04/21/18 Weekend Links

Activist Post: Senators call on Homeland Security to release info on D.C. cell phone surveillance

ACLU: How an Irish court ruling could affect U.S. spying

Nextgov: DARPA wants to merge human and computer cyber defenders

TechCrunch: Orchid Labs is in the process of raising $125 million for its surveillance-free layer atop the internet

Axios: How Peter Thiel’s Palantir tracks American citizens

Forbes: Bad things happen when you don’t update your privacy settings

The Intercept: The War on Pot marches on: In nearly half the country, marijuana arrests have gone up since 2014

Reason: The war on opioids probably helped kill Prince

The Atlantic: Anatomy of a Silicon Valley pot deal

FEE: Is the U.S. now freer than Europe in terms of pot decriminalization?

04/20/18 Overnight Links

Reason: How we lost privacy: “Where people once feared surveillance in their residences, their children now provide the cameras and microphones themselves. Home security systems offer live video streams accessible anywhere. People share their private conversations with devices such as Google Home and Amazon’s Echo. The recent subpoena of an Alexa—the artificial intelligence inside an Echo—that may have “witnessed” a homicide should give all of us pause about what our devices may be recording even when we think they’re not.

That’s the crux of the matter: Even people who resist the idea of the government having our information will willingly open the curtains to private companies—some of whom then turn what they learn over to the government, or leave it vulnerable to hackers. They have our names, our addresses, our bank details, our pictures, our email correspondence, even our current heart rate. Their geotracking knows where we are at any time.”

USA Today: Facebook fights to keep using your face

Activist Post: Police testing controversial portable DNA machine

Techdirt: The war on whistleblowers claims another casualty

BoingBoing: Government accidentally sends file on “remote mind control” methods to journalist

The American Conservative: John Bolton: In search of Carthage

DefenseOne: Pentagon is building an AI factory

Daily Beast: Fake pain pills killed Prince, along with thousands more Americans

Herb: Will psychedelics go corporate like cannabis?

National Geographic: ‘Exploding ant’ rips itself apart to protect its own

04/19/18 Overnight Links

Antiwar.com: UN security team delays chemical weapons inspectors from reaching site of supposed attack. Ed: Unbelievable, yet totally believable, that we are inciting another foreign conflict at the very moment that Syria had quelled the “rebels” and peace had been within reach. Unbelievable that just a handful of people in our own government can bypass all of Congress and provoke a widespread, possibly-nuclear conflict over a supposed chemical weapons attack that is said to have killed around 70 people.  Why would Assad attack his own civilians at the very moment an end to the conflict was in sight? And also, why does our own government suddenly care about foreign civilians? Where are the airstrikes on behalf of the thousands of dead Yemen civilians? Oh right, the US is funding the airstrikes that are killing those civilians, via the murderous Saudi regime.  The danger in this situation lies in the fact that so few Americans are willing to get behind a war against either Syria or Russia.  This sets the stage for a convenient attack that will result in the casualties of American citizens, one that will then conveniently be used to steer public opinion in favor of yet another open-ended, decade-long war, conveniently justifying the next trillion-dollar Pentagon budget.

WSWS: As lies of Syrian gas attack unravel, US and UK shift to claims of Russian “cyber war”

Counterpunch: President Trump’s war crime is worse than the one he accuses Assad of Ed: Initiating aggression against a sovereign nation. Punishable by death according to Nuremberg.

BGR: Pay close attention to Facebook’s new passive-aggressive privacy settings

National Review: The bulldozers of social justice

The Intercept: James Comey sees himself as a victim of Trump. He refuses to see the victims of the justice system. Ed: In the interviews of Comey that I’ve watched, I’ve noticed a disturbing trait that I’ve seen before in other people, particularly in political figures and other people who hold positions of power: an absolute belief in their goodness, that they are beyond reproach, that their actions are good in an absolute sense.  These people are the most dangerous because they aren’t hindered by guilt, self-reflection, or humility. Which means they are capable of great damage for a longer duration than others.  I believe that politics naturally attracts this type of person, due to the nature of the work.  “The worst get on top”, as Hayek forcefully argues in The Road to Serfdom. In Comey, it manifests as a vainglorious, petty, sanctimony, and it’s an ugly thing to behold. It’s also the prime move of racists, class-warfare-ists, and general, all-around totalitarians. I believe the instinct is within us all, which is probably the larger point I should be making here, because the nature of government propaganda is to draw it out, to unhinge it from the natural guilt we would feel had our minds not been trained through peer and authoritarian pressure to unleash this primitive prejudice on one group or another.  To government, it doesn’t matter what we wish government to do, as long as we wish them to do it.  It’s the authoritarian instinct unbound that matters.

Reason: A more infuriating way to think about your tax burden

FEE: Why socialism means slavery

Motherboard: Amazon wins patent for data stream to ‘identify’ Bitcoin users for law enforcement

Nextgov: Army figures out how to use facial recognition in the dark

Daily Beast: Unarmed teen killed by police was simply ‘backing his mom’s minivan’ out of garage, lawsuit claims Ed: Let them unionize, protect them from punishment, and they will predictably behave like thugs.

Daily Nock

From his essayAnarchist’s Progress:

“When I was seven years old, playing in front of our house on the outskirts of Brooklyn one morning, a policeman stopped and chatted with me for a few moments. He was a kindly man, of a Scandinavian blond type with pleasant blue eyes, and I took to him at once. He sealed our acquaintance permanently by telling me a story that I thought was immensely funny; I laughed over it at intervals all day. I do not remember what it was, but it had to do with the antics of a drove of geese in our neighborhood. He impressed me as the most entertaining and delightful person that I had seen in a long time, and I spoke of him to my parents with great pride.

At this time I did not know what policemen were. No doubt I had seen them, but not to notice them. Now, naturally, after meeting this highly prepossessing specimen, I wished to find out all I could about them, so I took the matter up with our old colored cook. I learned from her that my fine new friend represented something that was called the law; that the law was very good and great, and that everyone should obey and respect it. This was reasonable; if it were so, then my admirable friend just fitted his place, and was even more highly to be thought of, if possible. I asked where the law came from, and it was explained to me that men all over the country got together on what was called election day, and chose certain persons to make the law and others to see that it was carried out; and that the sum-total of all this mechanism was called our government. This again was as it should be; the men I knew, such as my father, my uncle George, and Messrs. So-and-so among the neighbors (running them over rapidly in my mind), could do this sort of thing handsomely, and there was probably a good deal in the idea. But what was it all for! Why did we have law and government, anyway! Then I learned that there were persons called criminals; some of them stole, some hurt or killed people or set fire to houses; and it was the duty of men like my friend the policeman to protect us from them. If he saw any he would catch them and lock them up, and they would be punished according to the law.

A year or so later we moved to another house in the same neighborhood, only a short distance away. On the corner of the block — rather a long block — behind our house stood a large one-story wooden building, very dirty and shabby, called the Wigwam. While getting the lie of my new surroundings, I considered this structure and remarked with disfavor the kind of people who seemed to be making themselves at home there. Some one told me it was a “political headquarters,” but I did not know what that meant, and therefore did not connect it with my recent researches into law and government. I had little curiosity about the Wigwam. My parents never forbade my going there, but my mother once casually told me that it was a pretty good place to keep away from, and I agreed with her.

Two months later I heard someone say that election day was shortly coming on, and I sparked up at once; this, then, was the day when the lawmakers were to be chosen. There had been great doings at the Wigwam lately; in the evenings, too, I had seen noisy processions of drunken loafers passing our house, carrying transparencies and tin torches that sent up clouds of kerosene-smoke. When I had asked what these meant, I was answered in one word, “politics,” uttered in a disparaging tone, but this signified nothing to me. The fact is that my attention had been attracted by a steam-calliope that went along with one of the first of these processions, and I took it to mean that there was a circus going on; and when I found that there was no circus, I was disappointed and did not care what else might be taking place.

On hearing of election day, however, the light broke in on me. I was really witnessing the August performances that I had heard of from our cook. All these processions of yelling hoodlums who sweat and stank in the parboiling humidity of the Indian-summer evenings–all the squalid goings-on in the Wigwam– all these, it seemed, were part and parcel of an election. I noticed that the men whom I knew in the neighborhood were not prominent in this election; my uncle George voted, I remember, and when he dropped in at our house that evening, I overheard him say that going to the polls was a filthy business. I could not make it out. Nothing could be clearer than that the leading spirits in the whole affair were most dreadful swine; and I wondered by what kind of magic they could bring forth anything so majestic, good and venerable as the law. But I kept my questionings to myself for some reason, though, as a rule, 1 was quite a hand for pestering older people about matters that seemed anomalous. Finally, I gave it up as hopeless, and thought no more about the subject for three years.

An incident of that election night, however, stuck in my memory. Some devoted brother, very far gone in whisky, fell by the wayside in a vacant lot just back of our house, on his way to the Wigwam to await the returns. He lay there all night, mostly in a comatose state. At intervals of something like half an hour he roused himself up in the darkness, apparently aware that he was not doing his duty by the occasion, and tried to sing the chorus of “Marching Through Georgia,” but he could never get quite through three measures of the first bar before relapsing into somnolence. It was very funny; he always began so bravely and earnestly, and always petered out so lamentably. I often think of him. His general sense of political duty, I must say, still seems to me as intelligent and as competent as that of any man I have met in the many, many years that have gone by since then, and his mode of expressing it still seems about as effective as any I could suggest.”

04/18/18 Overnight Links

AEI: Facebook’s convenient desire to be regulated

ZDNet: Supreme Court drops Microsoft data privacy case, but the battle isn’t over

Mashable: Facebook’s facial recognition features could cost it billions of dollars in class-action lawsuit

Reason: Comey acknowledges screwing up in encryption fight, but he still doesn’t grasp the issue

Motherboard: UK government is cozy with companies selling spytech

Activist Post: Social media now being used by police and intelligence agencies to collect biometrics

Common Dreams: Astronomical’ costs of war: Average US taxpayer sent $3,456 to Pentagon last year, and just $39 to EPA

Mises: America picks a fight with its largest foreign creditor

The American Conservative: Senators offer up unprecedented war powers to President

FEE: You can’t argue against socialism’s 100% failure rate

Gizmodo: 3 better alternatives to Gmail’s self-destructing emails

Cosmos: ‘Nuclear geyser’ may be origin of life

Daily Nock

From his book, Jefferson:

“Throughout his life, Mr. Jefferson consistently maintained that “the most effectual means of preventing the perversion of power into tyranny are to illuminate so far as possible the minds of the people.” He had no doubt that “if a nation expects to be ignorant and free…it expects what never was and never will be.” He seems never to suspected, however, the ease with which mere literacy is perverted, and that it is therefore quite possible for a literate people to be much more ignorant than an illiterate people–that a people of well-perverted literacy, indeed, is invincibly unintelligent.”

This is far more profound than it appears on a first reading.  And it’s not that the mere teaching of reading, writing, and arithmetic that is damaging to the independence of thought of children, but the insidious weaving of propaganda and State-approved theories of social organization into daily instruction.  If only schools would refocus all that energy, wasted into getting kids to accept various social philosophies that prop up the State, solely into reading comprehension, and our country might now have such an abysmally low level of reading ability.

Instead, government-approved versions of history, the worship of the symbols of government through the strangely non-subtle ‘Pledge of Allegiance’, a conditioning to accept a warden/prisoner environment for an unnaturally long time, remain the focal point.

04/16/18 Overnight Links

As I recently discovered, dogs apparently enjoy chewing through internet cables. Republic Reborn is back.

Tech Crunch: How to save your privacy from the internet’s clutches

Birmingham Mail: If Facebook isn’t spying on us, why did I get ads for things I just chatted about?

Bustle: Gmail’s new confidential mode may let users send “self-destructing” emails

Motherboard: Lawmakers call FBI’s ‘going dark’ narrative ‘highly questionable’ after Motherboard shows cops can easily hack iPhones

HardOCP: Cops around the country can now unlock iPhones, records show

Fast Company: Fired FBI director James Comey reveal how Apple and Google’s encryption efforts “drove me crazy”

Reason: Silicon Valley’s dangerous political blind spots

Ars Technica: Cop won’t be charged in “swatting” death of innocent, unarmed man

The Intercept: Trump ordered Syria strike based on secret legal justification even Congress can’t see

National Interest: In 1973, America and Russia almost fought a nuclear war over Syria

The Federalist: Britain’s knife control is a bad, real-life parody of gun control

Mises: How the Postal Service loses so much money

Reader’s Digest: 13 sneaky ways FBI agents protect their homes

High Times: Trump makes deal to protect states with legal cannabis

Brinkwire: Einstein’s ‘Dice of God’ has been used to generate truly random numbers

Gizmodo: A spooky quantum experiment creates what may be the most entangled controllable device yet

Friday the 13th Links

Mises: Don’t regulate Facebook. That’s what Zuckerberg wants.

BoingBoing: Peak Zuckerberg: “What’s a shadow profile?”

The Intercept: Why did the EPA’s Scott Pruitt suppress a report on corruption in Oklahoma?

Telegraph: Facial recognition used to catch fugitive among 60,000 concertgoers in China

Techdirt: California bill could introduce a Constitutionally-questionable “right to be forgotten” in the US

The Atlantic: Trump’s dangerous threat of war

Reason: Overdose deaths are a product of drug prohibition

 Federalist: School rules that allowed Parkland shooter to get guns coming soon to your district

High Times: These six industries don’t want hemp legalized

Quartz: Scientists keep “discovering” things stoners already know

Research Digest: Caffeine causes widespread brain entropy (apparently a good thing)

The Verge: New, ‘high definition’ vinyl promises longer playing time and louder, clearer audio

Overnight Tennyson

Reflecting on the topic of mortality, either of our own or that of family, friend, or some public figure whose lifelong labor will outlive them, inevitably brings out the poetic sense in even the most unfeeling of us.  The prospect of libertarian author Justin Raimondo’s mortality, from the news of his battle with cancer, brings to my mind Alfred Tennyson’s Ulysses.  Here is my personal favorite excerpt:

“There lies the port; the vessel puffs her sail: 
There gloom the dark, broad seas. My mariners, 
Souls that have toil’d, and wrought, and thought with me— 
That ever with a frolic welcome took 
The thunder and the sunshine, and opposed 
Free hearts, free foreheads—you and I are old; 
Old age hath yet his honour and his toil; 
Death closes all: but something ere the end, 
Some work of noble note, may yet be done, 
Not unbecoming men that strove with Gods. 
The lights begin to twinkle from the rocks: 
The long day wanes: the slow moon climbs: the deep 
Moans round with many voices. Come, my friends, 
‘T is not too late to seek a newer world. 
Push off, and sitting well in order smite 
The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds 
To sail beyond the sunset, and the baths 
Of all the western stars, until I die. 
It may be that the gulfs will wash us down: 
It may be we shall touch the Happy Isles, 
And see the great Achilles, whom we knew. 
Tho’ much is taken, much abides; and tho’ 
We are not now that strength which in old days 
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are; 
One equal temper of heroic hearts, 
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will 
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.”

04/12/18 Overnight Links

New York Times: What you don’t know about how Facebook uses your data

LA Times: Facebook will no longer fund campaign opposing proposed California consumer privacy initiative

Activist Post: The same government that spies on its citizens is lecturing the Facebook CEO for doing the same thing

 Breitbart: Master Mark: “We don’t think what we are doing is censoring speech”

MuckRock: Chicago police department coaches officers on how to avoid the same social media surveillance they themselves employ

Al Jazeera: Oil prices soar over fears of a US strike on Syria

Salon: Trump launches a new drug war, but who’s the real enemy?

Reason: It’s good news for libertarians when Paul Ryan quits Congress

FEE: Why the social engineers of the Sixties failed to create a “Great Society”

Cato: Candy-coated cartel: Time to kill the US sugar program

Also Cato: No strategic, tactical, legal, or humanitarian justification for US airstrikes in Syria

Consortium News: International lawyers: Strike against Syria would be illegal

The American Conservative: Trump surrenders to the foreign policy blob : “President Trump recently spoke an essential truth on foreign policy when he stated that American troops should come home from Syria. The Islamic State has been defeated and Washington has no business trying to overthrow Assad, dismember Syria, get between the Turks and Kurds, confront Russia and Iran, and whatever other inane quests the neocon think tanks have come up with.

However, the Blob—as the foreign policy establishment and its extensive network of analysts, pundits, and officials is known—also dominates the president’s staff. Indeed, it is not clear he has anyone working for him, at least at the State Department, Pentagon, and National Security Council, who is not a card-carrying member of the Blob. That means his foreign policy aides spend most of their time trying to talk him out of his most sensible ideas.”

Truthdig: YouTube blocks video criticizing Israeli militarism

In between cancer treatments, Justin Raimondo reflects on the purpose behind his writing and his website