Sometimes
you have to pay a heavy price to live in a free society. Bradley
Manning
You
Say Potato:
Obama says "we don't have a domestic spying program."
What he meant was that NSA - 'The
abyss from which there is no return' - isn't domesticated. Seems
the guys from Fort Meade 'scan' at least 75% of American web traffic,
emails and all. The other 25% if squirrels away to read another day.
Differences:
If you, or I, heaven forbid, make a poorly advised investment
through our brokerage account at Goldman Sachs, well, too bad, but
that's the way the market works. Some lose, some win. But when
Goldman Sachs makes a poorly advised investment through its
rapid-fire computer trading, well... It wants its several hundred
million buckaroos back. And will probably get them, too. One size,
it seems, does not fit all.
An
Explanation: The debate
over who will be the next Fed chair, Yelen or Summers, comes down to
a question of choosing between
leadership and salesmanship.
Say
Goodnight, Gracie: The
military thinks sit can track terrorists by tracking money laundering
via Twitter and Facebook. DHS says it is “making progress” with
technology to identify everyone
in any crowd through facial recognition. According to internal
documents, NSA monitors at least ““75%
of all U.S. Internet traffic.” And what it doesn't read today
it stores for a rainy day. As for the FISA court's oversight, after
it found some of NSA's activities to be unconstitutional, NSA did
not reform - it
simplied lied to the court for three years. Goodnight, Gracie.
Noted:
JPMorgan complains that the
US spends “pathetically little on infrastructure compared to the
rest of the civilized world.” Where did they get the idea that we
were civilized?
Why
I hate economists:
In figuring out how much austerity has hurt us (and the economy),
the general rule is to ask how much higher the GDP would have been
without the effects of the austerity measurs. But, and here's where
I reach for the air sickness bag, many economists say that overstates
things unless we take into consideration the value of the extra
leisure the unemployed and marginally employed are enjoying.
Après
Nous, le Déluge:
It may not be long before it will be impossible for journalists to
have confidential sources. Most reporting – indeed, most human life
in 2013 – leaves too much of a digital fingerprint for the concept
of 'confidential' to survive.
Informed
Citizens:
A poll showed that Louisiana Republicans are more likely to blame
Obama than Bush for the poor federal response to Hurricane Katrina,
which happened in 2005.
Once
More, Without Feeling:
Collateralized debt obligations, the complex financial instruments
that cratered disastrously in the financial crisis, are back. In the
bad old days they were frequently gamed to the tune of subprime
mortgages. Today they are being played with chips from assorted
squirrelly loans. Instead of being called CDO, they're now called
CLO. See, it's different this time.
Kindling:
Someone paid for research that determined that US Senators
represent their wealthiest constituents at the expense of those lower
on the food chain.
Healthcare,
The Score:
The public doesn’t like what it thinks the Democrats did. But it
really
doesn’t like what it thinks the Republicans will do. And rightly
so, for the Republicans have no idea what they will do after
repealing Obamacare.
Porn
O'Graph:
Equality.
The
Parting Shot:
No
IRA, no pension, no social safety net...
2 comments:
Regarding Miranda's detention: How could disclosures of our NSA material constitute a threat to British national security? My dim little mind fairly reels when speculating about the answer to this question.
Matte - you have to understand that 'national security' thee days means securing the leadership of the nation from the citizenry. In this case, GB does not want it known that it has been scooping up electronic info on Americans in return for the same sort of data scooped up by NSA about Brits.
It's win-win; both get the goods on the potential troublemakers while, marginally, staying at least in the grey are if not completely legal.
It's similara to the US government buying information on US citizens' shopping and similar habits from commercial firms. The law prevents them from getting it without a warrant, butg nothing says commercial firms can't gather the same info and then sell it to the gov.
ckm
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