The Evening Blues - 10-5-16



eb1pt12


The day's news roundup + tonight's musical feature: Sam Cooke

Hey! Good Evening!

This evening's music features soul singer Sam Cooke. Enjoy!

Sam Cooke - Bring it on home to me

“The Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, intact for over 200 years, guaranteed that the right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers and effects, against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath of affirmation, and particularly describing the place to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized. After September 11th, 2001, those were just words on an old piece of paper, no longer a restriction of the Government’s overreaching power to shake down its subjects.”

-- Kenneth Eade


News and Opinion

'Shameful': Yahoo Spied on Email Customers at Government's Request

In an astounding and "unprecedented" new account of U.S. government surveillance, Reuters reported Tuesday that Yahoo secretly scanned all of its customer's incoming emails for a specific set of characters, per request of the National Security Agency (NSA) or FBI.

The news agency broke the investigation after speaking with "two former employees and a third person apprised of the events," who described how the email giant complied with the vast government directive and built a custom software program to scan hundreds of millions of accounts for a "specific set of characters."

The classified directive was reportedly sent to the company's legal team last year. "It is not known what information intelligence officials were looking for, only that they wanted Yahoo to search for a set of characters," Reuters reported. "That could mean a phrase in an email or an attachment, said the sources, who did not want to be identified."

Reporter Joseph Menn said that he was "unable to confirm whether the 2015 demand went to other companies, or if any complied." Further, it is not known "what data Yahoo may have handed over, if any."


Delete Your Yahoo Account

There's no good reason to have a Yahoo account these days. But after Tuesday’s bombshell report by Reuters, indicating the enormous, faltering web company designed a bespoke email-wiretap service for the U.S. government, we now know that a Yahoo account is a toxic surveillance liability.

It remains unclear what form the directive took, though according to Andrew Crocker, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the best guess is that it invoked Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, which permits the bulk collection of communications for the purpose of targeting a foreign individual.

But this Yahoo program doesn’t appear to have had even an ostensibly non-U.S. target. Rather, literally every single person with a Yahoo email inbox was evidently placed under surveillance, regardless of citizenship.

Crocker said the Yahoo program seems “in some ways more problematic and broader” than previously revealed NSA bulk surveillance programs like PRISM or Upstream collection efforts. “It’s hard to think of an interpretation” of the Reuters report, he explained, “that doesn’t mean Yahoo isn’t being asked to scan all domestic communications without a warrant” or probable cause.

“The Fourth Amendment implications of that are pretty staggering,” Crocker said. ...

Here is how to delete your Yahoo account.


Yahoo may have let the government spy on emails. Now will we embrace encryption?

Much of the discussion about Edward Snowden’s 2013 revelations has focused on the NSA’s mass phone spying program that the courts later ruled illegal. But many people forget that the New York Times also reported, in 2013, based on previously published Snowden documents, that the NSA had been scanning countless emails going into and out of the US for years, looking for certain keywords.

This Yahoo story seems to be an escalation of this type of “about” or “upstream” surveillance, which was once done by the NSA by secretly wiretapping internet cables owned by AT&T and others. Since many email companies have started encrypting their emails in transit since that story came out, the NSA probably can’t do that type of surveillance unilaterally (or with the help of AT&T) anymore. The US government now seems to be moving to force internet companies to do this type of mass surveillance for them, on the companies’ servers, where the data remains accessible. ...

Incredibly, Yahoo apparently built this backdoor into its email system without even telling its then security chief, Alex Stamos. “The sources said the program was discovered by Yahoo’s security team in May 2015, within weeks of its installation,” Menn reported. “The security team initially thought hackers had broken in.”

Stamos was reportedly furious and resigned in protest. “Due to a programming flaw [in the software], he told [Yahoo executives] hackers could have accessed the stored emails,” Menn explained. Security experts have been highlighting for years how backdoors not only give access to the “good guys” but also could let other criminals or foreign governments into our communications systems. ...

Yahoo’s possible betrayal of its users is another example of why whistleblowers and leaks to the press are so important. The US government considers this type of surveillance “legal” even though it shocks the conscience of many ordinary Americans and dozens of civil liberties groups have been attempting to have courts rule it illegal for years.

Security experts urge clients to stop using Yahoo Mail after spying report

Civil and human rights groups issued denunciations and some cybersecurity experts urged their clients to stop using the popular Yahoo Mail service after a news agency reported Tuesday that the internet service provider had secretly scanned hundreds of millions of clients’ emails at the behest of U.S. intelligence agencies. ...

“Enough is enough. It’s time to close your Yahoo account,” Graham Cluley, a British cybersecurity expert, tweeted following the report. ...

Amnesty International, a London-based rights group, lamented what it called the eroding privacy of internet users and efforts by the U.S. government to “indiscriminately vacuum up the world’s data.”

“This is a clear sign that people can trust neither their government nor their service providers to respect their privacy: Only end-to-end encryption that keeps their communications away from prying eyes will do,” said Amnesty’s Sherif Elsayed-Ali, the head of technology and human rights.

Clinton: 'I don't recall any joke' about droning WikiLeaks founder

Hillary Clinton on Tuesday said she doesn't remember ever commenting -- joking or otherwise -- about using a drone strike against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

“I don't recall any joke,” Clinton said, when asked Tuesday at a press conference in Pennsylvania.

“It would have been a joke, if it had been said, but I don't recall that.”

The website TruePundit posted a report Sunday that alleged Clinton had in 2010 spoken of a drone strike against Assange.

The report cited State Department sources and claimed Clinton had said: "Can't we just drone this guy?"

US considers military strikes against Assad's troops

State Dept: US Considering ‘Military, Other Options’ Against Russia in Syria

Once again focusing on escalations of tensions with Russia, State Department spokesman Mark Toner today said that in addition to the “diplomatic” efforts the US is making in Syria, they are also considering conducting “military or other options.” ...

Adding to the uncomfortable talk about military possibilities, Toner also declared the US to “always consider unilateral options when looking at a situation like Syria,” and while he insisted the US prefers to work with its coalition, it’s unlikely much of the coalition will eagerly follow them into a war with Russia.

After US Suspends Talks, Russia Deploys Defensive Missiles in Syria

In response to the high-profile US announcement that they are suspending all discussions with Russia related to Syria, and that moreover they are considering “military and other options,” Russia is adding to their defensive systems in the country in the form of new S-300 missile systems.

The S-300 is an advanced anti-aircraft system, which is being deployed in the area near the Russian naval base at Tartus. Russian Defense Ministry officials say it is intended to ensure the safety of the base, and that they are “unclear” why the US and its allies are expressing such alarm. ...

That Russia is making that deployment at all suggests they think it’s at least a possibility they need to be prepared to counter, while the US reaction suggests that they feel as though they’re really losing a strategic option with Russia shoring up the defenses around this base.

An excellent article, worth reading in full. In a portion of the article not abstracted here, Parry chronicles the new propaganda-catapulting exploits of our old friends Tom Friedman and Fred Hiatt - two nitwits laying the groundwork for the nuclear destruction of humanity.

New ‘Group Think’ for War with Syria/Russia

Not since the eve of the U.S. invasion of Iraq has Official Washington’s political/punditry class clamored more single-mindedly – and openly – for the U.S. government to commit a gross violation of international law, now urging a major military assault on the government of Syria while also escalating tensions with nuclear-armed Russia.

And, like the frenzied war fever of 2002-2003, today’s lawless consensus is operating on a mix of selective, dubious and false information – while excluding from the public debate voices that might dare challenge the prevailing “group think.” It’s as if nothing was learned from the previous disaster in Iraq.

Most notably, there are two key facts about Syria that Americans are not being told: one, U.S. regional “allies” have been funding and arming radical jihadist groups, including Al Qaeda terrorists, there almost since the conflict began in 2011 and, two, the claim about “moderate” Syrian rebels is a fraud; the “moderates” have served essentially as a P.R. cut-out for the U.S. and its “allies” to supply Al Qaeda and its allies with sophisticated weapons while pretending not to. ...

Many of these calls for a U.S. military intervention against the Syrian government (and the Russians) are coming from the same advocates for war who created the misguided consensus for invading Iraq in 2002-2003, voices such as Sen. John McCain, Washington Post editorial-page editor Fred Hiatt, and New York Times columnist Thomas L. Friedman. And, much like the Iraq example, these esteemed opinion-leaders pile up their propaganda arguments in a one-sided fashion designed to silence the few voices that dare raise doubts.

This new “group think” has prevented Americans from looking at the Syrian situation with more nuance and objectivity. Indeed, if you mix in some of the other facts, the on-the-ground reality could be seen as the U.S. and its “allies” stoking the fire in Syria for five years and, now, as the Syrian military and Russian air power take drastic measures to finally get the blaze under some control, the U.S. government may bomb the firefighters and destroy their equipment.

Beyond the illegality of that action, how the U.S. military intervention is supposed to fix things in Syria is never discussed. By strengthening Al Qaeda and its “moderate” front men, the prospects for a longer and bloodier conflict are increased, not decreased.

The new McCarthyism, Entertainment Division:

Russians outraged by 'crude stereotyping' in Robbie Williams video

It was not reports from the war in Syria or the investigation into the downing of Malaysia Airlines flight MH17 that outraged Russians at the weekend, but a new music video by Robbie Williams.

Released to accompany the song Party Like a Russian, from his new album, Heavy Entertainment Show, the video outraged viewers for its crude stereotyping of Russian culture, with some tabloids suggesting the singer would never be able to perform in Russia again.

In the video, Williams sings about a leader who “alleviates the cash from a whole entire nation, takes loose change and builds his own space station,” and adds: “Ain’t no refutin’ or disputin’ - I’m a modern Rasputin”, while women dressed as ballerinas dance around him.

Singing to the tune of Dance of the Knights from Sergey Prokofiev’s ballet Romeo and Juliet, some viewers suggested the level of stereotyping displayed in the video could be interpreted as borderline racist.

Iraqi parliament rejects ‘occupying’ Turkish military mandate in N.Iraq

The Iraqi parliament, in a majority vote, has rejected an extension of the mandate of Turkish troops in Iraq and called for a review of relations with Turkey.

The lawmakers also asked for the government of Iraq to file a complaint against Turkey at the United Nations and the UN Security Council. They want the government to formally describe Turkish troops as an “occupying” force.

In addition, the parliament demanded the Turkish ambassador be summoned to receive a letter critical of Turkey’s presence in Iraq.

Iraq: Mosul battle against Islamic State group looms as US, France & Kurdish militias gather troops

More than 10,000 refugees rescued in two days in Mediterranean

More than 10,000 refugees bound for Italy have been rescued in the Mediterranean in the last 48 hours in a series of more than 70 operations led by the Italian coastguard and navy. ...

Earlier this week 6,055 people were rescued over a 24-hour period as the coastguard, navy and humanitarian groups came to the aid of 32 rubber dinghies, five large wooden boats and two rafts that were spotted 30 miles (48km) north of Libya.

Italy’s neighbours to the north – Austria, France and Switzerland – have essentially closed off their borders to new migrants, creating political tensions and forcing Italy to process and possibly relocate asylum seekers on its own.

Previously, the vast majority of migrants landing in Italy chose not to stay in and traveled north, often with Germany as a final destination.

Ten countries host half of world's refugees

Ten countries - which account for just 2.5 percent of the global economy - are hosting more than half the world's refugees, a rights group has said, accusing wealthy countries of leaving poorer nations to bear the brunt of a worsening crisis.

In a report published on Tuesday, Amnesty International said the unequal share was exacerbating the global refugee problem, as inadequate conditions in the main countries of shelter pushed many to embark on dangerous journeys to Europe and Australia.

The London-based group said 56 percent of the world's 21 million refugees are being hosted by just 10 countries - all in the Middle East, Africa and South Asia.

Jordan, which has taken in more than 2.7 million people, was named as the top refugee hosting country, followed by Turkey, over 2.5 million; Pakistan, 1.6 million; and Lebanon, more than 1.5 million.

The other top six nations were Iran, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Democratic Republic of Congo and Chad.

Israeli Navy Intercepts Women's Flotilla on Way to Break Gaza Blockade

The Israeli navy intercepted a flotilla aiming to break the blockade on the Gaza Strip on Wednesday, about 35 nautical miles from the Israeli coast.

According to a high-ranking officer, passengers on board the Zaytouna-Olivia offered no resistance when the troops took over the boat. The boat was redirected to the Israeli port city of Ashdod.

The Women’s Boat to Gaza, an initiative of the International Freedom Flotilla Coalition, which had set out from Barcelona, was scheduled to arrive at the port of Gaza on Wednesday night, according to its website.

Among the Zaytouna-Olivia's 13 passengers are several parliamentarians, an Olympic athlete, a retired U.S. army colonel and Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Mairead Maguire of Northern Ireland. The boat was sailing under a Dutch flag.

Another boat, the Amal 2, was forced to turn back to Barcelona due to a technical malfunction. However, organizers have voiced suspicions that the boat was sabotaged.

Colombian Right Gains Upper Hand Following Defeat of FARC Peace Deal

Colombia's ex-president spent years trying to thwart FARC peace deal

Former Colombian President Alvaro Uribe spent his eight years in office, between 2002 and 2010, waging a bruising military campaign against the country's largest rebel group, FARC. He spent the last three years trying to torpedo the historic peace deal between them and his successor and former political ally turned foe, President Juan Manuel Santos.

On Sunday, Uribe's hard work paid off when Colombians voted "no" to peace and handed Santos a razor-thin defeat. Now, Uribe is seeking to dictate the terms of a new deal that's tougher on the rebel protagonists of a 52-year civil war that has killed over 220,000 and displaced nearly 7 million.

President Santos had made it clear in the weeks leading up to Sunday's referendum that there would be "no Plan B" on his deal with the FARC. Now, the president has no choice but to accept the idea of a new negotiation if he has any hope of salvaging the historic deal — and his political legacy — which he had pinned on the vote.

The government's chief negotiator and two members of the cabinet are due to meet leaders closely linked to Uribe this Tuesday to start the new process.

No politician is so naive as to think it wil be easy for these sworn political enemies to find common ground, let alone give Colombia a second shot at securing peace after so many bloody decades.

And that's before taking the FARC into account.

The immediate aftermath saw Timochenko, hurrying to promise that the FARC remains committed to an unlimited ceasefire currently in place. But will he really be willing to lead the rebels back to the table and negotiate away at least some of the gains made over four long, hard years of talks?

Did Human Rights Watch Sabotage Colombia’s Peace Agreement?

The campaign to keep Colombia’s war going had an unlikely ally: Human Rights Watch. José Miguel Vivanco, the head of HRW’s Americas Watch division, emerged as an unexpected player in Colombian politics when he came out strongly against the “justice” provisions of the peace agreement. Vivanco agreed with Uribe by offering the most dire reading of the agreement possible, saying that perpetrators—in the FARC and the military—of human-rights violations would receive immunity. Vivanco was all over the press in Colombia, with his comments used to build opposition to the accords. Once it became clear that he was lining up too closely with Uribe, he staged a mock public dispute with the former para-president, even while continuing to basically support Uribe’s position (h/t Alejandro Velasco). Vivanco has tried to fudge his position with a false “even-handedness,” complaining that the accord let both the FARC and the military off the hook. But as the always insightful and usually temperate Adam Isacson, from the Washington Office on Latin America, described Vivanco’s bizarre proxy campaign on behalf of Uribe: “not everyone in Colombia is reading Human Rights Watch’s detailed ten-page analysis. What they hear are the large quotes like ‘piñata de impunidad’…or “checkmate against justice’ and believing as a result that Human Rights Watch opposes the entire process. It is a question more of tone, of supportiveness, and of urging creativity at a very key moment.” “Blows like this”—that is, Vivanco’s extremely dire analysis of a necessarily vague political agreement—“can do real damage.” They did.

That Human Rights Watch played useful idiot to Colombia’s far right was confirmed by its executive director, Kenneth Roth, who on Sunday night gloated about the outcome of the vote on Twitter: “Looks like Colombians aren’t so eager to premise ‘peace’ on effective impunity for FARC’s and military’s war crimes.”

Now what, Ken? What are you going to tweet at these victims of the FARC who came together to urge a “yes” vote? According to the Colombian weekly Semana, those regions that suffered the most deaths at the hands of the FARC were the most supportive of the peace talks. A “paradox,” Semana said. Enough was enough, victims and their families said. They are painfully aware—in ways that Roth and Vivanco, with their unaccountable Twitter broadsides against the peace process apparently aren’t—of consequences. And they prove more capable of understanding something that the leaders of Human Rights Watch can’t: that you don’t end a half-century war, with its nearly incomprehensible political history and ever-shifting alliances, by applying legal absolutes. You rather end it by political compromise.

'Where Is Justice'? Top UN Court Rejects Marshall Islands Nuke Case

US nuclear weapons test at Eniwetok in 1956

The International Court of Justice (ICJ) on Wednesday rejected three nuclear disarmament cases filed by the Marshall Islands against the United Kingdom, Pakistan, and India, on the grounds that the court does not have the jurisdiction to handle them.

The ICJ, the United Nations' highest court, ruled 9-8 the plaintiffs did not prove that a legal argument existed between the island country and the three nuclear nations before the case was filed in 2014. The Marshall Islands said the states had failed to fulfill their disarmament obligations under the 1968 Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT). ...

"The U.K. signed the NPT almost fifty years ago, committing to enter negotiations to get rid of its nuclear weapons. Instead, the government is in the process of spending at least £205 billion on new nuclear weapons—with the metal cutting tragically starting today," Kate Hudson, general secretary of the U.K.-based Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament [said]. "A mechanism is needed to ensure compliance with this international treaty, as currently the U.K. is dodging its obligations."

The initial case was filed against nine states in total—the U.K., India, and Pakistan, as well as the U.S., France, Russia, China, North Korea, and Israel—but the other six never made it to the preliminary hearings. ...

The Marshall Islands has vested interest in disarmament because the tiny Pacific nation served as an unwilling nuclear testing ground for the U.S. from 1946 to 1958. The so-called "Bravo" hydrogen bomb, tested at Bikini Atoll, was estimated to be 1,000 times bigger than the atomic bomb dropped on Hiroshima.

Many native residents were forced to flee their lands and thousands were exposed to radioactive material as a result of these tests.



the horse race



Big Business Declares TPP the Winner in Vice Presidential Debate

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has already picked the winner in Tuesday night’s vice presidential debate between Sen. Tim Kaine, D-Va., and Gov. Mike Pence, R-Ind.

It’s free trade! (Or, more accurately, corporate-friendly trade agreements.)

Previewing the debate Tuesday morning, the Chamber tweeted merrily that both candidates have a “great track record on trade.”

Their running mates are both on the record opposing the hugely controversial Trans-Pacific Partnership Agreement, but as the Chamber notes so happily, Kaine and Pence both have a long history of siding with big business. Both have praised the TPP and backed similar deals in the past.

Police Raid Indiana’s Largest Voter Registration Office Following Fraud Accusations From GOP

State police raided the offices of Indiana’s largest voter registration operation Tuesday morning, a dramatic step in a fast-developing investigation that police say is about voter fraud and election activists say amounts to a Republican-backed attack on access to the ballot in the Hoosier state.

According to organizers, nearly a dozen police entered the Indianapolis offices of the Indiana Voter Registration Project (IVRP) with a search warrant and seized multiple computers, the personal cellphones of employees and paperwork relating to the group’s get-out-the-vote operations in the state. ... The Washington, D.C.-based liberal-leaning Patriot Majority oversees the Indiana voting drive. ...

The state’s investigation into the IVRP went public in mid-September when Indiana’s Republican Secretary of State Connie Lawson announced that at least 10 of the group’s voter registration applications had been forged. ... The group retorted that it had already submitted tens of thousands of registrations in Indiana this year and that by zeroing in on just a handful of problematic applications the state appeared to be criminalizing a basic feature of voter registration itself, which inevitably involves submitting paperwork that contains imperfections.

Patriot Majority head Craig Varoga said that in Indiana, members of a voter registration drive cannot legally choose to discard applications; even if something appears faulty, the group must submit the application for the state to review.

No, Hillary, young voters aren't naive. The system doesn't work for them

As Emmett Rensin ably enumerated for Newsweek, young people did not support Sanders because they are, in Clinton’s recorded words, “new to politics”. They flocked to him because they have very different politics than she does. Clinton’s comments remind us just how different, and suggest her rhetorical commitments to parts of the Sanders platform won’t find reflection in her appointments.

And at bottom, they reveal a politician who still holds to the old Thatcher motto that defined the neoliberal era’s boost phase: there is no alternative. The impacts of deregulation and free trade are real, Clinton says in the tape, but organizing for radical change is just role-play fantasy politics. As she brushed it off in Virginia, it reflects “a deep desire to believe that we can have free college, free healthcare … you know, Scandinavia, whatever that means.”

Clinton’s comments also belie an incapacity to get her head around the full meaning of Sanders’ campaign. The political revolution Sanders invoked was not just a plan to get college graduates out of America’s basements and into sweet lofts. In reducing the campaign to crude economism, Clinton sounds like someone who doesn’t understand that many Sanders supporters don’t just want a bigger piece of the pie, they want a fundamentally different kind of society. Clinton’s message to her donor audience was essentially one of patience, of letting capitalism work its magic: as soon as these kids start making good money, they’ll fall in line behind center-right candidates. It’s perfectly natural that Clinton and her audience would think this, and that “everybody”, as Clinton described the political class in Virginia, would be “quite bewildered” in the meantime.

You can see a similar economism in media attempts to disentangle the motivations of Trump supporters. In August, much was made of a Gallup poll showing that Trump’s base was statistically no worse off than other voters. For many, this was the ultimate ballast for the argument that they couldn’t possibly be motivated by distress over inequality or the economic and social dislocations of free trade agreements.

This conclusion is as wrong, and for similar reasons, as Clinton’s supposition that Sanders supporters would Be With Her if only they’d gotten a cushy marketing gig after graduation.



the evening greens


With Dakota Access Back in Court, Activists Ask (Again): Where's Clinton?

As Dakota Access Pipeline (DAPL) protesters head back to court on Wednesday, U.S. presidential candidates' positions on the project (or lack thereof) are being thrust into the spotlight.

The three-judge panel at the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit is being asked to keep in place a temporary halt to construction while the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe appeals a lower-court ruling from September. The hearing was scheduled to begin at 9:30am Eastern, and Native News Online reports that it "may ultimately decide if the pipeline project moves forward."

"The Standing Rock Sioux Tribe will not back down from this fight," said Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Chairman Dave Archambault II, who will speak in D.C. following the hearing. "We are guided by prayer, and we will continue to fight for our people. We will not rest until our lands, people, waters and sacred sites are permanently protected from this destructive pipeline."

Meanwhile, Indigenous and environmental activists are looking to Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton for a sign of where she stands on the controversial project. Clinton has yet to state publicly whether or not she supports the four-state, $3.8 billion pipeline—despite longstanding calls for her to do so.

"We definitely need Secretary Clinton to make a statement on it," Bold Alliance president Jane Kleeb told The Hill on Wednesday. "We don't know where she stands, and we don't know where she stands on the general build-out of pipelines." ...

350.org co-founder Bill McKibben said last week on Democracy Now!: "She has so far refused to say anything about it. Let's hope that that changes, because this is not only a practical challenge, at this point it's a clear moral test."

Fracking Industry's New Plan? Prosecute Those Who Push Drilling Bans

"Drained" from taking local municipalities to court over fracking bans, a fossil fuel industry group is now considering charging local officials who suggest such prohibitions with criminal prosecution, new reporting by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette revealed Tuesday.

In the face of federal governmental inaction, more and more local municipalities have passed bans on fracking to address the mounting public health and environmental problems caused by the toxic drilling process. In fact, according to the Post-Gazette, since Pittsburgh passed its ordinance in 2010, more than 100 other localities have followed suit.

In Pennsylvania, which is the second largest producer of fracked gas in the nation, as well as elsewhere, the drilling industry has aggressively challenged these bans—but, according to Kevin Moody, general counsel for the Pennsylvania Independent Oil & Gas Association, that "fight is draining and doesn't seem to be deterring municipal officials from attempting to block oil and gas development."

Alternately, Moody told the Post-Gazette that he's been "exploring" the concept of criminal prosecution for years but finally found a fitting statute to test it out.

"It's called official oppression," the newspaper explained, "and makes it a second degree misdemeanor for a public official to deny or impede someone's rights or privileges with the knowledge such actions are illegal. The penalty is up to two years in prison and a fine of up to $5,000."

Moody specifically cited the recent action taken by Grant Township as an "egregious example" that should be challenged. In the face of ongoing litigation over its fracking ban, the Pennsylvania community last spring adopted the country's first municipal charter establishing a local bill of rights codifying environmental and democratic rights. ...

But Moody claims that the charter, which was drafted by the Franklin County-based nonprofit Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF), is illegal. If a judge agrees with him, Moody could use that decision "to say municipal officials know what they're doing is not legal when they deny gas companies the right to operate within their borders. From there, other options could surface," such as filing a private criminal complaint against or impeaching local officials, the Post-Gazette reported.

'Historic' global climate deal could go into effect within days

In a move that's being called "historic," the European Parliament has approved the ratification of the first ever legally binding worldwide climate deal, putting the agreement within days of going into effect.

The approval comes only two days after one of the world's biggest greenhouse-gas emitters, India, ratified the Paris climate deal and one week after the planet passed a major atmospheric-carbon milestone of 400 parts per million.

The move follows an agreement by EU leaders in mid-September that they speed up the ratification process. With the parliament's approval, the 28 EU member states are now expected to individually ratify the agreement. ...

The EU's approval is a huge step because the climate deal needs a minimum of 55 countries, representing at least 55 percent of global emissions, in order to become legally binding. As of today, 62 countries representing 52 percent of global emissions are on board.

Hurricanes will worsen as planet warms and sea levels rise, scientists warn

Major storms such as Hurricane Matthew, which has slammed into Haiti and is now headed towards the US, will grow in menace as the world warms and sea levels rise, scientists have warned.

Hurricane Matthew is already feared to have caused seven deaths after it hit Haiti and the Dominican Republic on Tuesday, bringing 145mph winds, pounding rain and storm surges to coastal communities.

The category 4 storm, the strongest hurricane to hit Haiti in 50 years, is expected to surge northwards towards Florida’s east coast and up the south-eastern US coast by the weekend. It follows September’s Hurricane Hermine, which was the first hurricane to hit Florida in nearly 11 years. ...

There was previously far more certainty among climate scientists over the increase of temperatures than trends in hurricanes, but government officials are now confident enough to say there has been a “substantial increase” in Atlantic hurricane activity since the 1980s, with the destruction set to ratchet up further as the world warms.

“We expect to see more high-intensity events, category 4 and 5 events, that are around 13% of total hurricanes but do a disproportionate amount of damage,” said Kerry Emanuel, a climate scientist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “The theory is robust and there are hints that we are already beginning to see it in nature.”


Also of Interest

Here are some articles of interest, some which defied fair-use abstraction.

Tim Kaine, John Negroponte and the Priest Who Was Thrown From a Helicopter

The Dreadful Chronology of Gaddafi’s Murder

Did I Say That? State Department Official Admits Ties to Terrorist Groups

Canada Accused of Complicity in Mining Companies' Abuse of Women and Girls

Is music an answer to the epidemic of loneliness?

More savage than Caravaggio: the woman who took revenge in oil


A Little Night Music

Sam Cooke - Chain Gang

Sam Cooke - Having A Party

Sam Cooke - Twisting The Night Away

Sam Cooke - A Change Is Gonna Come

Sam Cooke - Shake

Sam Cooke - Little Red Rooster

Sam Cooke - Another Saturday Night

Sam Cooke - That's It, I Quit, I'm Moving On



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Shockwave's picture

N.S.A. Contractor Arrested in Possible New Theft of Secrets

WASHINGTON — The F.B.I. secretly arrested a National Security Agency contractor in recent weeks and is investigating whether he stole and disclosed highly classified computer code developed to hack into the networks of foreign governments, according to several senior law enforcement and intelligence officials.

The theft raises the embarrassing prospect that for the second time in three years, an insider has managed to steal highly damaging secret information from the N.S.A. In 2013, Edward J. Snowden, who was also a contractor for the agency, took a vast trove of documents that were later passed to journalists, exposing N.S.A. surveillance programs in the United States and abroad.

The contractor was identified as Harold T. Martin III, 51, of Glen Burnie, Md., according to a criminal complaint filed in late August. He was charged with theft of government property, and unauthorized removal or retention of classified documents. During an F.B.I. raid of his house, agents seized documents and digital information stored on electronic devices. A large percentage of the materials found in his house and car contained highly classified information.

What this means given also what happened to Stuxnet, as described in the highly recommended Zero Days, is that all computer systems are vulnerable to all sorts of hackers and parties. When you use the Internet or your phone you have to assume that someone can be spying on you.

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The political revolution continues

joe shikspack's picture

yes, our privacy is toast. because national security.

it's not going to be easy to take our privacy back, either. the people who run things like their new powers.

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janis b's picture

stop acquiring new power. They need to be unplugged, not we.

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joe shikspack's picture

i blame scientists, engineers and inventors. Smile

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work the high schools and colleges nationwide looking for the best and brightest to work in cybersecurity. I've a neighbor with two sons (Extremely intelligent, good kids) working for the NSA...her comment was " at least it is someone you know that is doing it"...like that makes it OK to spy on everyone. As Clinton says... give'm a good job, and they'll just hop on the status quo bandwagon. NO!!! these young patriots will vote for Trump to "Make America Great Again"

Rupert Murdoch and the media/ propaganda mega corps have done a good job of polarizing/ brainwashing the masses. . Divide and conquer is working well for the Clintons, Trumps, and Corporations that are the .1%

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Stamos was reportedly furious and resigned in protest. “Due to a programming flaw [in the software], he told [Yahoo executives] hackers could have accessed the stored emails,” Menn explained. Security experts have been highlighting for years how backdoors not only give access to the “good guys” but also could let other criminals or foreign governments into our communications systems. ...

The US Chamber of Commerce has to realize that these back-doors, hacks and end-arounds are actually make the US less secure. Worried about a foreign competitor steeling your intellectual secrets, rate sheets, sales strategy and internal messages? The NSA is making it easier for them. Worried about Russia hacking your political strategy? Thank the NSA. And what is the Obama admin doing about this? Apparently egging on the NSA.

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Democrats, we tried to warn you. How is that guilt and shame working out?

joe shikspack's picture

i'm sure that those things worry various members of the chamber. on the other hand, it's like this. we could stop most surveillance if we all turned off our computers and cellphones and refused to use them until our privacy was respected. but that is impractical, since most people will not give up these things no matter what. similarly, members of the chamber of commerce are addicted to mining consumer data, hence they can't push on the nsa too much by boycotting.

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mimi's picture

because almost all activities, school, job searches, any kind of government services you can only do online, and if you still can do it without using the digital format, they charge you a whole lot of extra fees.
Let your job searching kids and kids that go to college live on their own without using a computer and the internet. It's not going to work.

We are completely dependent on the internet for essential functions of our lives.

I think you can't really boycott it anymore.

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featheredsprite's picture

It's a crappy song. The video is technically well done, even though it is a poster child for "Sex sells."

Was this really filmed in the Hermitage? Is that part of the offense?

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Life is strong. I'm weak, but Life is strong.

joe shikspack's picture

i don't think that it strains relations so much as average russians know propaganda when they see it and wonder why americans don't see through such transparent garbage.

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thanatokephaloides's picture

average russians know propaganda when they see it and wonder why americans don't see through such transparent garbage.

Increasingly, we do see through it. And we're not happy.

Diablo

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

janis b's picture

But I think equally true, is that some are becoming increasingly more blinded by the deceptive power of the media they watch or listen to, rather than seeing things more clearly. People on all sides seem to be becoming more and more polarised.

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zett's picture

I now think I dreamed this

but years ago I heard a piece on NPR on Sam Cooke that featured A Change is Gonna Come without the orchestral backing. It was the greatest thing I have ever heard in my life, but I never heard it again. Does anyone know if this was ever released? I never found it - I even tried Napster but only found the usual version, which is magnificent - but the NPR version had a stark beauty that stopped me in my tracks. I think I could go ahead and die if I were to hear that track once more.

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joe shikspack's picture

well, here's an npr feature on sam cooke which includes "a change is going to come." it originally aired in 2014.

edit:

here's another one from 2007.

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was the daughter of a cattleman. He hauled cattle all over Texas from ranches to auction. His driver was a black guy all of us adored. James. James introduced us to Wolf Man Jack, the stroll, to Sam Cooke.
My good God, I remember the music, dancing with James.
He died young, heart attack.
He was so handsome, so cool, even wearing khakis and cowboy boots with cow shit on the toes.

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"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." ---- William Casey, CIA Director, 1981

joe shikspack's picture

a tip of the hat to james, for spreading the culture and leaving you with such happy memories.

have a great evening!

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

to say 'hello,' and thanks for tonight's EB. Always liked Sam Cooke. I'm thinking that he died very young, when I was in grammar school or junior high school (as they called it back then). Wink So, thanks for posting his tunes this evening.

After 'the B' gets straightened out, I'm hoping to write a blurb about our recent/ongoing experience with a type of EpiPen (not the drug antidote, or allergy variety). The cost is exorbitant.

Anyhoo, here's the only version of You Send Me that I could find (in short order).

[video:https://youtu.be/mrwfB4aAZZc width:460 height:350]

Hope Everyone has a nice evening, and is enjoying the cooler weather, as much as we are.

Bye

Mollie


“I believe in the redemptive powers of a dog’s love. It is in recognition of each dog’s potential to lift the human spirit, and, therefore, to change society for the better, that I fight to make sure every street dog has its day.”
--Stasha Wong, Secretary, Save Our Street Dogs (SOSD)

National Mill Dog Rescue (NMDR) - Dogs Available For Adoption

Update: Misty May has been adopted. Yeah!

Misty May - NMDR

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

joe shikspack's picture

thanks for the tune, have a great evening!

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MarilynW's picture

Yahoo owns Flickr and many people including me have hundreds of photos on Flickr, nicely organized into albums. I never use the email but we have to sign up in order to use Flickr.

In other news, it's Canadian Thanksgiving this week-end so a big family get together is happening.

I'm thankful Trump is not running for office in Canada.

I'm thankful that the Blue Jays won yesterday.

Thank you also for Evening Blues!

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To thine own self be true.

joe shikspack's picture

i have the same flickr situation as you. i figure that i will wean myself off of using the email, migrate my past emails to another archive and just use the account for flickr.

have a great thanksgiving with the family!

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Cachola's picture

Just spent some time going down memory lane. These are photos from the early 2000s that I did not even remember existed. Some people might not like having these memory holes but I really enjoy all the nice surprises I get. Smile

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Mundus vult decipi, ergo decipiatur.

janis b's picture

Thanks joe for the news and blues with Sam Cooke.

That link you posted in response to Featheredsprite is an interesting one. I really wanted to hear that version of A Change is Gonna Come, but it is blocked due to copyright at my end. Something that is so moving that you would be happy to take your last breath to, would be wonderful to listen to.

Oh well, but I did find this while trying ...

[video:https://youtu.be/dtqDB2spyG0]

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joe shikspack's picture

actually, you can listen to the show, even though the video is not available. unfortunately, the show did not have a non-symphonic version of the song by sam cooke, though.

i doubt that such a version by sam cooke exists. he made the one recording of it and only performed the song live once - with an orchestra. see the wikipedia entry for the song for more details.

heh. thanks for the james brown, that should have my toes tapping in my sleep (which is coming soon).

have a great evening (or whatever time it is over there on the other side of the world)!

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snoopydawg's picture

The Secret Stupid Saudi-US Deal on Syria. Oil Gas Pipeline War

231 38.2K
kerry-syria-remarks-300x199
This incisive article first published by GR in October 2014 sheds light on the unfolding war in Syria and the confrontation between Russia and the US.

The details are emerging of a new secret and quite stupid Saudi-US deal on Syria and the so-called ISIS. It involves oil and gas control of the entire region and the weakening of Russia and Iran by Saudi Arabian flooding the world market with cheap oil. Details were concluded in the September meeting by US Secretary of State John Kerry and the Saudi King. The unintended consequence will be to push Russia even faster to turn east to China and Eurasia.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/the-secret-stupid-saudi-us-deal-on-syria/54...
As is the case for most of the 'wars' since the revolutionary war that kicked the British out of the US, most of our so called wars have been for resources.
Smedley Butler told us this in 1930, but many American people still think that our military is fighting to defend our country, our freedoms or to protect people in other countries from the brutal dictators that the CIA has usually installed after overthrowing the democratically elected governments.
But in order to protect people from their governments, the countries that are supposed to be protecting them seem to kill a lot more than their own government would have.
I'm curious about how many of the people in the military are aware of what they are risking their lives for? Haven't they heard of Smedley and his book War is a racket that tells how a select few people, banks and corporations get filthy rich from them?
Or wondered why there are so many homeless veterans, the 22 veterans that commit suicide each day or the trouble that the veterans have getting treatment for their injuries?
I quoted a soldier yesterday about how he didn't want to hear about how the next terrorist attack was because they got their training and weapons from the United States and its allies.
In the attacks in Paris, Brussels and Nice did those terrorists use equipment that they got from us or our allies?
People on the left are upset because DT says that if he is president then he's going to bomb the terrorists and their families, but aren't upset because Obama and the CIA are already doing these things?
Countless weddings, double taps on the people who come to help the people who were bombed, the hospitals that the US and Saudi Arabia 'mistakenly" bomb in Afghanistan, Libya, Syria and Yemen.
And because Saudi Arabia, Qatar and other countries got mad because Assad had already had a deal with Russia and Iran for the natural gas, oil and pipelines so he told those other countries that they couldn't get their hands on those things according to the article.
And because they couldn't they are going to risk a war with Russia, China and Iran that could possibly bring nuclear weapons into play.
Other articles have written about how after Obama rejected some people in congress, the pentagon and the CIa to put ground troops into Syria, or to uphold the ceasefire, they go behind his back and do whatever the hell they want.
Remember when Truman fired Macaurthur (?) because he didn't follow orders?
I wonder why there hasn't been any repercussions against whoever it was that broke the latest ceasefire in Syria?
Who is actually in charge of the military?

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mimi's picture

who know about what all their activity is about and I think they are so disgusted in fact that they never talk about it. And when you get too disgusted you can become suicidal.

Who is in charge of the military? I think it's the CIA, NSA, Homeland Security _and the Pentagon and to a certain degree the President, though I believe that the President is dependent on them and not the other way around. Of course that's just my hunch as a know-nothing old lady and looks around.

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snoopydawg's picture

That many of the troops who witnessed heinous acts of violence against the people whose countries they invaded on false pretenses by some of their fellow soldiers, or themselves.
Or saw their buddies die or get grievously wounded and then find out how they had been misled by their leaders.
Especially the people who joined after 9/11 to fight in Afghanistan only to be sent to Iraq.

I can't find the article I recently read about how some of the people in the CIA and pentagon defied Obama's orders on the ceasefire.
It suggested that they did it to buy time until Hillary becomes president because they know that she will extend the war in Syria and possibly create a no fly zone.
The reason for that is to ground the Syrian and Russian air force, but would need up to 70,000 ground troops in Syria.
We've read how some people in congress and our military are calling Obama weak because he won't send troops into Syria or create a no fly zone.
I'm not sure what is the truth about if trying to keep from creating a war with Russia or not, but I do know that he doesn't have a problem using drones or creating the kill list.
I'm just so disgusted about the loss of life for the innocent civilians who are caught between the warring parties.
I wish that more Americans would think what it would be like if these military actions were happening to us.
We had a very small taste of it on 9/11, but look at how many 9/11's we have done since the pilgrims came to the shores of this country starting with the Native Americans.
We really aren't that exceptional.
I have read Rev. Wright's whole speech and I can't say that I disagree with him.

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travelerxxx's picture

I wonder whether you might not be thinking of this article, snoopydawg: Obama Warned to Defuse Tensions with Russia at consortiumnews.com?

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snoopydawg's picture

I did read this one earlier, but there was another one that in the same vein as this, but it mentioned that Obama was worried about being taken out like JFK was if he pushed back too hard against the MICC.
It does seem like Obama doesn't have complete control over the military.
As I wrote previously, he has been on board with a lot of the decisions for the use of drones and invading countries on false pretenses, but the people who decided to break the ceasefire is in the article I'm looking for.
I've just read the real reason why Gaddafi was removed from office, and it's the same damned reason why so many of the other leaders were removed from office. Money and resources.
I do not see any difference between what the US and its allies do to other countries when they bomb them and kill thousands of innocent civilians and when the terrorists do the same things to innocent civilians in other countries. Can anyone tell me how it is different?
The US bombed the DWB's hospital for over an hour and continued bombing it after the hospital called someone in our military and told them that they were a hospital.
Saudi Arabia has bombed at least 10 hospitals in Yemen and when the UN wanted to sanction them, SA said if they did then they would quit funding them and our government backed them up.
Even though our government, including many members of congress see that SA is targeting civilian areas in Yemen, they continue to sell them weapons including the cluster bombs that they are using on Yemen.
Most countries have said that the use of cluster bombs is a war crime, our government continues to sell them.
Why were we 'attacked' on 9/11? Why were there attacks in London Paris, Brussels, Nice and other countries? The people who attacked Paris and Brussels said that it was retaliation for the attacks on innocent civilians in the Middle East.
If our country was invaded and the people here fought back against them, would we consider them insurgents or terrorists? If not, then why were the people who fought our military in Iraq called those names?
As I wrote earlier, I am beyond sickened and disgusted by the continued killings of the people who live in countries that have the resources that the corporations want to take from them.
They should either make deals with the governments or have to use their own damned money to fund these illegal wars, not us or our soldiers with their lives!
Counterpunch always has excellent articles, but the ones today and yesterday are must reads.
I'm reading the one about how we have created and funded the terrorists groups in Syria to help overthrow Assad. Just like we did in Afghanistan when they funded Al Quada and after they were done with them, they quit funding them.
What the hell do they think is going to happen if Assad is removed?

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mimi's picture

Got a link?

I assume you didn't refer to his 2008 speech and I thought he had made a new speech recently you refer to?

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Pricknick's picture

I'd have nothing new to view. Thank you.
We, as in you and I, seem to travel the same paths of information where we find them.
I am not alone. Always forward. Never straight.

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Regardless of the path in life I chose, I realize it's always forward, never straight.

snoopydawg's picture

Syrian jihadists and how the troops feel about it

“No one on the ground believes in this mission or this effort”, a former Green Beret writes of America’s covert and clandestine programs to train and arm Syrian insurgents, “they know we are just training the next generation of jihadis, so they are sabotaging it by saying, ‘Fuck it, who cares?’”. “I don’t want to be responsible for Nusra guys saying they were trained by Americans,” the Green Beret added.

https://consortiumnews.com/2016/09/29/how-the-us-armed-up-syrian-jihadists/
How much money has been wasted on these wars of aggression that should have been spent on our citizens and our country?
Since 1945 when the United States started its path to global hegemony, how many TRILLIONS OF DOLLARS have been spent and what could it have bought here at home?

This puts $5 trillion in perspective.

estimates that as of 2016, The Iraq and Afghanistan Wars have cost the American taxpayers $5 trillion. That number isn’t important when we consider the human cost: Some 7,000 US troops dead, 52,000 wounded in action; hundreds of thousands of Iraqis dead who wouldn’t otherwise be, 4 million displaced and made homeless, etc.
Just to put that $5 trillion in perspective. Let’s say you chose five individuals. Each of the five will spend $10 million a day. That’s the cost of Heidi Klum’s mansion. They’d be buying the equivalent of five of those each day.
They’ll do that every day of their lives. All five of them. And then each of them will be succeeded by one their children, who will spend $10 million dollars a day, and one of their grandchildren, and one of their great-grandchildren, until 270 years have passed and it is the year 2286. That’s the equivalent of a stardate for Captain Picard of the Enterprise.

http://www.truthdig.com/report/item/what_did_we_buy_with_the_5_trillion_...

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snoopydawg's picture

since it started in 2001 and what it could have bought.
It takes less than a second to spend $100
https://www.nationalpriorities.org/cost-of/

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thanatokephaloides's picture

Thank you, Joe, for introducing me to the tune as Sam Cooke and band did it!

Here's a more recent incarnation (Grateful Dead):

July 7, 1989 JFK Stadium Philadelphia, PA
[video:https://youtu.be/gspGPBijYFU width:480 height:360]

(I put this one first because Brett Mydland carried the work of Sam Cooke's original keyboardist back into the Dead's version the best IMHO.)

October 31, 1980 Radio City Music Hall New York, NY
[video:https://youtu.be/N2c-MsnXWM8 width:480 height:360]

Smile

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

Azazello's picture

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We wanted decent healthcare, a living wage and free college.
The Democrats gave us Biden and war instead.

Alligator Ed's picture

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Late Again's picture

there was a user in one of the groups who was ahead of the curve as far as his awareness of government surveillance.

What he used to do was - with every single post he made - attach a signature block that contained every keyword the government might be looking for. He reasoned that if everyone included all those words in every communication, the keywords would become utterly useless.

I always thought it was delightfully subversive. Wonder what would happen if we all did that? Seems like it's time.

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"When we remember we are all mad, the mysteries disappear and life stands explained." - Mark Twain