Overnight Garet Garrett

Last one of the night I swear.  This is from Garet Garrett’s essay, The Revolution Was:

“There are those who still think they are holding the pass against a revolution that may be coming up the road. But they are gazing in the wrong direction. The revolution is behind them. It went by in the Night of Depression, singing songs to freedom.

There are those who have never ceased to say very earnestly, “Something is going to happen to the American form of government if we don’t watch out.” These were the innocent disarmers. Their trust was in words. They had forgotten their Aristotle. More than 2,000 years ago he wrote of what can happen within the form, when “one thing takes the place of another, so that the ancient laws will remain, while the power will be in the hands of those who have brought about revolution in the state.”

The “revolution within the form” is what we face today, it is what makes possible the spectacle of Congressmen, Presidents, and various administrative officials pledging fealty to liberty and the Constitution while simultaneously destroying both.

Ed: I am amazed that you all are still clicking on my links and visiting this site.  I haven’t been as consistent as I would like, but that should change as I begin to focus more on actually writing in this space, as opposed to merely posting links. Please continue to visit this space, thanks for the views.

Overnight Nock

From his essay, ‘What the American vote for’:

“MY FIRST and only presidential vote was cast many,
many years ago. It was dictated by pure instinct. I remember
the circumstances well. Like all well-brought-up youngsters,
I had been told that it was the duty of every citizen to vote—
reasons not stated. I was prepared to obey in all good faith,
and accordingly, when the time came, I set forth to the polls.
But what was I to vote for? An issue? There was none.
You could not get a sheet of cigarette-paper between the official
positions of the two parties. A candidate? Well, who
were they? Both of them seemed to me to be mediocre timeserving
fellows who would sell out their immortal souls, if
they had any, for a turn at place and power, and throw in
their risen Lord for good measure. Suddenly, the ridiculous
truth of the matter struck me: that the whole campaign was
based on no political reason at: all, but on an astronomical
reason. We were voting simply because, since the time we
last voted, the earth had gone 1461 times around the sun, or
some such number, and for no other reason in the world. As
I approached the polls my resentment of this nonsense grew
stronger and stronger, and when I arrived I deliberately
wrote in a vote for Jefferson Davis of Mississippi.
It was not an ignorant vote, for I was fully aware that Jeff
was dead. Nor was it a piece of mere flippancy—far from it.
I found out afterward that either Mark Twain or Artemus
Ward, I forget which, had once done something of the kind,

on the plea that “if we can’t have a live statesman, let us by
all means have a first-class corpse.” There is a great deal to
be said for that idea, and I am proud to subscribe to it, but
it was not my idea at the time. My vote was a vote of serious
protest against what I regarded as an impudent and degrading
absurdity, and at this late day I am more than ever prepared
to maintain that the instinct which prompted it was sound
and enlightened. I am also prepared to show cause for believing
that this instinct actually controls the majority of our
electorate, whether they are aware of it or not, and to show
cause for believing that they are fully justified in letting it
control them.”

05/07/18 Overnight Links

TNW: Facebook vs. Google: Clash of the privacy infringers

Motherboard: Gmail’s ‘self-destruct’ feature will probably be used to illegally destroy government records

Bloomberg: Your online history could soon determine your credit score

Wall Street Journal: Privacy is dead. Here’s what comes next.

The Atlantic: Mark Zuckerberg doesn’t understand journalism

EFF: There’s no middle ground on encryption

Gizmodo: Facial recognition used by Wales police has 90 percent false positive rate

The Times: Undercover police “had sex with political targets”

Reason: Even where weed is legal, government regulation makes advertising it a nightmare

Antiwar.com: The latest act in Israel’s Iran nuclear disinformation campaign

RAND PAUL: Congress moves to give the President unlimited war powers

National Review: Washington offers up bread and circuses, but the US is remarkably resilient

ScienceMag: AI researchers allege that machine learning is alchemy

Business Insider: Psychedelic drugs appear to fundamentally reorganize the brain–and they’re starting to turn into approved treatments

Chicago Tribune: Drink this! Cold brew coffee infused with cannabis compound

05/06/18 Overnight Links

Engadget: Facebook’s ‘Sauron alert’ protects staff against privacy breaches

Tech Times: Facebook used your Instagram images to train its image recognition AI

Activist Post: Pentagon seeks $300 million for 65,000 US-backed forces in Syria

WSWS: Trump ends protected status for 86,000 Hondurans

FEE: Curing disease is sustainable, government in healthcare is not

Mises: “Real socialism” has indeed been tried–and it’s been a disaster

The American Conservative: The Saudi coalition’s starvation of Yemen hasn’t ended

High Times: 8 worst portrayals of weed in television shows

Not overpopulation, but fear of overpopulation is the greatest threat to the human race

I remain shocked that the Malthusian population bomb theory was the basis for Thanos’ universe-spanning campaign of genocide in the latest Avengers film.  That it was expounded by Thanos himself in such plain, Malthusian terms is even more shocking.  While watching the film though, I wished that at least one Avenger had countered that ideology with facts and theories, instead of mere violence.  An Avengers analog of Julian Simon to counter the biologist Paul Ehrlich embodied in Thanos.  Because even if Thanos were destroyed, the population bomb thesis would still exist unrefuted in the Avengers universe.

Business professor Julian Simon and biologist Paul Ehrlich made a bet in 1980 on which direction the prices of certain resources would go over the next decade.  Simon challenged Ehrlich, and gave him the option of picking which resources to track over the next years.  All five commodities Ehrlich chose decreased in price over the next decade.

The population of the globe more than doubled over the past 50 years, yet food production tripled. According the overpopulation alarmists, this should have been impossible.  Human life expectancy across the globe reached its highest level so far, and global poverty fell below 10%, the lowest on record.

Yet despite these facts, and despite the total failure of Ehrlich’s theory, academics and totalitarian governments around the world believe that it’s immoral to have more than one child, as it is has been in China, that the human race is dooming itself by not checking it’s growth.

The key to this rapid rise in living standards in the face of a seeming explosion in population has to do with what Julian Simon dubbed “the ultimate resource”.  This resource is human creativity, and he believed that our rising living standards weren’t occurring despite population growth, but because of it.  More people on the planet means more creators, innovators, and workers engaging in what Deirdre McCloskey calls “market-tested innovation“. The unrestricted innovation, entrepreneurship, and tinkering with new and different ideas, and the testing of all of it in the marketplace is the source of our prosperity.  That’s why it is crucial that we protect that environment of market-tested experimentation in the face of an irrational fear of population growth.  As long as the freedom to innovate and experiment in an unrestricted market economy, economic prosperity will always outstrip resource consumption.  A politicized fear of overpopulation is what will doom our species, not population growth itself.

05/05/18 AM Links

Gizmodo: The NSA managed to collect 500 million US call records in 2017 despite targeting just 40 people

The Intercept: How Scott Pruitt helped Arkansas poultry giants pollute one of Oklahoma’s prettiest rivers

Ars Technica: Body-cam giant snaps up biggest rival to create near-monopoly

Reason: Conservatives need to put aside kneejerk police support

And another one: The Federalist: The real villain in Avengers: Infinity War is overpopulation panic

Wired UK: Facial recognition tech used by UK police is making a ton of mistakes

New York Times: Why are US troops in the Yemen war?

Motherboard: Idaho State University lost enough weapons-grade plutonium to make a dirty bomb

Forbes: Dyson spheres are missing from the galaxy

05/04/18 Overnight Links

Vox: The Golden State Killer case shows how swiftly we’re losing genetic privacy

ZDnet: Tech giants hit by NSA spying slam encryption backdoors

Gizmodo: Chicago advances bill allowing police drones to surveil protestors

DW: Whistleblower Chelsea Manning in Berlin warns over Google, Facebook privacy

Techdirt: Virginia Supreme Court says license plate readers collect personal data; suggests use violates state law

Washington Examiner: Alan Dershowitz: Michael Cohen wiretap shows the US is becoming a surveillance state

The Federalist: Google’s insane campus is what happens when you politicize everything

Reason: Maine legislators override governor’s veto of marijuana legalization

FFF: The Bundy Ranch case explains Westerner’s distrust of Washington

Of course he does: NDTV: Bill Gates praises Aadhaar, says “it doesn’t pose any privacy issue” Ed: Gotta love that predictable elitist condescension in their “I know what’s best for the Third World” attitude. It shapes every aspect of his vanity-flattering, “humanitarian” efforts in countries that do not want nor need it.  What the Third World needs most is protection from these First World humanitarians.

Interestingly, it’s the elites that buy into the overpopulation myth, and there have been quite a few well-written pieces coming out in recent days as it becomes obvious that the Avenger’s Thanos is motivated by the fear of overpopulation.  Here is one such piece from National Review: Infinity War: Thanos plans to cull humans, echoing Paul and Anne Erlich

Wall Street Journal: The new science of psychedelics

Nature: The ethics of experimenting with human brain tissue Ed: Could we soon create a brain in a vat that contemplates whether it’s a brain in a vat?

Thanos is the logical conclusion to the overpopulation myth

What I recently watched unfold before my eyes at the movie theater had a bizarre synchronicity, considering how much thought I’d given the topic lately: the overpopulation myth taken to its inevitable conclusion.  Thanos, the villian of the latest Avengers film, is a dupe, religiously devoted to the idea that the universe itself is overpopulated, and must be cut in half via genocide on a mind-boggling scale.  That may or may not be a spoiler.  Stranger still, it seems almost as if Thanos has been given this justification for total evil as a way to make him a sympathetic character.  A more human touch, since he’s doing this for the good of the universe. His overpopulation thesis, when he tells it, is an overt cue for the audience to slowly nod their heads in reluctant agreement that yes, resources are finite, and, to his eyes, populations are exploding at an unsustainable rate. Therefore, he must step in and do the hard but necessary thing of murdering half the universe.  Thanos doesn’t appear to have ever heard of the Simon/Erlich wager, comparative advantage, or economics at all.  Which also props up my theory that the overpopulation argument is an appeal to the “man-in-the-street”, in that, on the surface, it appears imminently reasonable, in exactly the same way that trade protectionism, socialism, and nationalism appear very reasonable.

Thanos is what you get when you convince enough people that “overpopulation”, whatever that means, is a problem that must be remedied.

More on this tomorrow.

05/03/18 Overnight Links

Gizmodo: Oakland passes nation’s strongest surveillance technology ordinance yet

The Intercept: New bipartisan bill could give President the power to imprison US citizens in military detention forever

Activist Post: James Comey says Deep State doesn’t exist, then describes the Deep State’s existence

LA Times: Technology turns our cities into spies for ICE, whether we like it or not

Reason: New York officials weaponize regulatory power against the NRA

The Hill: TSA forced to check whether air marshals show up to work sober: report

Techdirt: Amazon joins Google in making censorship easy, threatens signal for circumventing censorship regimes

FEE: Bigotry and compulsory inclusion are both collectivist

Cato: The 14 most common arguments against immigration and why they’re wrong

National Interest: Why Washington turns a blind eye to Egypt’s thugocracy Ed: Our government has no business worrying about the internal affairs of any foreign nation, thug state or not.  But it’s important to note the selective outrage that emanates from DC in regards to overseas atrocities.  Yemen, for example, is suffering thousands of innocent dead from Saudi Arabia’s U.S.-backed war of attrition and no one in D.C. cares, because Saudi Arabia is a thug state of America’s own making.  Our entire foreign policy could be boiled down into the propping up of various thug states across the globe, whether it be the Saudis, Ukrainian neo-Nazis, among other various and sundry tin pots who are promised American dollars in exchange for the subjection of their people.

On the topic of US-back Neo-Nazis in Ukraine is this just-published gem at The Nation: America’s collusion with Neo-Nazis  “That stormtroop-like assaults on gays, Jews, elderly ethnic Russians, and other “impure” citizens are widespread throughout Kiev-ruled Ukraine, along with torchlight marches reminiscent of those that eventually inflamed Germany in the late 1920s and 1930s. And that the police and official legal authorities do virtually nothing to prevent these neo-fascist acts or to prosecute them. On the contrary, Kiev has officially encouraged them by systematically rehabilitating and even memorializing Ukrainian collaborators with Nazi German extermination pogroms and their leaders  during World War II, renaming streets in their honor, building monuments to them, rewriting history to glorify them, and more.”

A small note on fascism: Fascism takes root so quickly in populations, with entire populations who insist that they are firmly against fascism yet backpedal into the thing they profess to oppose, because fascist rhetoric appeals to a primitive instinct that resides within all of us.  Fascism is nothing more than a militant tribalism, the fascist program exploits this aspect of human psychology to build power.  Tribalist rhetoric sustains it, and inspires dimwits to murder and die for it.  The fight against totalitarianism, and fascism, is also a fight against that instinct within us.

Cato: Drones on the border: efficacy and privacy implications

Zero Hedge: Trump “all but decided to withdraw” from Iran deal as IAEA refutes Netanyahu speech

Inverse: MDMA successfully treats PTSD in new study, scientists eye FDA approval Ed: On the verge of an historic revolution in medicine, an end of the slavery to deadly, insanity-inducing pharmaceuticals by way of marijuana and psychedelics

Cosmos: How psychedelic therapies are making a comeback

05/01/18 Overnight Links

Reason: Police body cameras may get facial recognition. Ed: A measure fought for by transparency advocates as a way to increase police accountability will now transform cops into walking avatars of the surveillance state.

Gizmodo: Companies in China are using brain sensors to monitor employees’ emotions

New York Times: Creepy or not? Your privacy concerns likely reflect your politics

USA Today: The walls have eyes for potential home buyers

Asia Times: Australia eyes wider spying on its citizens

Motherboard: Pimps are preying on sex workers pushed off web because of FOSTA/SESTA Ed: The solution to the human trafficking problem is the complete and utter legalization of prostitution. Violence and victimization are inherent to an illegal transaction, because neither party has recourse to courts of law.

Defense News: US makes it cheaper for foreign nations to buy American weapons

Mises Institute: Baby Alfie, the latest victim of omnipotent government

The American Conservative: Britain’s nervous breakdown

Boston Globe: Hoisting the false flag

FEE: How foreign competition strengthens domestic firms

The Intercept: Why do so many denounce authoritarianism from Trump and Putin, but not from Israel’s Netanyahu?

ACLU: The CIA gives a highly sanitized view of Gina Haspel while keeping her torture record secret

Rutherford Institute: While America feuds, the Police State shifts into high gear