02/16/18 Morning Links

The Week: Trump’s anti-immigrant enforcers want to team up with Trump’s spies

EFF: Customs and Border Protection’s biometric data snooping goes too far

Consortium News: NYT’s “really weird” Russiagate story

More believable: Reuters: Russia says it has evidence of Western meddling in Russian election

The Hill: George W. Bush doesn’t deserve the media’s efforts at rehabilitation

SHELDON RICHMAN: ‘Peace through strength’ is a racket

Reason: None of these popular gun control proposals would have stopped the Parkland shooting

Are guns a danger to our kids, or is the real danger the public school system? Public School Control Now!

02/16/18 Overnight Links

Techdirt: FBI Director still won’t say which encryption experts are advising him on his bizarre approach to encryption

Mises: Why don’t schools have better security? Ed: Bars have better security than our public schools

Reason: More cops in schools is the wrong answer to mass shootings Ed: Private, non-unionized, highly-trained, mentally-stable security employees that can be held accountable.

Washington Times: Federal government spending at a rate of $1 million a minute

Mashable: Over a decade later, FBI surveillance of Iraq War protests still resonates

The Federalist: The media stopped reporting the Russian collusion story because they helped create it

Mashable: Nvidia is creating surveillance cameras with built-in facial recognition

Collective Evolution: MK Ultra: What they didn’t tell you about the program that’s probably still operational

Motherboard: Forget Boston Dynamics robot dogs: Purdue’s microbots are the real nightmare

02/15/18 Morning Links

InHomelandSecurity: China’s Surveillance State now a ‘creepy’ technological reality

USA Today: After Apple’s fight with the FBI, two groups say they can solve the encryption battle

Washington Examiner: Why are the Comey memos secret?

Reason: If you owe the IRS over $51,000, it can trap you in the United States

Buffalo: Daniel Ellsberg shed light on the Pentagon Papers, now he’s doing the same with nuclear war

Techdirt: What are the ethical issues of Google conducting AI research in China?

Nature: The quantum internet is coming

EFF: Catalog of missing devices illustrates gadgets that could and should exist, were it not for bad copyright law

02/15/18 Overnight Links

GovTech: Activists file lawsuit over LAPD’s predictive policing program

Bonnie Kristian, one of the greatest writers of my generation, writes on the illogic of handing the Pentagon more money than ever before, despite it’s clear inability to wisely spend the money it already receives

Civil asset forfeiture is an easy source of revenue for unscrupulous members of law enforcement, and they will actively work to prevent any change to that arrangement, as this example out of Alabama shows

WSWS: British judge refuses to overturn Assange’s arrest warrant

CNBC: It’s not just lizards in Iran—squirrels, cats, and dolphins have also been tagged as spies over the years

The Federalist: The Left is conditioning college students to hate free speech

The Quint: Can you really prevent Google from spying on you?

QuartzWhat we miss about AI when we’re worried about killer robots

The solution to the North Korea problem that wouldn’t cost several million innocent lives is also the simplest

The solution to eliminating whatever threat our leaders believe that North Korea poses to our precious bodily fluids is also the simplest: remove all trade restrictions, tear down the Berlin Wall-style barrier between North and South, and allow them to talk.  It removes the risk of a devastating war in which millions of innocents were perish over the course of several years, it would save North Korea from starvation, and it would slowly allow unfiltered news from the outside world to seep into that Hermit Kingdom.  Trade would transform the country for better, in a way that no other option could.  And it wouldn’t cost a thing.  BUT. But.

Washington D.C. is shopping for a war.  War means justifying future $700 billion “defense” budgets that are divvied up among an entire industry that is devoted to waging war.  That industry is what we call the military-industrial complex. That industry needs enemies, needs constant wars around the globe.  Conflict is good for business.  And peace is bad, not only for business, but also power.

Peace is simple, and inexpensive relative to the human and economic costs of war.  But war props up power, not only within our borders, but also in the country being targeted.  North Korea builds its dictatorship upon the very real threat of invasion and attack.

Valentine’s Day Links

Washington Examiner: Every Pentagon wish is granted in Trump’s defense budget request

The Federalist: Why it’s a big problem if the FISA court relied on Steele’s hearsay to grant surveillance order

Alternet: Trump’s budget doubles down on the Drug War

National Review: Duke professor: “Libertarians seem to be on the autism spectrum.”Ed: Bahaha.  It does sound as though she is actually implying that Public Choice Theorist, and academic god among insects, James Buchanan, is on the autism spectrum.  Nothing more than a middle-school slur from someone with no actual arguments. “Oh those people I don’t like? They’re just retarded.”

New York Times: Are spies like us? A national security reporter says yes, and no

ACLU: A California city fights off ICE’s digital deportation machine

The Intercept: Republican scaremongering on “Sanctuary Cities” backfires, Democrats win big upset in Florida special election

Valley News: Facebook loses Germany court battle over privacy settings

The Week: Is America the main obstacle to peace in Korea?

Techdirt: More than 4,000 government websites infected with covert cryptocurrency miner

Business Insider: US intelligence officials say they wouldn’t use a Chinese-made phone for fear of spying. Ed: They speak from the experience of what they themselves do.  Safe to assume US-made phones are little more than our own personal self-surveillance devices.

National Interest: The Deep State is very real

Forbes: Try exercising this Constitutional right and you’re apt to regret it

The Guardian: Social media spying is turning us into a stalking society

02/13/18 Morning Links

TechCrunch: UK unveils extremism-blocking tool and could force tech firms to use it

Antiwar.com: The UK’s hidden role in Julian Assange’s detention

Bloomberg: US airstrikes in Syria killed over 200 Russian contract soldiers, sources say

McClatchyDC: Report: patient advocacy groups pushed opioids after getting industry money

The Intercept: GOP law enforcement chiefs invited donors to help set policy via secret bulletin board

WND: The top 10 colleges that are the worst for free speech

Slate: The arming and disarming of black America

FEE: The most basic freedom is the freedom to quit: “If we move our minds out of the quagmire of competition (indeed, we can’t win tennis matches by quitting) and think of life’s broader goals — the goals of surviving, avoiding injury, finding happiness, and living in accordance with our personal values among people whom we respect and who respect us — then we see that freedom to quit is essential to all of these goals. I am talking here about the freedom to walk away from people and situations that are harmful to our well being.”

02/13/18 Overnight Links

The American Conservative: Inside the chilling world of artificially intelligent drones

USA Today: Pentagon risk getting “fatter, not stronger” with spending increases in new budget

Techdirt: Your ‘smart’ TV remains a privacy and security dumpster fire: Consumer Reports

The Guardian: Encryption keeps us safe. It must not be compromised with ‘backdoors’

WND: Who’s the bigger threat to privacy, the NSA or Google?

Activist Post: German court rules Facebook violates users rights with illegal default privacy settings

RON PAUL: E-Verify threatens us all

Reason: West Virginia cop fired for not shooting suicidal man settles lawsuit against city

MintPressNews: Lifting of US propaganda ban gives new meaning to old song

High Times: Is it possible to trick a drug-sniffing dog?

02/12/18 Morning Links

The Guardian: Government spying on immigrants in America is now fair game. What next?

Fortune: How the U.S. Courts website unwittingly became a bitcoin miner

The Daily Star: A Pentagon budget like none before: $700 billion

Reason: Donald Trump shouldn’t talk to the Feds. And neither should you.

The Intercept: How torture fuels, rather than reduces, terrorism

National Review: When border searches become unreasonable

Techdirt: Will Manhattan DA’s anti-encryption pitch change now that the NYPD’s using iPhones?

Activist Post: Baltimore will now force bad cops to pay their victims out of their own pockets

Consortium News: How Establishment propaganda gaslights us into submission

02/12/18 Overnight Links

NextBigFuture: China’s techno-Police State will identify any face within 3 seconds by 2020 using billions of cameras

Politico: The Grassley Letter that everyone is ignoring is far more important that the Nunes Memo

Daily Beast: U.S. intelligence shuts down damning report on whistleblower retaliation

Consortium News: US intelligence crisis poses a threat to the world

Activist Post: Convictions thrown out after police caught paying labs for positive DUI test results

OC Register: “Attacking” the FBI is an unalienable American right

The Federalist: The GOP budget deal throws fiscal sanity out the Overton Window

Inquisitr: Scientists warn that potential FDA kratom ban could worsen America’s opioid epidemic

CounterPunch: Afghan civilians keep paying the price for the so-called ‘War on Terror’

Zero Hedge: Nassim Taleb explains why people who make money are usually wrong

Wired: The downsides of AI and deep learning

Science News: 50 years on, nuclear fusion still hasn’t delivered clean energy