The Crucifixion of Tomas Young

“For Young, the war, the wound, the paralysis, the wheelchair, the anti-war demonstrations, the wife who left him and the one who didn’t, the embolism, the loss of motor control, the slurred speech, the colostomy, the IV line for narcotics implanted in his chest, the open bed sores that expose his bones, the despair—the crushing despair—the decision to die, have come down to a girl. Aleksus, his only niece. She will not remember her uncle. But he lies in his dimly lit room, painkillers flowing into his broken body, and he thinks of her. He does not know exactly when he will die. But it must be before her second birthday, in June. He will not mar that day with his death.” Continue reading

Continue Reading The Crucifixion of Tomas Young

Muslim leaders urge ‘decisive action’ against Syria

“The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation on Wednesday condemned alleged poison gas attacks in Syria, blaming the government and calling for ‘decisive action’ in response. The world’s largest grouping of Muslim nations ‘stressed the need to hold the Syrian government legally and morally accountable for this heinous crime and to bring its perpetrators to justice’. The OIC called on the UN ‘Security Council to discharge its duty of preserving international security and stability, taking a unified position against this monstrous crime and its perpetrators.'” Continue reading

Continue Reading Muslim leaders urge ‘decisive action’ against Syria

Jeffrey Tucker: We’re All Edward Snowden Now

“In the course of only a few decades, everything unraveled. The monopoly over communication that the government once maintained had been completely smashed. This situation has persisted for about 15 years — a near-anarchist paradise of human sharing and interaction through technological innovation. What’s going on today is really the reaction and response by the elites. They want their power and control back. They are trying to get it through the oldest form of government control surveillance and the blackmail that comes with it. It’s the tactic guards used to control prisoners. It’s the tactic government is using to fight its way back toward having control over our lives.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Jeffrey Tucker: We’re All Edward Snowden Now

Facebook to pay 614,000 users $15 each over privacy concerns

“A lawsuit that accused Facebook of misappropriating users’ images ended with a settlement on Monday. The agreement states that the social media site has to pay approximately 614,000 Facebook users $15 each for using their information for advertising purposes. While approximately 150 million Facebook users’ images and likenesses were allegedly used to promote products and services through the Sponsored Stories program, only users who entered a claim form by May 2, 2013, were eligible to receive settlement funds. As part of the settlement, Facebook will give users greater information about and control over how they are featured in the Sponsored Stories.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Facebook to pay 614,000 users $15 each over privacy concerns

Civil liberties may not survive the ‘Gorgon Stare’

“At the top of the executive branch, President Obama and his team favor Orwellian euphemism, preferring wordblobs like ‘disposition matrix’ to the harsh Anglo-Saxon of ‘kill list’ — mumbling ‘kinetic military action’ when what they really mean is ‘war.’ But further down the administrative ladder, the language sometimes gets admirably blunt. The National Security Agency has programs with names like ‘TRAFFICTHIEF’ and ‘PANOPTICON.’ And DHS has even expressed interest in ‘Gorgon Stare,’ a drone-mounted camera array under development by the Air Force that can watch whole cities at a time (and turn the inhabitants to stone?).” Continue reading

Continue Reading Civil liberties may not survive the ‘Gorgon Stare’

UW Researcher Moves Another Human’s Finger with his Thoughts

“Many new studies have shown that people can control things — like video games or a cursor on a screen — only with their thoughts, but a new project takes this to the next level: people controlling other people with their thoughts. A new study by University of Washington researchers created the first human-to-human brain interface that is noninvasive. It allowed the thoughts of one researcher to manipulate movement of another. The study used electroencephalography (EEG) — which is used to record brain activity noninvasively from the scalp — and transcranial magnetic stimulation, which is a noninvasive way of delivering stimulation to the brain to obtain a response.” Continue reading

Continue Reading UW Researcher Moves Another Human’s Finger with his Thoughts

Elysium: The Technological Side of the American Police State

“While much has been said about Blomkamp’s use of Elysium to raise concerns about immigration, access to healthcare, worker’s rights, and socioeconomic stratification, what I found most striking and unnerving was its depiction of how the government will employ technologies such as drones, tasers and biometric scanners to track, target and control the populace, especially dissidents. Mind you, while these technologies are already in use today and being hailed for their potentially life-saving, cost-saving, time-saving benefits, it won’t be long before the drawbacks to having a government equipped with technology that makes it all-seeing, all-knowing, and all-powerful far outdistance the benefits.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Elysium: The Technological Side of the American Police State

Small minds, big ideas: The implications of the IRS targeting anti-tax groups

“Any time you give a state agency a goal with an extremely broad, malleable definition, the agency is going to tend to interpret its mission as broadly as possible. And when that goal is inherently incompatible with a free society, the agency’s powers will inevitably grow at the expense of individual liberties and the rule of law. We shouldn’t trust the IRS to take as much money as it wants; we shouldn’t trust the military to invade the countries it thinks need to be invaded; and we shouldn’t trust the state security apparatus to ‘keep us safe from terrorism.’ The best thing that can happen to an agency trusted with such a goal is that it will fail. The worst is that it will succeed.” Continue reading

Continue Reading Small minds, big ideas: The implications of the IRS targeting anti-tax groups