Showing posts with label America 2.0. Show all posts
Showing posts with label America 2.0. Show all posts

"Quiet Skies" and Rough Waters Ahead

[Content Note: Privacy violations.]

It's been a minute since we've discussed the TSA's horrendous penchant for invading travelers' privacy in egregious ways.

But of course anything that was bad during the Obama administration is exponentially worse during the Trump administration.

So, at the Boston Globe, Jana Winter has an extensive piece on "Quiet Skies," a TSA program which tasks federal air marshals with "following ordinary US citizens not suspected of a crime or on any terrorist watch list and collecting extensive information about their movements and behavior under a new domestic surveillance program."

The previously undisclosed program, called "Quiet Skies," specifically targets travelers who "are not under investigation by any agency and are not in the Terrorist Screening Data Base," according to a Transportation Security Administration bulletin in March.

The internal bulletin describes the program's goal as thwarting threats to commercial aircraft "posed by unknown or partially known terrorists," and gives the agency broad discretion over which air travelers to focus on and how closely they are tracked.

But some air marshals, in interviews and internal communications shared with the Globe, say the program has them tasked with shadowing travelers who appear to pose no real threat — a businesswoman who happened to have traveled through a Mideast hot spot, in one case; a Southwest Airlines flight attendant, in another; a fellow federal law enforcement officer, in a third.

It is a time-consuming and costly assignment, they say, which saps their ability to do more vital law enforcement work.

TSA officials, in a written statement to the Globe, broadly defended the agency's efforts to deter potential acts of terror. But the agency declined to discuss whether Quiet Skies has intercepted any threats, or even to confirm that the program exists.

Release of such information "would make passengers less safe," spokesman James Gregory said in the statement.
Ah, the old "we can't disclose results because safety" chestnut. Which we know means: There is no point to this program and it hasn't achieved a goddamned thing.

And anyone with a lick of sense understands that what makes passengers less safe is the TSA scrutinizing their movements and heaping undeserved suspicion on them, recording that information for future use in ways that can only be harmful to the "thousands of unsuspecting Americans" who have been assessed in ways that are profoundly troubling.
[The] targeted airport and inflight surveillance [is] carried out by small teams of armed, undercover air marshals, government documents show. The teams document whether passengers fidget, use a computer, have a "jump" in their Adam's apple, or a "cold penetrating stare," among other behaviors, according to the records.

Air marshals note these observations — minute-by-minute — in two separate reports and send this information back to the TSA.
It's easy to imagine how many disabled people have been unjustly targeted by this program, based on the metrics being used to identify "suspicious" behavior, as well as people who have reason to be nervous about flying — like trans people for whom security checks are deeply fraught and potentially traumatizing, and fat people for whom flying is an endless nightmare.

It's not at all clear that the program is even legal: As George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley told the Globe, "U.S. citizens don't lose their rights simply because they are in an airplane at 30,000 feet."

Or just walking through an airport.

Unfortunately, the current president has brazen contempt for the law. So it's even less clear how this program gets the axe.

One hopes that the federal air marshals speaking out about how it's preventing them from doing effective work that legitimately keeps passengers safe will be enough to persuade someone empowered to stop the program to do precisely that.

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Confirmation of the Fait Accompli


This is it, folks. We are officially fucked. The Russian Foreign Minister has made the incredible announcement that a "joint working group" between the U.S. and Russia will be established to work on cybersecurity issues, even as one of the biggest news stories of the day is that Russia is the chief suspect in a series of breaches at U.S. power plants, including nuclear facilities.

It's unthinkable. And yet here we are.


Lavrov explained that "Trump said he heard Putin's statements that Russia didn't hack election and accepts them."


I have repeatedly outlined my concerns about how Donald Trump's war on the intelligence community had led to what is effectively dueling coups between the Trump administration and the national security bureaucrats. I suspect that this latest indignity will lead to all-out war between the administration and the intelligence community — though, at this point, it's too late. The only point now is vengeance.

And the only potential salvation for us is the 2018 midterms, which Mike Pence is diligently working on rigging in the Republicans' favor, so.

If you suspected that today's meeting between Trump and Putin was to seal the coup with a chat and handshake, I regret to inform you that you were correct.

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Today in America 2.0

[Content Note: Surveillance.]

An AP investigation has determined that the FBI is responsible for a "mysterious fleet of aircraft conducting surveillance over US cities."

Scores of low-flying planes circling American cities are part of a civilian air force operated by the FBI and obscured behind fictitious companies, The Associated Press has learned.

The AP traced at least 50 aircraft back to the FBI, and identified more than 100 flights in 11 states over a 30-day period since late April, orbiting both major cities and rural areas. At least 115 planes, including 90 Cessna aircraft, were mentioned in a federal budget document from 2009.

For decades, the planes have provided support to FBI surveillance operations on the ground. But now the aircraft are equipped with high-tech cameras, and in rare circumstances, technology capable of tracking thousands of cellphones, raising questions about how these surveillance flights affect Americans' privacy.

...The FBI says the planes are not equipped or used for bulk collection activities or mass surveillance. The surveillance equipment is used for ongoing investigations, the FBI says, generally without a judge's approval.
Emphasis mine. There is much, much more at the link.

So here we are again, back to federal surveillance with no judicial review, no Congressional oversight, and thus no meaningful accountability.

This sort of fuckery was supposed to leave the building with George W. Bush and his merry band of miscreants, but, as I have said before on many, many occasions, once federal law enforcement has been granted any power to encroach upon the civil rights of the people, they are very reluctant to let it go.

And neither of the two major parties are keen to force them to let it go, because neither of them are particularly interested in a truly free citizenry.

[H/T to Shaker KatherineSpins.]

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Every Breath You Take

[Content Note: Hostility to consent and privacy; surveillance; stalking.]

Once upon a time, the internet and mobile phones came to the (white collar) workplace, and everyone was excitedly talking about how it was going to revolutionize (white collar) work. We'd be so much more efficient! We'd be able to work from home! Our work-life balance was going to be extraordinary!

Hahahahahaha whooooooooooooooooooops!

Instead, now (white collar and other) workers never leave work at all. Not really. Slowly, there evolved an expectation that workers would answer their mobile phones and respond to email and digitally submit their TPS Reports (with new cover sheets) (did you even see the memo?) (I'll go ahead and make sure you get another copy of that memo) at all hours of the day and night. Always connected! Always plugged in! Always in competition with the RedBull-swilling 20-something douchebag with no kids, no pets, no elderly parent to care for, whose whole life is his work BOOYAH!, answering emails at 11:30pm on a work night.

No downtime. No real vacations. No work-life balance. No boundaries.

No privacy:

A Central California woman claims she was fired after uninstalling an app that her employer required her to run constantly on her company issued iPhone—an app that tracked her every move 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Plaintiff Myrna Arias, a former Bakersfield sales executive for money transfer service Intermex, claims in a state court lawsuit that her boss, John Stubits, fired her shortly after she uninstalled the job-management Xora app that she and her colleagues were required to use. According to her suit (PDF) in Kern County Superior Court:
After researching the app and speaking with a trainer from Xora, Plaintiff and her co-workers asked whether Intermex would be monitoring their movements while off duty. Stubits admitted that employees would be monitored while off duty and bragged that he knew how fast she was driving at specific moments ever since she installed the app on her phone. Plaintiff expressed that she had no problem with the app's GPS function during work hours, but she objected to the monitoring of her location during non-work hours and complained to Stubits that this was an invasion of her privacy. She likened the app to a prisoner's ankle bracelet and informed Stubits that his actions were illegal. Stubits replied that she should tolerate the illegal intrusion….
Stubits used "the program to continuously monitor her, during company as well as personal time." Which, under any other circumstances, would rightly be identified as stalking.

But, increasingly, all manner of personal tracking by employers—including employee "wellness" programs—are considered acceptable, as long as the tracking is done under the auspices of "efficiency," or "health," or "productivity," or "compliance," or any other red herring offered to mask that it's about nothing more than profitability and control.

Each boss for whom I've ever worked, some of whom were generally terrific and some of whom were appalling, had some level of totally unjustified paranoia that their employees were scamming them.

It didn't matter if everyone was getting their work done; it didn't matter that people came in early and skipped lunches and stayed late; it didn't matter that, like at many companies, people were salaried who shouldn't have been and thus were losing out on deserved overtime pay; it didn't matter if the boss was someone who would call you at home at night and expect you to pick up the phone and chit-chat about an idea zie'd just had.

If they saw one person fucking around on the internet for five minutes, obviously that person was a lazy scammer, probably indicative of an office full of lazy scammers, and it was time to lock shit down and scare some work ethic into these people!

It never mattered how much of their lives outside 8-6 (lol 9-5) people were giving (or having taken from them). That never counted. Work endlessly encroached on employees' lives, but employees' lives were never, ever, meant to encroach on work. The lines were blurred in one direction only.

Now, I know there are some bosses who are fucking terrific about work-life balance, even in corporate environments, but that is, unfortunately, not the norm. The norm is treating employees like their salary buys access to their entire lives.

The norm is pretending like having no official policy that you have to answer your mobile phone 24/7 means that, if you do, it's your choice. It's not a meaningful choice when you know that wanting some privacy will mean you lose out on raises, bonuses, promotions—because you haven't demonstrated sufficient commitment to the company; you haven't demonstrated sufficient willingness to be owned.

The norm is walking into an office that treats your life like their property, and seeing some bullshit motivational poster hung on the wall. "Work to live; don't live to work!" Without a trace of fucking irony.

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Money Talks Votes

[Content Note: Class warfare.]

Something you probably know about me by now is that voting is about the closest thing there is to a sacrament in my secular little world. Even when my vote doesn't matter to the outcome of an election, for one reason or another, my vote matters to me.

That's why I get angry about gerrymandering, about disenfranchisement, about the decimation of the Voting Rights Act, about financial influence in politics, about Citizens fucking United.

That's why I get angry when I read shit like this:

Never have so many candidates entered a White House contest boosted by such huge sums.

...Some party operatives say that 2016 could be the first race in the modern era in which a candidate does not need to win Iowa or New Hampshire to prevail. Strong showings in those early states historically translated into much-needed financial momentum. But this time, wealthy patrons might keep their favorite picks aloft through independent spending.

...The 2016 primary contest could resemble the fracas in 2012, when super PAC benefactors kept alive the bids of former House speaker Newt Gingrich and former U.S. senator Rick Santorum of Pennsylvania, forcing Mitt Romney into an extended fight for the nomination.

Adelson and his family poured $15 million into a super PAC backing Gingrich, then an unthinkably large amount. This time, with more big spenders in the mix, such sums could be commonplace, the former House speaker said.

"What seems like really big money is less than a yacht," Gingrich said in an interview. Wealthy donors could decide that "this year, instead of buying a new yacht, I'm going to spend $70 million on a candidate," he said.
One person with more money than zie could ever spend in a lifetime now has the ability to meaningfully affect the nation's presidential election.

That isn't a democracy. Not a functional, meaningful one.

What that is, despite conservative caterwauling about "wealth redistribution" in response to any attempt to robustly fund an effective social safety net, is class warfare.

Class warfare is not, as we are meant to believe, taxing people who have way more than they need so that people who don't even have the basics to survive can have a little more.

Class warfare is obliterating a democracy by rendering irrelevant the votes of any and all human beings who aren't grotesquely wealthy, and calling it "free speech."

Class warfare is believing that money is "free speech," but one's constitutional right to cast a vote that means something is not.

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Thanks, Citizens United!

[Content Note: Class warfare.]

Here's a cool headline: "Koch-backed network aims to spend nearly $1 billion on 2016 elections."

How neat for them! How neat for ALL OF US! It's so terrific that these conservative shitlords have all that money, and that they're willing to spend it on buying elections in an ostensible democracy, and that the Supreme Court paved the way for them to do so. Congratulations, rich people!

If I had a billion dollars, well, I'd use it to try to lobby to close the loophole that let me spend a billion dollars on an election. But, if that didn't work, I'd give a billion dollars to the first candidate to advocate a universal basic income of slightly or significantly more than the social minimum.

What would you use your billion dollars for?!

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Extreme weather; death] The snow has slowed in and around Buffalo, after a truly epic (in the old sense of the world) snowstorm, which caused 13 deaths, including two elderly residents of a nursing home yesterday, who died during an evacuation when the roof began buckling. Buckling roofs and busted doors and windows are the major concern now, and, once such an enormous amount of snow starts melting, flooding will be a major concern. I've been there, after major snows, and it's incredibly stressful. My profound sympathies to everyone who's dealing with this stuff right now.

[CN: Police brutality; racism] Police are arresting protestors every night in Ferguson, because of course they are.

[CN: War on agency] Ohio Republicans are really determined to be choice-restricting assholes: "This week, Republican lawmakers in Ohio pulled out all the stops to advance an extreme anti-abortion bill in the state's lame duck session. They added the legislation to the schedule at the last minute on Thursday morning, and even restructured a House committee—replacing the legislators who oppose the measure with different legislators who support it—to ensure the bill's passage. HB 248, which now heads to a vote in the full House, would criminalize abortion after a fetal heartbeat can be detected, something that typically occurs around six weeks of pregnancy. That shaves off about 17 weeks from the window that [pregnant people] can access legal abortion services under Roe v. Wade. It's also so early that many [people] may not even realize they're pregnant at that point."

[CN: Misogyny] BIG TENT! "House Republicans filled every one of their open committee chair spots with men even though there are more women in Congress than ever before. All nine of the new committee chairs are men, and all are white except for Devin Nunes (R-CA), who is of Portuguese descent and will chair the Intelligence committee. Of 21 House committees, only one will be headed by a woman, Rep. Candice Miller (R-MI), who will chair the House Committee on Administration. The Senate is also likely to only include one female committee chair out of 16, Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-AL), with the other 15 chairs being white men." It continues to be a real mystery why Republicans aren't connecting with a majority of female voters.

[CN: Homophobia] Goddammit: "Gambia's leader Yahya Jammed signed a bill into law that would imprison citizens for homosexual acts." People who are found guilty of "aggravated homosexuality" will be sentenced to life in prison. Why is this shit happening in Africa now? In large part because of US conservative Christians who are peddling their violent hate gospel over there.

[CN: Privacy violations] Privacy schmivacy! "The ACLU is filing a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request today for information about a newly revealed Marshals Service program that uses aircraft to suck up location data from tens of thousands of people's cell phones at a time. The U.S. Marshals Service program, exposed last week by the Wall Street Journal, involves Cessna planes equipped with 'cell site simulators' flying from at least five airports around the country. Cell site simulators, also called IMSI catchers, impersonate a wireless service provider's cell tower, prompting cell phones and other wireless devices to communicate with them instead of the nearest tower. In doing do so, the simulators can learn all sorts of information that facilitates accurate location tracking, including the electronic serial numbers and other information about the phone and the direction and strength of the phone's signal." Neat! America 2.0 is terrific!

An older sister shared (with permission) her younger brother's text conversation with his best friend during which he came out to him. It is probably the best thing you'll read all day.

This is just an amazing video of a crow using the lid of a jar to ski down a roof. The great thing about being a skiing bird is that you've got your own build-in ski lift!

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Quote of the Day

[Content Note: Class warfare.]

"Suddenly, we privatized politics."—Trevor Potter, an election lawyer who helped draft the McCain-Feingold law, quoted in Jim Rutenberg's "How Billionaire Oligarchs Are Becoming Their Own Political Parties."

With the advent of Citizens United, any players with the wherewithal, and there are surprisingly many of them, can start what are in essence their own political parties, built around pet causes or industries and backing politicians uniquely answerable to them. No longer do they have to buy into the system. Instead, they buy their own pieces of it outright, to use as they see fit.
When the Supreme Court handed down the decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, which granted corporations, unions, and nonprofits the latitude to donate freely to political campaigns and thus effectively bankroll federal elections, I grimly mused: "It is not hyperbole to say this decision is paving the way for America to become a fully-fledged corporatocracy, which, depending on your perspective, is a sibling to fascism or a version of it. ...This decision further diminishes any voice that isn't backed with a fuckload of money. Someday, we may look back on this day and realize it was the day our democracy died."

Welp.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Police brutality; death; racism] An important update on the John Crawford case: Not only is the police account falling apart, but the primary witness account is falling apart, too.

[CN: Police brutality; death; racism] And in Utah, authorities "have altered their account of how a 22-year-old black man was killed by police, after an attorney for the man's family alleged that he was shot repeatedly from behind by officers while running away. The authorities also said that the two police officers involved in the shooting of Darrien Hunt last Wednesday had not yet been interviewed about the incident. The attorney for Hunt's family described this delay as 'almost incomprehensible.'"

[CN: Illness] The US will send 3,000 troops to Africa, at a cost of possibly $750 million over the next six months, in order to lead and facilitate Operation United Assistance. "The general will head a regional command based in Liberia that will help oversee and coordinate U.S. and international relief efforts while a new, separate regional staging base will help accelerate transportation of urgently needed equipment, supplies and personnel."

The FBI has announced "the completion of its new facial recognition system, making operational a program that civil rights groups have warned risks turning millions of citizens with no criminal record into suspects. ...Mug shots will be combined with non-criminal facial images taken from employment records and background check databases, technology news website The Verge reported Monday. That means someone with no criminal history could be implicated as a suspect in a crime if an image of his or her face happens to be in the database, [civil liberties watchdog Electronic Frontier Foundation] warned. Compounding that risk is the apparent ineffectiveness of the system, with some in the industry saying the image matching system has a low rate of success, according to The Verge report. The FBI [says the system] is meant to provide a list of candidates—saying that if the true candidate exists in the system, it will appear in the top 50 candidates returned by the system 85 percent of the time, according to documents obtained by the EFF. 'This means that many people will be presented as suspects for crimes they didn't commit,' EFF said."

[CN: Domestic violence] Give him all the cookies: "NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell sent a letter Monday to teams and staff announcing the appointment of four women to shape the league's policies on intimate partner violence. Following the release of a video showing Ray Rice's attack on his now wife, and the revelation that law enforcement had sent the video to NFL during their investigation earlier this year, advocacy organizations as well as some politicians have called for Goodell's resignation. ...Despite calls for his resignation, Goodell has said he's not going anywhere, and on Monday announced the creation of several new positions to improve the league's handling of domestic violence." Listen, I am glad that four women who are legit experts have been hired to "advise the league on how to create policies that effectively address sexual assault and domestic violence," but I find it really obnoxious that Goodell is using those women as human shields against meaningful accountability for his catastrophic failures.

[CN: War on agency] Fuck: Missouri Legislators Pass 72-Hour Abortion Waiting Period Law. "Missouri legislators voted late last night to triple the state's current 24-hour waiting period to 72 hours, with no exceptions for rape or incest. Governor Jay Nixon previously vetoed the bill in July, calling it 'extreme and disrespectful.' Missouri's House voted 117-44 to override the veto, and then the Senate used a procedural move to stop a Democratic filibuster of the bill and vote 23-7 to complete the veto override Wednesday."

[CN: Rape culture] Rush Limbaugh continues to be a reprehensible dirtbag: "'How many of you guys in your own experience with women have learned that 'no' means 'yes' if you know how to spot it?' he asked on 'The Rush Limbaugh Show' Monday. ...Limbaugh then read off Ohio State University's definition of consent, which outlines how two people should behave once they have decided to engage in a sexual relationship. It states that you and your partner must agree to engage in the activity every step of the way, including agreeing on 'why' you are doing so. But that just sucks all the fun out of it, Limbaugh said. 'Agreeing on the 'why' takes all the romance out of everything!' he said." If sexytalk during sexytimes "sucks all the fun out of it" for you, I'm pretty sure you're doing it wrong.

Are you so excited about the possibility of Mike Huckabee running for president yet again? I bet you are. He's terrific.

If you are a fan of the Bourne movie series, then you are in luck, because "Universal Pictures has begun making deals with Matt Damon and director Paul Greengrass to reunite for their third film in The Bourne Identity series." (The first film in the franchise was directed by Doug Liman.)

Here are some fun pictures of a large-spotted genet riding around on the backs of buffalo and a white rhinoceros. Adorbz!

And finally: Here is video of a giant manta ray approaching divers off Costa Rica, seeking help to disentangle it from part of a fishing net. Extraordinary.

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Welp

[Content Note: Surveillance.]

"CIA improperly accessed Senate computers, agency finds." Whoooooops!

CIA employees improperly accessed computers used by the Senate Intelligence Committee to compile a report on the agency's now defunct detention and interrogation program, an internal CIA investigation has determined.

Findings of the investigation by the CIA Inspector General's Office "include a judgment that some CIA employees acted in a manner inconsistent with the common understanding reached between SSCI (Senate Select Committee on Intelligence) and the CIA in 2009," CIA spokesman Dean Boyd said in a statement.
Well. That's sure a nice way of putting it.

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Whooooooooops Your Reform Bill!

[Content Note: Surveillance.]

I haven't been giving a whole lot of attention to the NSA reform bill making its way through the US congress, because I figured that it would be watered-down garbage by the time it came to a vote, and welp:

A landmark surveillance bill, likely to pass the US House of Representatives on Thursday, is [losing] support from the civil libertarians and privacy advocates who were its champions from the start.

Major revisions to the USA Freedom Act have stripped away privacy protections and transparency requirements while expanding the potential pool of data the National Security Agency can collect, all in a bill cast as banning bulk collection of domestic phone records. As the bill nears a vote on the House floor, expected Thursday, there has been a wave of denunciations.

"It does not deserve the name 'USA Freedom Act' any more than the 'Patriot Act' merits its moniker," wrote four former NSA whistleblowers and their old ally on the House intelligence committee staff.

The former NSA officials – Thomas Drake, William Binney, Edward Loomis and J Kirk Wiebe – and former congressional staffer Diane Roark denounced 11th-hour changes to the Freedom Act as resulting in "a very weak" bill.

"Much legislation has been exploited and interpreted by the administration as permitting activities that Congress never intended," they wrote in a letter Wednesday to Representative Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat.

Lofgren told the Guardian last week that she intended to offer amendments to the Freedom Act, which cleared the House intelligence and judiciary committees two weeks ago, adding encryption protections and providing greater leeway to companies seeking to disclose surveillance orders for their customers' data.

But Lofgren warned on the House floor Wednesday that none of her amendments were put into order by the powerful House rules committee, which released a new version of the Freedom Act on Tuesday night that reflected substantial changes made at the insistence of the Obama administration, the NSA and the office of the director of national intelligence.

Most significantly, the version emerging from the rules committee expanded the definition of a "specific selection term," the root thing – formerly defined as information that "uniquely describe[s] a person, entity, or account" – the government must present to a judge, with suspicion of connection of terrorism or espionage, in order to collect data under the bill.

The new definition is "a discrete term, such as" a person, entity, account, "address or device". That revision has spurred privacy advocates and even major technology companies to doubt that the bill will actually ban the mass collection of Americans' data, its ostensible purpose.
This bill has bipartisan support, about which the the White House office of management and budget is proudly bragging, and almost nothing says "garbage legislation" these days than bipartisan support of two parties who can't agree on the color of the sky.

As I've said many times before: Once the government gets empowered to encroach on citizens' civil rights with impunity, they are very unlikely to ever give that power back.

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In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Military aggression] Russian President Vladimir Putin has asserted Russia's right to use military force in eastern Ukraine, saying "that the upper chamber of Parliament had authorized him to use military force if necessary in eastern Ukraine, and he stressed Russia's historical claim to the territory in language not often used before, signaling a new and more aggressive policy. Mr. Putin repeatedly referred to eastern Ukraine as 'New Russia'—as the area north of the Black Sea was known after it was conquered by the Russian Empire in the late 1700s." Hoo boy.

Meanwhile: "Secretary of State John Kerry is headed to Geneva to meet with his Russian counterpart Thursday as part of the Ukraine contact group—but administration officials said Wednesday they're already expecting the result will be more sanctions, not any kind of breakthrough. ...Asked about the prospect of new sanctions in an interview with CBS News Wednesday, Obama reiterated that he's said consistently that 'each time Russia violates Ukraine’s sovereignty…there are going to be consequences.' In the geopolitical chess game that's been unfolding over recent weeks, they admit they aren't sure what Vladimir Putin's next move would be then. Without any direct knowledge of his mindframe, they say they're relying on their best assessments of the Russian leader."

(I love, ahem, "geopolitical chess game," as if it's just abstract strategy and not massive upheaval that is already affecting many people's lives and threatens the lives of many more.)

[CN: Antisemitism] And this is very, very worrying: "Jews emerging from a synagogue [in the eastern Ukrainian city of Donetsk where pro-Russian militants have taken over government buildings] say they were handed leaflets that ordered the city's Jews to provide a list of property they own and pay a registration fee 'or else have their citizenship revoked, face deportation and see their assets confiscated,' reported Ynet News, Israel's largest news website. ...The leaflet begins, 'Dear Ukraine citizens of Jewish nationality,' and states that all people of Jewish descent over 16 years old must report to the Commissioner for Nationalities in the Donetsk Regional Administration building and 'register.'"

[CN: Sexual assault] Director Bryan Singer, who directed The Usual Suspects and helms the X-Men franchise, has been accused of drugging and sexually assaulting a teenage boy in 1999. "Marc Collins-Rector, the former chairman of Digital Entertainment Network, an ambitious Internet startup that sputtered in the dotcom bust of 2000, is also cited in the Singer lawsuit, although he is not named as a defendant. He is accused of initiating the sexual abuse of Egan and arranging for Singer to assault Egan at a house in Encino, Calif. Collins-Rector is a registered sex offender, having pleaded guilty in 2004 to luring minors across state lines for sexual acts." Xeni Jardin recalls that, in 1997, "a 14-year-old movie extra filed a lawsuit claiming that Singer and others 'ordered him and other minors to strip for a scene that was shot in the showers of a school locker room.'"

[CN: Disaster; death] The captain of the ferry that capsized off the coast of South Korea says "I am really sorry and deeply ashamed. I don't know what to say," but hasn't made any further statement indicating what might have happened. The investigation continues, as does the search, rescue, and recovery: Nearly 300 people are still missing.

[CN: Class warfare] A new study from Princeton and Northwestern Universities has found that the US is an oligarchy: "The US government does not represent the interests of the majority of the country's citizens, but is instead ruled by those of the rich and powerful."

In totally unrelated news (cough): "Charles and David Koch, the billionaire brothers who run Wichita, Kansas-based Koch Industries Inc., added $1.3 billion to their collective fortune yesterday on reports that U.S. industrial production gained more than forecast. The surge elevated their net worth to more than $100 billion, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index. The Koch's ascent comes as Freedom Partners, one of their fundraising networks, last week aired its first batch of television ads targeted at this year's U.S. Senate races, including commercials knocking Democratic Senator Mark Udall of Colorado and Representative Bruce Braley of Iowa for supporting President Barack Obama's health-care law."

[CN: Misogyny] Democratic Senator Elizabeth Warren reports she was told by an unnamed Obama adviser (COUGHLARRYSUMMERSCOUGH) that her primary role for the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, an agency she helped create, would be "cheerleader." Writes Warren in a new book: "I assume that was meant as a metaphor, but I had to wonder: Cheerleader? Would the same suggestion have been made to a man in my position? I did not rush out to buy pom-poms."

Here's some good news: "Over the past two decades, the rates of heart attacks and strokes among diabetics fell by more than 60 percent, a new federal study shows. The research also confirms earlier reports of drastic declines in diabetes-related kidney failure and amputations. The drop is mainly attributed to better screening, medicines, and care. ...'It is great news,' said Dr. John Buse, a University of North Carolina diabetes specialist. 'The prognosis for folks with diabetes has improved dramatically over the last two decades, at least for those with good access to care,' Buse said in an email." Universal healthcare now. Repeat ad infinitum.

And finally! Here is a terrific video of a greyhound being silly!

Open Wide...

In the News

Here is some stuff in the news today...

[Content Note: Rape culture] As today is Tax Day in the US, here is our annual reminder for assholes that to describe what has "been done to you" by the IRS and/or US Government by requiring you to pay taxes is not "rape." Thank you and have a nice day.

[CN: Terrorism; gun violence; death; racism] Today is the one-year anniversary of the Boston Marathon Bombing. There will be many moving pieces in the media today about the survivors, and about the first responders, and about a city that is recovering from a grave trauma. And, without diminishing the importance of those stories, I want to also recommend this piece [cn: appropriative "blindness" language], about the violence in Boston that doesn't get recognized in the same way, the victims who aren't mourned in the same way.

[CN: School violence] The teenager who stabbed classmates and a school security guard last week reportedly made threatening calls to two classmates the night before the stabbing. Also: A bunch of video game stuff was found at the alleged attacker's home. News.

[CN: Terrorism; antisemitism] Frazier Glenn Cross, who killed three people at Jewish centers earlier this week, will likely be charged with a hate crime, but not with a terrorist act.

[CN: Transphobia; misogynoir] Monica Jones is a social work student at Arizona State University and a black trans activist who was arrested and "convicted through controversial anti-prostitution programme she fought against." Here is why it is important to #StandwithMonica.

[CN: Racism; profiling; police harassment] Former Chicago Cub Doug Glanville writes a powerful piece about being racially profiled in his own driveway in Hartford, Connecticut: "He'd been outside his jurisdiction—the representative from internal affairs had confirmed this. That meant a police officer from another town had come to my house, approached me while I was shoveling my own driveway, and—without any introduction—asked me a very presumptuous question. All of this had put me in an extremely vulnerable situation. In one moment, I went from being an ordinary father and husband, carrying out a simple household chore, to a suspect offering a defense. The inquiry had forced me to check my tone, to avoid sounding smug even when I was stating the obvious: that I was shoveling the driveway because the house belonged to me."

[CN: War; violence] Ukraine Moves Against Separatists as Medvedev Evokes Civil War: "The government in Kiev started the operation after fighting between its forces and pro-Russian separatists turned deadly this week. The U.S. and the European Union also deliberated deepening sanctions against Russia, which they blame for stoking the unrest, as Barack Obama and Russian President Vladimir Putin remained at odds over who was at fault."

India's Supreme Court has issued "a landmark verdict recognizing transgender rights as human rights, saying people can identify themselves as a third gender on official documents. ...Previously, transgender Indians could only identify themselves as male or female in all official documents. The decision was praised as giving relief to the estimated 3 million Indians who are transgender. The court noted that it was the right of every human being to choose their gender while granting rights to those who identify themselves as neither male nor female. 'All documents will now have a third category marked 'transgender.' This verdict has come as a great relief for all of us. Today I am proud to be an Indian,' said Laxmi Narayan Tripathi, a transgender activist who, along with a legal agency, had petitioned the court."

[Note: The language and culture of the third sex in India differs in some ways from the Western paradigm. Also: Trans Indians have the option to identify as male or female if they have sex-reassignment surgery, which does still leave a problem for people who want to identify as male or female but don't want or can't afford surgery.]

Welp: "New documents released by the FBI show that the Bureau is well on its way toward its goal of a fully operational face recognition database by this summer." Welcome to America 2.0.

All right then: "For a moment, it seemed like Google and Facebook were about to pursue two different techniques to deliver internet signals from the sky: Google with weather balloons, and Facebook with high-flying drones. But now, it seems that Google will own drones as well. Google has just bought Titan Aerospace, the very company that Facebook was rumored to be acquiring."

And finally: Here is a ridiculously adorable story about a mama cat adopting a baby squirrel. I mean.

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Yup

So, Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein is deeply unthrilled that the CIA was allegedly snooping on the US Senate. Feinstein says she has "grave concerns that the CIA's search may well have violated the separation of powers principles embodied in the US Constitution."

And while I share her "grave concerns" about surveillance overreach, I am laughing all kinds of mirthless laughter over here, because, as I said earlier this month: "Oh, so now that it's them being surveilled, they give a shit."

Which is pretty much the exact same thing whistleblower Edward Snowden said yesterday:

"It's clear the CIA was trying to play 'keep away' with documents relevant to an investigation by their overseers in Congress, and that's a serious constitutional concern," Snowden said in a statement to NBC News. "But it's equally if not more concerning that we're seeing another 'Merkel Effect,' where an elected official does not care at all that the rights of millions of ordinary citizens are violated by our spies, but suddenly it's a scandal when a politician finds out the same thing happens to them."
BOOM.

Suddenly it's a scandal when the same thing happens to them. That pretty much sums it up.

It would be terrific if this "grave concern" about unconstitutional searching in the Senate would make Feinstein & Co. more concerned about the privacy violations being made against the general public, but that is not going to happen. The people who were elected to represent our interests aren't concerned with advocating for us; they're concerned with protecting themselves against us.

Which is only one of many reasons why the US government is profoundly broken.

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Whut.

NSA and GCHQ target 'leaky' phone apps like Angry Birds to scoop user data:

The National Security Agency and its UK counterpart GCHQ have been developing capabilities to take advantage of "leaky" smartphone apps, such as the wildly popular Angry Birds game, that transmit users' private information across the internet, according to top secret documents.

The data pouring onto communication networks from the new generation of iPhone and Android apps ranges from phone model and screen size to personal details such as age, gender and location. Some apps, the documents state, can share users' most sensitive information such as sexual orientation – and one app recorded in the material even sends specific sexual preferences such as whether or not the user may be a swinger.

...Scooping up information the apps are sending about their users allows the agencies to collect large quantities of mobile phone data from their existing mass surveillance tools – such as cable taps, or from international mobile networks – rather than solely from hacking into individual mobile handsets.

Exploiting phone information and location is a high-priority effort for the intelligence agencies, as terrorists and other intelligence targets make substantial use of phones in planning and carrying out their activities, for example by using phones as triggering devices in conflict zones. The NSA has cumulatively spent more than $1bn in its phone targeting efforts.

...The documents do not make it clear how much of the information that can be taken from apps is routinely collected, stored or searched, nor how many users may be affected. The NSA says it does not target Americans and its capabilities are deployed only against "valid foreign intelligence targets".
Oh, well, that's okay, then. (No it's not.)

I honestly do not even know what to say anymore. The breaches of privacy are so vast and so utterly overwhelming and so pervasive that I feel like all I have left is resignation. "So they're basically just as aggressively invasive as anyone's worst fears ever could have been? Oh."

I don't feel good about that. But that's all I got.

I feel more powerless in response to the surveillance state than pretty much anything else.

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Welp

MSNBC host Andrea Mitchell interrupts former Congresswoman Jane Harman (D-CA) in the middle of a discussion about the recent task force recommendation that the NSA stop collecting phone records with some TOTALLY TRENCHANT BREAKING NOOZ:

Harman: —seriously consider, ah, not continuing section 215 and getting the—

Mitchell: Uh, Congresswoman Harman, let me interrupt you— Congresswoman, let me interrupt you just for a moment. We've got some breaking news out of Miami. Stand by if you will. [BREAKING NEWS graphic appears onscreen, following footage of a courtroom] Right now, in Miami, Justin Bieber has been arrested on a number of charges. The judge is reading the charges, including resisting arrest and driving under the influence. He's appearing now before the judge for his bond hearing. Let's watch.
Fuck everything.

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President Obama Will Fix Everything

Reuters: Obama to announce overhaul to controversial NSA program.

President Barack Obama will announce on Friday a major overhaul of a controversial National Security Agency program that collects vast amounts of basic telephone call data on foreigners and Americans, a senior Obama administration official said.

In an 11 a.m. (1600 GMT) speech at the Justice Department, Obama will say he is ordering a transition that will significantly change the handling of what is known as the telephone "metadata" program from the way the NSA currently handles it.

Obama's move is aimed at restoring Americans' confidence in U.S. intelligence practices and caps months of reviews by the White House in the wake of damaging disclosures about U.S. surveillance tactics from former U.S. spy agency contractor Edward Snowden.

In a nod to privacy advocates, Obama will say he has decided that the government should not hold the bulk telephone metadata, a decision that could frustrate some intelligence officials.

In addition, he will order that effectively immediately, "we will take steps to modify the program so that a judicial finding is required before we query the database," said the senior official, who revealed details of the speech on condition of anonymity.

...Obama is balancing public anger at the disclosure of intrusion into Americans' privacy with his commitment to retain policies he considers critical to protecting the United States.
"Aimed at restoring Americans' confidence in US intelligence practices." As opposed to: Aimed at halting illegal spying on people in the US and abroad.

Oh, I'm so cynical. I know. But the reason I don't foresee meaningful change is not just because of a few lines in a single news story that make the Obama administration sound more interested in improving PR than improving their intelligence policies. It's because once these sorts of practices start, they never get rolled back. Not really. Despite lots of lipservice about accountability and oversight and warrants and balance and blah blah fart, once a piece of our privacy is gone at this level in service to "national security," it tends to stay gone.

That is one thing on which both parties are always able to agree.

----------------

UPDATE: Here is the full transcript of the President's address.

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Dispatches from America 2.0

Of course:

Not limiting their activities to the earthly realm, American and British spies have infiltrated the fantasy worlds of World of Warcraft and Second Life [as well as Xbox Live], conducting surveillance and scooping up data in the online games played by millions of people across the globe, according to newly disclosed classified documents.

Fearing that terrorist or criminal networks could use the games to communicate secretly, move money or plot attacks, the documents show, intelligence operatives have entered terrain populated by digital avatars that include elves, gnomes and supermodels.

The spies have created make-believe characters to snoop and to try to recruit informers, while also collecting data and contents of communications between players, according to the documents, disclosed by the former National Security Agency contractor Edward J. Snowden.

...But for all their enthusiasm — so many CIA, FBI and Pentagon spies were hunting around in Second Life, the document noted, that a "deconfliction" group was needed to avoid collisions — the intelligence agencies may have inflated the threat.
Keystone Snoops.

I'm sure you'll be shocked to hear that there have been no reported intelligence successes from spying on gamers.

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Today in America 2.0


The NSA has your snaps, too. FYI.

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2,776

Barton Gellman for the Washington Post: "NSA broke privacy rules thousands of times per year, audit finds." 2,776 times, to be exact.

The National Security Agency has broken privacy rules or overstepped its legal authority thousands of times each year since Congress granted the agency broad new powers in 2008, according to an internal audit and other top-secret documents.

Most of the infractions involve unauthorized surveillance of Americans or foreign intelligence targets in the United States, both of which are restricted by statute and executive order. They range from significant violations of law to typographical errors that resulted in unintended interception of U.S. e-mails and telephone calls.
Whoooooooooooops.

So much for that whole "None of the revelations show that government has actually abused these powers" thing, eh, Mr. President?

Go see Digby for more.

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