News Dump Saturday: Zombie Apocalypse Edition

You can all relax: The government has a plan for the coming Zombie Apocalypse.

A few years ago, the Center for Disease Control launched a zombie preparedness initiative that drew significant attention. The Department of Defense followed suit and developed an entire training course intended for the Joint Operational Planning and Execution System (JOPES). The complete response plan, called CONPLAN888, was recently declassified, and it’s just as weird and creepy as you might imagine.
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Reading at times like the treatment to a campy science fiction script, CONPLAN888 categorizes eight classes of zombies:

Pathogenic zombies — Zombie life forms created after infection by a viral or bacterial contagion.
Radiation zombies — Zombie life forms created after infection from electromagnetic or particle radiation.
Evil Magic Zombies — Zombie life forms created by occult experimentation, or “evil magic.”
Space Zombies — Zombies that come from space or are created by extraterrestrial toxins (this also includes Zombie Satellites that could pose a threat to SATCOM services like DirecTV)
Weaponized Zombies — Zombie life forms engineered through bio-mechanical technology for the purposes of attacking another nation.
Symbiant-Induced Zombies — Zombie life forms created after the “introduction of a symbiant life form into an otherwise healthy host.”
Vegetarian Zombies — Zombie life forms that cause no threat to humans because they only eat plant life (could nevertheless “cause massive de-forestation or elimination of basic food crops essential to humans [rice, corn, soybeans])”
Chicken Zombies (yes, this is real)— Zombies that are essentially old hens that can no longer lay eggs. Farmers euthanize them with carbon monoxide and stack them in piles; however, some of the hens are still alive and crawl out. Though they ultimately die of organ failure, chicken zombies are “simply terrifying to behold” and are likely only to make people become vegetarians in protest of animal cruelty.

silencing dissent

A paper published last week in Journalism and Mass Communication Quarterly, the flagship peer-reviewed journal of the Association for Education in Journalism and Mass Communication (AEJMC), found that "the government’s online surveillance programs may threaten the disclosure of minority views and contribute to the reinforcement of majority opinion.”
"What this research shows is that in the presence of surveillance, our country's most vulnerable voices are unwilling to express their beliefs online."
The NSA’s “ability to surreptitiously monitor the online activities of US citizens may make online opinion climates especially chilly” and “can contribute to the silencing of minority views that provide the bedrock of democratic discourse," the researcher found....
For the majority of respondents, the study concluded, being aware of government surveillance “significantly reduced the likelihood of speaking out in hostile opinion climates.”
Although more nuanced than a blanket silencing, the study still concluded that “knowing one’s online activities are subject to government interception and believing these surveillance practices are necessary for national security play important roles in influencing conformist behavior.”
Perhaps unsurprisingly, the most significant conformist effect was from people who supported surveillance. They turned out to be more likely to conceal other dissenting opinions, which they felt strayed from the majority view.

Hacked behind the wheel

The growing number of high-tech cars that connect to the Internet is making Americans increasingly at risk of being hacked behind the wheel, the FBI warned Thursday.
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"While not all hacking incidents may result in a risk to safety — such as an attacker taking control of a vehicle — it is important that consumers take appropriate steps to minimize risk. Therefore, the FBI and NHTSA are warning the general public and manufacturers — of vehicles, vehicle components and aftermarket devices — to maintain awareness of potential issues and cybersecurity threats related to connected vehicle technologies in modern vehicles."
But eight months after security researchers demonstrated how a commercially available Jeep Cherokee could be remotely hacked — and prompted Chrysler to recall roughly 1.4 million vehicles in response — experts said this week that the government's warning is more than just a little late.

World's financial defenses are too low

The global financial safety net has become increasingly fragmented, making it harder to respond to crises in a world roiled by volatile capital flows, International Monetary Fund staffers warned.
Defenses haven’t kept up with the growth of external debt in recent years, the Washington-based fund said in a report released Thursday. As a result, a system-wide shock could overwhelm the world’s crisis resources, which include nations’ foreign-exchange reserves, central-bank swap lines, regional funds such as the euro area’s European Stability Mechanism, and the IMF itself, the lender said.
Financial cycles have been “growing in amplitude and duration, capital flows have become more volatile, and non-banks have gained importance, altering the nature of systemic risk,” IMF staff said in the report, which was presented to the fund’s executive board on March 7. In a major event, “the needs could exceed the collective resources available,” the fund said.

Central banks losing control of currencies

Efforts by many of the world’s central banks to weaken their currencies are failing, raising concerns about whether policy makers are losing the ability to wield control over financial markets. This was the case again in Japan on Thursday, when the dollar fell 1.1% against yen, to ¥111.39. Despite the Bank of Japan’s efforts to push down its currency and jump-start the economy with negative interest rates, the yen is up 8% this year and is at its strongest level against the dollar since October 2014. European central bankers are having similar problems containing the strength of the euro and other currencies. These difficulties are a reminder that the long stretch of exceptionally low rates in response to the 2008 financial crisis has created market distortions that may be difficult for central bankers to contain.
This disconnect could produce more volatility in financial markets. Even if investors can predict what actions central banks are likely to take, they are having a hard time predicting how markets will react, potentially sparking a pullback from riskier assets, such as emerging markets or commodities. It also underscores long-standing concerns about the prospects for global growth. A number of central bankers are reaching for the lever of lower interest rates to weaken their currency and make their exports more competitive. But because policy makers are all following the same approach, they are in effect canceling each other out. “There is a rising concern that central banks are testing the limits of their policies,” said Brian Daingerfield, a currency strategist at RBS Securities. “Each time you take a tool out of the tool kit, it gets closer to being empty.”

Brazil's House of Cards

The plot to Brazil's political crisis has become so complicated that even makers of political drama 'House of Cards' joke they are now following events.
There is even an online quiz where one has to guess: did it happen in Brazil or in House of Cards, or both?
But this is no laughing matter in Brazil.
This is the country's toughest political crisis since the early 1990s, when its first democratically-elected President in the modern era, Fernando Collor, was removed from power.
On Wednesday night the crisis took a bizarre turn, as a judge revealed phone conversations between President Dilma Rousseff and her predecessor Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and suggested they are trying to obstruct the course of an investigation into corruption.
Spontaneous protests erupted in more than 15 cities across the country and riot police acted against demonstrators in Brasilia.

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Transparent!

(AP) -- The Obama administration set a record for the number of times its federal employees told disappointed citizens, journalists and others that despite searching they couldn't find a single page requested under the Freedom of Information Act, according to a new Associated Press analysis of government data.
In more than one in six cases, or 129,825 times, government searchers said they came up empty-handed last year. Such cases contributed to an alarming measurement: People who asked for records under the law received censored files or nothing in 77 percent of requests, also a record. In the first full year after President Barack Obama's election, that figure was only 65 percent of cases.

Not a coincidence

The Obama administration has long called itself the most transparent administration in history. But newly released Department of Justice (DOJ) documents show that the White House has actually worked aggressively behind the scenes to scuttle congressional reforms designed to give the public better access to information possessed by the federal government.
The documents confirm longstanding suspicions about the administration's meddling, and lay bare for the first time how it worked to undermine FOIA reform bills that received overwhelming bipartisan support and were unanimously passed by both the House and Senate in 2014 — yet were never put up for a final vote.
Moreover, a separate set of documents obtained by VICE News in response to a nearly two-year-old FOIA request provides new insight into how the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) also tried to disrupt Congress's FOIA reform efforts, which would have required those agencies to be far more transparent when responding to records requests.

Meanwhile in the White House

“There seems to be an alternative reality out there from the some of the political folks that America’s down in the dumps. It’s not. America’s pretty darn great right now,” he said in a White House meeting with his economic team on a day when the Labor Department announced the economy added 242,000 jobs in February and the unemployment rate remained at 4.9 percent.
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OLinda's picture

"What this research shows is that in the presence of surveillance, our country's most vulnerable voices are unwilling to express their beliefs online."

I don't think I too often hesitate to speak my beliefs (except at TOP), but I do think about it when I search for items. Sometimes I'll wonder about something, and then not do a search for it. It's so wrong to sit in your own home alone and know that what you do is not private.

I always assume someone is listening when I'm on the phone. Also my entire life is in email. Banking and cc transactions, confirmations, etc., online ordering receipts, in addition to regular text emails sent and received.

The sad thing about email is, I feel like I've resigned myself to it, or become accustomed to the fact that it is scooped up and not private. Instead of trying to limit the activity, or use encryption, I'm like "Oh well, that's life in America." I think I pressured myself to accept it so that I didn't freak out, stress out, and get angry over it every day. I don't think that is good.

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sensetolisten's picture

Is that what we now calling "IT" ???

That Other Place?

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“I never did give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell.”
― Harry Truman
OLinda's picture

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sensetolisten's picture

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“I never did give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell.”
― Harry Truman
OLinda's picture

Perhaps unsurprisingly, the most significant conformist effect was from people who supported surveillance. They turned out to be more likely to conceal other dissenting opinions, which they felt strayed from the majority view.

It says "unsurprisingly." Why do you think this is the case?

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Those who support universal surveillance are generally conformists.

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An Amiga 1000 leading an army of DEC PDP11s streaming paper-tape behind them. Imagine Zeniths, TRS's, even Timex Sinclairs, all confusing the battle-field with unknown languages.

Now that is the start of a movie. No, a series of movies. I want some popcorn.

best, john

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Strange that a harp of thousand strings should keep in tune so long

tapu dali's picture

with hundreds of boxes of punchcards?

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There are known knowns; there are things we know we know. We also know there are known unknowns; that is to say we know there are some things we do not know. But there are also unknown unknowns – the ones we don't know we don't know.

OLinda's picture

the story made me think of a case where robbers used a garage door opener to open garages, and usually the door from the garage to the house was unlocked. So, if you have a locked garage door, make sure the inside door is also locked anyway. Don't know if that would stop them if they made it that far though, but maybe.

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It's the Orwellian Rabbit Hole. Winston worked for big Brother. Winston kept his thoughts to himself.
grrr I had intended this to reply to OLinda

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

OLinda's picture

Ah, thank you for this explanation.

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gulfgal98's picture

I cannot believe that the government has a plan for zombies, even chicken zombies. Blum 3

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

The zombie planning by the DoD appeared to me to be preparation for massive civil unrest in the USA. I haven't read CONPLAN888 still, it's nearly impossible for me to see it any other way.

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

riverlover's picture

Unusual activity at National Guard armories?

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Hey! my dear friends or soon-to-be's, JtC could use the donations to keep this site functioning for those of us who can still see the life preserver or flotsam in the water.

If there was massive civil unrest probably yeah. If riots were happening across the country you wouldn't need to bolo anything, it would be right there in front of you.
I understand tendency to be dismissive, and that's fine. With Climate change/global warming widely expected to cause social upheaval. With the pentagon already taking measures to deal with climate change. I don't see how it's so far fetched as t think they would develop plans to deal with civil unrest.

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

OLinda's picture

The document’s assessment of zombies states that they are “undead and thus feel no pain or fear of death, (therefore) riot control counter-measures would be completely ineffective.”

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ok ok, maybe the 'zombie' plan is nothing more than a training exercise. Maybe the Pentagon has no plans for civil unrest in the face of climate change. It just seems to me that the 'zombie' plan sounds like something one might expect in the face of climate change related famine and disease and such. The Pentagon's got a plan for everything right?

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With their hearts they turned to each others heart for refuge
In troubled years that came before the deluge
*Jackson Browne, 1974, Before the Deluge https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7SX-HFcSIoU

I'm going to write a diary directly calling out Markos for his censorship.
Let's see if he bojo's me. I can't think of a more worthy reason to be banned.

Not today though. Too busy. Maybe tomorrow.

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gendjinn's picture

Providing a target for the rage of those in denial only delays their confrontation with reality. Leave them to it. They will clamber out of it or they won't. Your time is far better invested elsewhere.

And don't lose sight of the fact that even though we disagree on the relative merits of Clinton/Sanders, we are allies on many, many issues.

Meteor Blades is very effective at getting his message heard on a high traffic platform. Why sacrifice yours?

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“If not us, then who?
If not now, then when?”

― John E. Lewis

My stand is not a bold one. I risk very little.
But someone has to stand against censorship.

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gendjinn's picture

And there is a certain grim satisfaction in railing against the dying of the light.

Personally, should the worst come to pass, I would like the opportunity to quote certain Clinton supporters back to themselves. I see far more repeat satisfaction there.

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gulfgal98's picture

at the help desk over there. I had linked greywolf's diary and then posted below. Obviously, the numbers are much higher now with someone posting that it had 20K Facebook shares.

I am just wondering why this diarist was banned. This diary hit the top of the rec list with over 460 recommendations and was shared with nearly 13 K Facebook users. It was a great example of satire and yet the diarist was banned without notice.

IMO, it is sad when people must have to self censor. Every person here now is walking on eggshells unless they are a full throated supporter of Hillary Clinton. It is sad that anyone should feel that way. It is the worst type of censorship. I would hope that dkos is a better place than that.

So far, I have not been banned for it, but there is a purge going on over there. Originally I was trying to avoid being banned because I still wanted the honor the person who gifted me a lifetime membership, but that is becoming less important to me as Markos continues to cleanse his site of any dissent. The Clintonites are literally so bloodthirsty that they are jumping on anything perceived as even the smallest slight against their idol. If she survives the investigation, just wait to see how the Republicans shred her to pieces. Meanwhile they reside in their hermetically sealed little bubble with Markos and his henchmen (Trix, bbb, and LL) guarding the gates.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

OLinda's picture

at the help desk and not be banned, at least you used to be able to. Some really scummy, ugly stuff has been said there, often!, without bannings. Recently, however, Phoenix Woman was on a Time Out and since she couldn't post at DK, she posted at the help desk. What she posted was jerky and mgmt changed her TO to banned. That is the first and only time I have seen anyone face any repercussions from help desk postings. Phoenix may be the first of something new.

Re the bloodthirsty Clintonites. They have the owner on their side, so they are feeling brave. Apparently, you can't knock Hillary because she is the "nominee" according to kos, but you can knock Bernie because he isn't.

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OLinda's picture

do you know who gave you the membership or was it anonymous? If you know, maybe send them a mail message thanking them and telling them how much it meant to you and letting them know you may be banned but how much you appreciated it. Better to send now while you can, in case you do get banned which I hope you don't!

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sensetolisten's picture

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“I never did give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell.”
― Harry Truman

I have thought about, and forwarded many of your diaries. You make a difference wherever you are.
You are worthy.

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OLinda's picture

Figuring this must have started during Rumsfeld's time, I took a look to see if there were dates. Ran into this:

This fictitious plan was created by junior military officers undergoing training related to the Department of Defense’s Joint Operational Planning and Execution System (JOPES), the formalized process by which the Department conducts all contingency planning and execution. In an effort to learn the JOPES process, and to do so in a more interesting way, the students were assigned this completely fictitious scenario and directed to use JOPES to develop a written contingency plan. Using this fictitious scenario avoided concerns over the use of classified information, it resolved sensitivity to using real-world nations or scenarios, and it better engaged the students.

Frankly, I completely believed it was a real deal by our government. Would not have surprised me at all.

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angel d's picture

make great zombie McNuggets!

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Uh, I'll pass. Thanks anyway.

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sensetolisten's picture

This is amusing: "coming Zombie Apocalypse."

This is disturbing: "silencing dissent"

This is disconcerting: "Hacked behind the wheel"

This is not surprising: "World's financial defenses are too low"

This is also not surprising: "Central banks losing control of currencies"

This is just sad: "Brazil's House of Cards"

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“I never did give them hell. I just told the truth, and they thought it was hell.”
― Harry Truman