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"I don't think the report is true, but these crises work for those who want to make fights between people." Kulam Dastagir, 28, a bird seller in Afghanistan

The overconsumption myth.
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:38 pm EDT, May 26, 2011

When George W. Bush signed the bankruptcy bill into law earlier this year, he made clear his vision that whatever troubles face American families, it is their own fault, and his plan is to punish them. America’s middle class deserves better.

Literally every single argument made in favor of that abominable bill was a lie. This article provides a long refutation of the GOP's position that the middle class is plagued by lazy overconsumption and provides some reasonable policy priorities that would actually be useful.

The overconsumption myth.


China used prisoners in lucrative internet gaming work | World news | guardian.co.uk
Topic: Miscellaneous 10:46 am EDT, May 26, 2011

It was the forced online gaming that was the most surreal part of his imprisonment. The hard slog may have been virtual, but the punishment for falling behind was real.

"If I couldn't complete my work quota, they would punish me physically. They would make me stand with my hands raised in the air and after I returned to my dormitory they would beat me with plastic pipes. We kept playing until we could barely see things," he said.

China used prisoners in lucrative internet gaming work | World news | guardian.co.uk


Ronald McKinnon: The Return of Stagflation - WSJ.com
Topic: Miscellaneous 8:56 pm EDT, May 25, 2011

April's producer price index for finished goods, which excludes services and falling home prices, rose 6.8%. The Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that intermediate goods prices for April were rising at a 9.4% annual clip.

Fuck.

This would only be useful if it was having a positive impact on housing prices.

It isn't.

Which means the value of your assets is collapsing and the value of your cash is collapsing.

Ronald McKinnon: The Return of Stagflation - WSJ.com


Red-light camera firm puts exec on leave for Web postings - Spokesman.com - May 20, 2011
Topic: Miscellaneous 10:22 pm EDT, May 23, 2011

An executive at the company that provides red-light cameras in Spokane has been suspended after a newspaper in Western Washington discovered he misrepresented himself as a local resident on its website and made comments to promote business in the area, a company spokesman said Friday.

Red-light camera firm puts exec on leave for Web postings - Spokesman.com - May 20, 2011


More deadly tornadoes on the way this year - Bloomberg
Topic: Miscellaneous 6:37 pm EDT, May 23, 2011

At least 481 people have died in tornadoes so far this year, the earliest such a high toll has ever been reached...

“We are now on pace for a record year for tornado fatalities,” Schneider said on conference call with reporters today. “I think we have to be aware that we are just now entering the peak of the season.”

This year’s stormy season may be caused by a waning La Nina, a cooling in the Pacific Ocean, that is focusing the track for severe storms at just the right distance from warm moist air coming north from the Gulf of Mexico.

“Some part of it is global warming-climate change and some part is natural variability.”

More deadly tornadoes on the way this year - Bloomberg


The Filter Bubble: how personalization changes society - Boing Boing
Topic: Miscellaneous 3:38 pm EDT, May 23, 2011

Pariser is concerned that invisible "smart" customization of your Internet experience can make you parochial, exploiting your cognitive blind-spots to make you overestimate the importance or prevalence of certain ideas, products and philosophies and underestimate others.

This is an important discussion.

The Filter Bubble: how personalization changes society - Boing Boing


RE: Nothing to Hide: The False Tradeoff between Privacy and Security
Topic: Politics and Law 9:37 am EDT, May 22, 2011

If you see any promotional essays that reveal something about where the book is taking its arguments please post them. Solove wrote:

This book grows out of an essay I wrote a few years ago about the Nothing-to-Hide Argument. The essay’s popularity surprised me and made me realize that there is a hunger out there for discussions about the arguments made in the debate between privacy and security.

This was an interesting essay but I recall feeling like it failed to hit the nail on the head. Oversight is not sufficient to address concerns about privacy violations. The "nothing-to-hide" argument always carries the implicit and falicious assumption that nothing inappropriate will ever be done with any of the data collected...

I recall traveling in southern German a certain feeling of freedom that isn't present in modern America, at least in my interactions with public transportation architecture. Its legal to speed on the freeway in certain places. A gas station attendant was confused when I attempted to pre-pay for gas. You are required to pay to use the subway in Munich but no turnstile enforces this requirement. You can just walk on the train. In New York City the subway system is locked in cages. In Atlanta most of the freeway traffic exceeds the speed limit all the time and everyone is constantly on the lookout for the police while they drive.

There are many ingredients in a free society but *trust* is certainly one of them. Another is not having to look over your shoulder to see if the police are watching you.

When we say we need to go through your computer, we're saying that we don't trust you.

You might ask why - and thats what the fourth amendment's "probable cause" requirement is about. By default, we trust you. If we choose not to trust you, we have to have a good reason for it.

Random, suspicionless searches have no "why." We don't trust you because no one can be trusted.

The random forensic inspection of traveler's laptop computers by U.S. Customs sends the message that no one who leaves the country can be trusted with regard to any information they might carry with them.

And you have to look over your shoulder - you've got to ask, is there anything stored anywhere on my computer that might be questioned by the police for any reason? Even if you're confident that you've got nothing to hide, we still don't trust you. You still have to take stock of it.

If you live in a society where no one is trusted and everyone constantly has to look over their shoulder - you are not living in a free society. Whats lost here is the character of a society and the quality of life living there. These things damage your quality of life in *exactly the same way* that crime and terrorism damage your quality of life - through mutual distrust and fear.

Without the constraints imposed by the Constitution, in particular the 4th Amendment's requirement for probable cause, the efforts of law enforcement would exacerbate and amplify the negative collective impact of crime - just as our over-reaction to failed terrorism plots has caused some people to argue that those plots were nearly as effective as if they had been successful.

RE: Nothing to Hide: The False Tradeoff between Privacy and Security


Apocalypse not now: The Rapture fails to materialise | World news | guardian.co.uk
Topic: Miscellaneous 8:15 am EDT, May 21, 2011

Christian doomsday prophet Harold Camping looks likely to be less than rapturous after his prediction that the world would end on Saturday failed to materialise.

The 89-year-old Californian preacher had prophesied that the Rapture would begin at 6pm in each of the world's time zones, with those "saved" by Jesus ascending to heaven and the non-believers being wiped out by an earthquake rolling from city to city across the planet.

This is what Jane Lane was talking about! I guess I have 10 hours before the world ends in my time zone - Already popping a beer...

Apocalypse not now: The Rapture fails to materialise | World news | guardian.co.uk


Pay No Attention to Salary Parrot
Topic: Society 2:27 pm EDT, May 20, 2011

“I have friends with the same degree as me, from a worse school, but because of who they knew or when they happened to graduate, they’re in much better jobs - It’s more about luck than anything else.”

Pay No Attention to Salary Parrot


Charges Against the N.S.A.’s Thomas Drake : The New Yorker
Topic: Miscellaneous 12:18 pm EDT, May 16, 2011

Mark Klein, the former A.T. & T. employee who exposed the telecom-company wiretaps, is also dismayed by the Drake case. “I think it’s outrageous,” he says. “The Bush people have been let off. The telecom companies got immunity. The only people Obama has prosecuted are the whistle-blowers.”

Of interest...

Charges Against the N.S.A.’s Thomas Drake : The New Yorker


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