State, a victory for liberty.

 

 

 

Links

Years of the War on Terror have weakened U.S. ability to fight an actual war

23 Palestinian children killed by Israeli forces in the past three months.  We should care about what thug states that we fund do with our money.

Speaking of thug states: Saudi Arabia continues its brutal U.S.-backed/funded war of attrition on Yemen’s civilian population

Neocons have a deep-seated fear of peace with Iran.  Too wedded to the narrative of a threatening Iran.  It’s a lucrative business, the spreading of war propaganda.

The creeping militarization of America, the sheepening of American citizens.  We’ve been taught from birth to always submit to someone wearing a badge or military uniform.  So the police state comes waving a flag, carrying a cross, and most people aren’t able to anything but put up signs saying “we support our police!”.

Mandatory maternity leave for new mothers means less women being hired.  How much thought really goes into bills like this?  Raising the cost of hiring someone will make it more likely that they won’t be hired.  The same logic applies to the minimum wage.

FBI director says that filming cops increases crimes rates.  In reality, it decreases crime committed by cops.  Not surprising coming from someone who demands total secrecy on the part of the Surveillance State, combined with total transparency of the population.

Speaking of the FBI, they apparently planted surveillance microphones all over San Francisco, ostensibly to catch a real estate fraud ring.  They always have a ready-made excuse in case they get caught.

Morning links

Maniac cop who killed elderly rancher is on the loose, police issue statewide alert

Dubbed “unstable” by the people who know him, Brian Wood, one of the two officers involved in the November 1st, 2015 death of rancher Jack Yantis, is on the loose, and the police themselves have issued a warning about approaching him.  Wood has had problems with excessive force in the past, which led to a lawsuit over his manhandling of a 78-year old man.  I have a unique policy proposal: refuse to hire cops that have been fired for excessive force, or who have a history of roughing up the elderly.  It Wood had been barred from employment with law enforcement, Yantis might still be alive.  LibertyFight and CopBlock have been thoroughly covering this story.

Postal worker who was roughed up and arrested by NYPD for no legitimate reason has charges thrown out

Blue privilege does have its limits, it seems.  Postal worker Glenn Grays was almost hit by an unmarked car full of plainclothes cops that was driving recklessly through NYC.  He yelled at the car, which apparently angered the sensitive cops in the careening car, and they turned around and arrested him.  “Stop resisting” is heard on the video, a phrase that is not infrequently followed by an unprovoked police beat-down.  They toss him in their unmarked paddy wagon and immediately rear-end another car as they drive away.  Geniuses, these. CBS

Morning links

European “missile shield” that US built right next to Russia will be switched on

This missile base is located in Romania, but a second will go live in Poland in 2018.  By encircling Russia with these missile bases, US is deliberately provoking a reaction.  If Russia does strike, or some small incident is blown out of proportion and a series of retaliations occur, let it be known that the fault will lie with the US, not Russia, for inciting the most easily-avoidable major war in modern times. Reuters