kunstler | The email issue won’t go away because it entails serious issues of
racketeering in public office, not just niceties of security procedure.
One of the Secretary of State’s duties is to approve weapons sales to
foreign countries. During her three years at State, Hillary signed off
on $165 billion worth of sales by private commercial arms contractors to
Clinton Foundation foreign donors. On top of that was an additional
$151 billion of separate Pentagon-brokered deals for 16 of the countries
that gave to the Clinton Foundation. It also happened that the weapons
contractors themselves and companies connected financially to them made
substantial donations to the Clinton foundation — and paid whopping
speaking fees to Hillary’s husband ex-president Bill, during her years
at State.
Salon Magazine has also reported that in contradiction of a
1995 directive signed by then-president Bill against arms sales to
nations violating human rights, Hillary approved such weapons sales. Salon’s David Sirota writes:
As just one of many examples, in its 2011 Human Rights
Report, Clinton’s State Department slammed Algeria’s government for
imposing “restrictions on freedom of assembly and association,”
tolerating “arbitrary killing,” “widespread corruption” and a “lack of
judicial independence.
That year, the Algerian government donated $500,000 to the Clinton
Foundation and the next year Clinton’s State Department approved a
one-year 70 percent increase in military export authorizations to the
country. The jump included authorizations for almost 50,000 items
classified as “toxicological agents, including chemical agents,
biological agents and associated equipment.” The State Department had
not authorized the export of any of such items to Algeria the year
before.
There’s no way that the shady doings of the Clinton Foundation will
not become a campaign issue whether Trump emerges as the eventual GOP
nominee or not, and of course the other noisome matter of exactly what
Hillary told Too-Big-To-Fail banks in exchange for many quarter-million
dollar “speaking fees” still lurks behind all that. Hillary’s partisans
at the The New York Times and The WashPo have ignored
these stories for months, but the telltale stench remains, like a dead
body under the floorboards.. In contrast to her beaming victory lap
after the California primary, all this stuff promises some serious
frowny-face for Mz. It’s-My-Turn in the months ahead.
politico | Retaining some kind of superdelegate system has been a high priority
for CBC members, said Democratic strategist Doug Thornell, formerly the
group’s communications director.
"Sanders did a lot of things right in this campaign, he did a lot
better than expected. At the same time he seemed to have a lack of
understanding or lack of relationships with black leaders that you saw
ultimately hurt him in South Carolina and other states with big black
electorates," Thornell said. "And this is something that the CBC is
going to be very passionate and push back against. This is a way that
African-American officials can represent their district and have a say
in the process. They're not going to go along with this at all."
Multiple CBC members conceded that the superdelegate system has its
flaws, but also argued it's not worth scrapping. "I've been listening to
both sides, all sides of the debate and I think both sides have made
persuasive arguments," said one CBC member, who asked to not be named.
"The superdelegate system is not perfect but it has worked for us
quite well over the years and frankly the superdelegates have never
needed to cast any superdelegate votes to alter what the voters did
during the primary elections," said Rep. Emanuel Cleaver. "Never. That's
not the case this year either. The concern many of us have, of course,
is that our numbers would shrink in terms of having influence over and
involvement with what happens at the convention."
Cleaver added that the CBC would not be swayed on the superdelegate issue.
"The black caucus is immovable on this subject because our number one
concern is going to be an always be the highest level of minority
participation as possible at the convention," Cleaver said. "You're
going to see the same thing with the Hispanic Congressional Caucus. Mr.
Sanders, if he had met with either or what's called the tri-caucus, he
would have found out there is no flexibility."
economist | A PICTURE is said to be worth a thousand words. That metaphor might be expected to pertain a fortiori
in the case of scientific papers, where a figure can brilliantly
illuminate an idea that might otherwise be baffling. Papers with figures
in them should thus be easier to grasp than those without. They should
therefore reach larger audiences and, in turn, be more influential
simply by virtue of being more widely read. But are they? Bill Howe and
his colleagues at the University of Washington, in Seattle, decided to
find out.
First, they trained a computer algorithm to distinguish between
various sorts of figures—which they defined as diagrams, equations,
photographs, plots (such as bar charts and scatter graphs) and tables.
They exposed their algorithm to between 400 and 600 images of each of
these types of figure until it could distinguish them with an accuracy
greater than 90%. Then they set it loose on the more-than-650,000 papers
(containing more than 10m figures) stored on PubMed Central, an online
archive of biomedical-research articles.
To measure each paper’s influence, they calculated its article-level
Eigenfactor score—a modified version of the PageRank algorithm Google
uses to provide the most relevant results for internet searches.
Eigenfactor scoring gives a better measure than simply noting the number
of times a paper is cited elsewhere, because it weights citations by
their influence. A citation in a paper that is itself highly cited is
worth more than one in a paper that is not.
As the team describe in a paper posted on arXivhttp://viziometrics.org/search/,
they found that figures did indeed matter—but not all in the same way.
An average paper in PubMed Central has about one diagram for every three
pages and gets 1.67 citations. Papers with more diagrams per page and,
to a lesser extent, plots per page tended to be more influential (on
average, a paper accrued two more citations for every extra diagram per
page, and one more for every extra plot per page). By contrast,
including photographs and equations seemed to decrease the chances of a
paper being cited by others. That agrees with a study from 2012, whose
authors counted (by hand) the number of mathematical expressions in over
600 biology papers and found that each additional equation per page
reduced the number of citations a paper received by 22%. viziometrics.org
newyorker | If this place has
done its job—and I suspect it has—you’re all scientists now. Sorry,
English and history graduates, even you are, too. Science is not a major
or a career. It is a commitment to a systematic way of thinking, an
allegiance to a way of building knowledge and explaining the universe
through testing and factual observation. The thing is, that isn’t a
normal way of thinking. It is unnatural and counterintuitive. It has to
be learned. Scientific explanation stands in contrast to the wisdom of
divinity and experience and common sense. Common sense once told us that
the sun moves across the sky and that being out in the cold produced
colds. But a scientific mind recognized that these intuitions were only
hypotheses. They had to be tested.
When
I came to college from my Ohio home town, the most intellectually
unnerving thing I discovered was how wrong many of my assumptions were
about how the world works—whether the natural or the human-made world. I
looked to my professors and fellow-students to supply my replacement
ideas. Then I returned home with some of those ideas and told my parents
everything they’d got wrong (which they just loved). But, even then, I
was just replacing one set of received beliefs for another. It took me a
long time to recognize the particular mind-set that scientists have.
The great physicist Edwin Hubble, speaking at Caltech’s commencement in
1938, said a scientist has “a healthy skepticism, suspended judgement,
and disciplined imagination”—not only about other people’s ideas but
also about his or her own. The scientist has an experimental mind, not a
litigious one.
As a student, this
seemed to me more than a way of thinking. It was a way of being—a weird
way of being. You are supposed to have skepticism and imagination, but
not too much. You are supposed to suspend judgment, yet exercise it.
Ultimately, you hope to observe the world with an open mind, gathering
facts and testing your predictions and expectations against them. Then
you make up your mind and either affirm or reject the ideas at hand. But
you also hope to accept that nothing is ever completely settled, that
all knowledge is just probable knowledge. A contradictory piece of
evidence can always emerge. Hubble said it best when he said, “The
scientist explains the world by successive approximations.”
The
scientific orientation has proved immensely powerful. It has allowed us
to nearly double our lifespan during the past century, to increase our
global abundance, and to deepen our understanding of the nature of the
universe. Yet scientific knowledge is not necessarily trusted. Partly,
that’s because it is incomplete. But even where the knowledge provided
by science is overwhelming, people often resist it—sometimes outright
deny it. Many people continue to believe, for instance, despite massive
evidence to the contrary, that childhood vaccines cause autism (they do
not); that people are safer owning a gun (they are not); that
genetically modified crops are harmful (on balance, they have been
beneficial); that climate change is not happening (it is).
bibliotecapleyades | My name isCarol Rosin. I am an educator who became the first woman corporate manager of an Aerospace Company,Fairchild Industries. I am a Space and Missile Defense Consultant and have consulted to a number of companies, organizations, and government departments, even the intelligence community. I was a consultant toTRWworking on theMX missile, so I was part of that strategy, which turned out to be a role model for how to sell space-based weapons to the public. TheMX missileis yet another weapon system that we didn’t need.
I founded theInstitute for Security and Cooperation in Outer Space, a Washington DC based think tank. I am an author and have testified before Congress and the President’s Commission on Space.
When I was a Corporate Manager ofFairchild Industriesfrom 1974 through 1977, I met the lateDr. Wernher Von Braun. We first met in early 1974. At that time, Von Braun was dying of cancer but he assured me that he would live a few more years to tell me about the game that was being played- that game being the effort toweaponize space, tocontrol the Earth from spaceandspace itself.
Von Braun had a history of working with weapons systems. He escaped from Germany to come to this country and became a Vice President ofFairchild Industrieswhen I had met him. Von Braun’s purpose during the last years of his life, his dying years, was to educate the public and decision-makers about why space-based weapons are dumb, dangerous, destabilizing, too costly, unnecessary, unworkable, and an undesirable idea, and about the alternatives that are available.
As practically a deathbed speech, he educated me about those concepts and who the players were in this game. He gave me the responsibility, since he was dying, of continuing this effort toprevent the weaponization of outer space. When Wernher Von Braun was dying of cancer, he asked me to be his spokesperson, to appear on occasions when he was too ill to speak. I did this.
What was most interesting to me was a repetitive sentence that he said to me over and over again during the approximately four years that I had the opportunity to work with him. He said the strategy that was being used to educate the public and decision makers was to use scare tactics That was how we identify an enemy.
The strategy that Wernher Von Braun taught me was that first theRussiansare going to be considered to be the enemy. In fact, in 1974, they were the enemy, the identified enemy. We were told that they had "killer satellites". We were told that they were coming to get us and control us -- that they were "Commies."
Thenterroristswould be identified, and that was soon to follow. We heard a lot aboutterrorism. Then we were going to identifythird-world country"crazies." We now call themNations of Concern. But he said that would be the third enemy against whom we would build space-based weapons.
The next enemy wasasteroids. Now, at this point he kind of chuckled the first time he said it.Asteroids-against asteroidswe are going to buildspace-based weapons.
And the funniest one of all was what he calledaliens,extraterrestrials. That would bethe final scare.
NYTimes | Wernher von Braun, the master rocket builder and pioneer of space travel, died of cancer Thursday morning. He was 65 years old.
The German‐born scientist, who had been in failing health for two years, died at a hospital in Alexandria, Va. A private funeral service was held later in the day, but no public announcement was made until yesterday. He leaves his wife and three children.
In a statement released by the White House, President Carter eulogized Dr. von Braun as “a man of bold vision” and said:
“To millions of Americans, Wernher von Braun's name was inextricably linked to our exploration of space and to the creative application of technology. Not just the people of our nation, but all the people of the world have profited from his work. We will continue to profit from his example.”
Dr. von Braun was best known for two achievements‐the German V‐2 rocket and the American Saturn 5 moon rocket. One, a dreaded weapon of warfare, was a precursor of the other, a vehicle of magnificent human adventure.
Both sprang from a lifetime commitment to a romantic vision. Long before space travel became a reality, Dr. von Braun committed himself to a vision of rockets breaking the bonds of the Earth's gravity, of men making journeys to the Moon and beyond, of worlds to explore and incorporate in the human experience.
While a student in Berlin, he read an article about an imaginary• trip to the moon that made a lasting impression, which he once recalled:
“It filled me with a romantic urge. Interplanetary travel! Here was a task worth dedicating one's life to. Not just stare through a telescope at the Moon and the planets but to soar through the heavens and actually explore the mysterious universe. I knew how Columbus had felt.”
centauri-dreams |Image: Ernst Stuhlinger’s Umbrella Ship, built around ion propulsion. Notice the size of the radiator, which disperses heat from the reactor at the end of the boom. As Adam notes in his blog piece, the source for this concept was a Stuhlinger paper called “Electrical Propulsion System for Space Ships with Nuclear Power Source,” which ran in theJournal of the Astronautical Sciences2, no. Pt. 1 in 1955, pp. 149-152 (online versionhere). Credit: Winchell Chung.
No chemical rockets for Stuhlinger. While von Braun envisioned his fleet using a nitric acid/hydrazine propellant, Stuhlinger was interested in electrical propulsion, producing thrust by expelling ions and electrons instead of combustion gases. He noted in the paper that using chemical reactions to produce thrust created a high initial mass as compared to the payload. To reduce this mass problem, he saw, it would be necessary to increase the exhaust velocity of the propellant. Accelerating propellant particles by electrical fields made the numbers more attractive, as the paper notes in its summary:
A propulsion system for space ships is described which produces thrust by expelling ions and electrons instead of combustion gases. Equations are derived from the optimum mass ratio, power, and driving voltage of a ship with given payload, travel time, and initial acceleration. A nuclear reactor provides the primary power for a turbo-electric generator; the electric power then accelerates the ions. Cesium is the best propellant available because of its high atomic mass and its low ionization energy. A space ship with 150 tons payload and an initial acceleration of 0.67 x 10-4G, traveling to Mars and back in a total travel time of about 2 years, would have a takeoff mass of 730 tons.
Adam works out the details, drawing from the Stuhlinger paper itself and deriving some quantities through his own work. We get a payload, including landing vehicle and crew habitat, that is about 20.5 percent of launch mass, an impressive figure indeed. We’re also saddled with low acceleration, as you would expect. The Umbrella Ship would take about a year to reach Mars, while a chemically propelled ship as analyzed by Stuhlinger would make the journey in about 260 days. The longer the travel time, the greater the hazard, which was in many ways unknown to Stuhlinger, as Adam comments:
These days we wouldn’t want a crewed vehicle spending weeks crawling through the Van Allen Belts, but back when Stuhlinger computed his trajectory and even when the design aired, the Belts were utterly unknown. Now we’d have to throw in a solar radiation “storm shelter” and I’d feel rather uncomfortable making astronauts spend two years soaking up cosmic-rays in interplanetary space. Even so, the elegance of the design, as compared with the gargantuan Von Braun “Der Mars Projekt” for example, is a testament to Stuhlinger’s advocacy of electric propulsion.
But what an interesting design to emerge in the 1950s, and it’s ironic given the above remark that when Explorer 1 was launched in 1958, Stuhlinger was at the controls of the timer that, in those relatively primitive days of space technology, handled rocket staging. Explorer 1 was the satellite that discovered the Van Allen belts in the first place. A German infantryman (he was wounded outside Moscow and later served at Stalingrad), Stuhlinger joined the German V-2 effort and worked closely with von Braun, later coming to the United States as part of Operation Paperclip. In the 1950s, he actively collaborated with von Braun on the Disney filmsMan in Space,Man and the MoonandMars and Beyond.
Stuhlinger would spend a great deal of time on ion thrusters using either cesium or rubidium vapor, accelerating positively charged ions through a grid of electrodes. Today, he is considered a pioneer of ion propulsion, well known for his bookIon Propulsion for Space Flight(McGraw-Hill, 1964). He would serve as director of Marshall Space Flight Center’s Space Science Laboratory until 1968 and later as MSFC’s associate director for science, going on to become a professor at the University of Alabama in Huntsville and a senior research assistant with Teledyne Brown Engineering. Ernst Stuhlinger died in Huntsville in May of 2008.
antimedia | As the mainstream largely directed attention
to the hack of the Democratic National Committee’s strategy to oppose
Donald Trump, this collusion to steer the narrative in Hillary’s favor
appears to have gone unnoticed, as US Uncut reported.
But this series of leaked emails show a meticulously plotted
coordination between DNC narratives touting Clinton, rather than
Sanders, as if she had been the presumptive nominee from the outset —
precisely as activists and fair elections advocates had suspected.
Under the heading “Tactics,” the document states, “Working with the DNC and allied groups, we will use several different methods to land these attacks” — including, under the subheading, “Reporter Outreach”:
“Working through the DNC and others, we should use background
briefings, prep with reporters for interviews with GOP candidates,
off-the-record conversations and oppo pitches to help pitch stories with no fingerprints and utilize reporters to drive a message.” And under “Bracketing Events,” the email states: “Both the DNC and outside groups are looking to do events and press surrounding Republican events to insert our messaging into their press and to force them to answer questions around key issues.”
Most revealing in this particular document is its conclusion, which reads, in part, “Our
goal is to use this conversation to answer the questions who do we want
to run against and how best to leverage other candidates to maneuver
them into the right place.”
Guccifer 2.0 also leaked a two-page list titled “HRC election plans,” which, as US Uncut noted, includes a talking point that later appeared word for word in Clinton’s video announcement of her bid to run for president:
“Americans have fought their way back from tough economic times but the deck is still stacked for those at the top.”
Not only does this show a carefully-orchestrated spoonfeeding of
vapid Clinton-isms to the ostensibly unsuspecting public, the irony of
the former First Lady pontificating on ‘stacked decks’ for the elite bears a startling degree of hypocrisy in this context.
Prior to the release of these hacked documents, an analysis of election coverage by Neal Gabler, published in Truthout,
evidenced startling favoritism for Clinton by the mainstream media
throughout the 2016 election season thus far. While not entirely overt,
the media’s fondness for Hillary often comprised propagandic semantic
gymnastics to avoid showing Sanders in a rosy light.
truthdig | WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says his organization’s upcoming leak of more Hillary Clinton emails should be enough to indict her—but doubts the FBI will do so.
As the presidential race heats up, there has been increased attention on the FBI investigation into Clinton’s emails as Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump has begun touse the scandalas an offensive strategy against his Democratic opponent. Clinton isunder investigationby the FBI because of her reliance on a private email server during her tenure as secretary of state, breaking multiple department rules on cybersecurity.
WikiLeaks, an organization created to publish classified information, made major waves in March when it publisheda searchable archiveof Clinton’s emails. Now, Assange is promising another leak of emails that he believes could serve as sufficient evidence for the FBI to indict her. Speaking via video inan interview on Britain’s ITV network, he noted that WikiLeaks “had a very big year ahead.”
“We have upcoming leaks in relation to Hillary Clinton,” he said. “We’ve accumulated a lot of material about Hillary Clinton. We could proceed to an indictment.”
Assange said, however, that in his opinion, the FBI would choose not to indict her in hopes of gaining favor with a Clinton administration. “The FBI could push for concessions from the new Clinton government,” he said. But, he added, “there’s very strong material, both in the emails and in relation to theClinton Foundation.”
AsThe Guardian notes, Assange has long been a critic of Clinton’s politics. He once said that “she has a long history of being a liberal war hawk,” and last week he evenaccused Googleof manipulating search suggestions to help her campaign.
WaPo | Over four decades of public life, Bill and Hillary Clinton have built
an unrivaled global network of donors while pioneering fundraising
techniques that have transformed modern politics and paved the way for
them to potentially become the first husband and wife to win the White
House.
The grand total raised for all of their political campaigns and
their family’s charitable foundation reaches at least $3 billion,
according to a Washington Post investigation.
Their fundraising haul, which began with $178,000 that Bill Clinton
raised for his long-shot 1974 congressional bid, is on track to expand
substantially with Hillary Clinton’s 2016 White House run, which has
already drawn $110 million in support.
The Post identified donations from roughly
336,000 individuals, corporations, unions and foreign governments in
support of their political or philanthropic endeavors — a list that
includes top patrons such as Steven Spielberg and George Soros,
as well as lesser-known backers who have given smaller amounts dozens
of times. Not included in the count are an untold number of small donors
whose names are not identified in campaign finance reports but together
have given millions to the Clintons over the years.
The majority of the money — $2 billion — has gone to the Clinton Foundation,
one of the world’s fastest-growing charities, which supports health,
education and economic development initiatives around the globe. A
handful of elite givers have contributed more than $25 million to the
foundation, including Canadian mining magnate Frank Giustra, who is among the wealthy foreign donors who have given tens of millions.
Separately, donors have given $1 billion to support the Clintons’
political races and legal defense fund, making capped contributions to
their campaigns and writing six-figure checks to the Democratic National
Committee and allied super PACs.
The Post investigation found that many top Clinton patrons supported
them in multiple ways, helping finance their political causes, their
legal needs, their philanthropy and their personal bank accounts. In
some cases, companies connected to their donors hired the Clintons as paid speakers, helping them collect more than $150 million on the lecture circuit in the past 15 years.
The couple’s biggest individual political benefactors are Univision chairman Haim Saban and his wife, Cheryl,
who have made 39 contributions totaling $2.4 million to support the
Clintons’ races since 1992. The Sabans have also donated at least
$10 million to the foundation.
The Clintons kept big contributors in their orbit for decades by
methodically wooing competing interest groups — toggling between their
liberal base and powerful constituencies, according to donors, friends
and aides who have known the couple since their Arkansas days.
They made historic inroads on Wall Street, pulling
in at least $69 million in political contributions from the employees
and PACs of banks, insurance companies, and securities and investment
firms. Wealthy hedge fund managers S. Donald Sussman and David E. Shaw are among their top campaign supporters, having given more than $1 million each.
The Clintons’ ties to the financial sector
strained their bonds with the left, particularly organized labor. But
unions repeatedly shook off their disappointment, giving at least
$21 million to support their races. The public employees union AFSCME has been their top labor backer, giving nearly $1.7 million for their campaigns.
The Clintons’ fundraising operation — $3 billion amassed by one
couple, working in tandem for more than four decades — has no equal. Fist tap Democratic Underground
narconews | The Clinton Administration took the groundwork laid by Nixon, Reagan and
Bush and embraced and blossomed the expansion and promotion of federal
support for police, enforcement and the War on Drugs with a passion that
was hard to understand unless and until you realized that the American
financial system was deeply dependent on attracting an estimated $500
billion-$1 trillion of annual money laundering. Globalizing corporations
and deepening deficits and housing bubbles required attracting vast
amounts of capital.
Attracting capital also required making the world safe for the
reinvestment of the profits of organized crime and the war machine.
Without growing organized crime and military activities through
government budgets and contracts, the economy would stop centralizing.
The Clinton Administration was to govern a doubling of the federal
prison population.[1]
Whether through subsidy, credit and asset forfeiture kickbacks to
state and local government or increased laws, regulations and federal
sentencing and imprisonment, the supremacy of the federal enforcement
infrastructure and the industry it feeds was to be a Clinton legacy.
One of the first major initiatives by President Bill Clinton was the
Omnibus Crime Bill, signed into law in September 1994. This legislation
implemented mandatory sentencing, authorized $10.5 billion to fund
prison construction that mandatory sentencing would help require,
loosened the rules on allowing federal asset forfeiture teams to keep
and spend the money their operations made from seizing assets, and
provided federal monies for local police. The legislation also provided a
variety of pork for a Clinton Administration vogue constituency
Community Development Corporations (CDCs) and Community Development
Financial Institutions (CDFIs). The CDCs and CDFIs
became instrumental during this period in putting a socially acceptable
face on increasing central control of local finance and shutting off
equity capital to small business.
The potential impact on the private prison industry was significant.
With the bill only through the house, former Attorney General Benjamin
Civiletti joined the board of Wackenhut Corrections, which went public
in July 1994 with an initial public offering of 2.2 million shares. By
the end of 1998, Wackenhut’s stock market value had increased almost ten
times. When I visited their website at that time it offered a feature
that flashed the number of beds they owned and managed. The number
increased as I was watching it the prison business was growing that
fast.
However, the Clinton Administration did not wait for the Omnibus
Crime Bill to build the federal enforcement infrastructure.
Government-wide, agencies were encouraged to cash in on support in both
Executive Branch and Congress for authorizations and programs many
justified under the umbrella of the War on Drugs that allowed agency
personnel to carry weapons, make arrests and generate revenues from
money makers such as civil money penalties and asset forfeitures and
seizures. Indeed, federal enforcement was moving towards a model that
some would call “for profit” faster than one could say “Sheriff of
Nottingham.”
On February 4, 1994, U.S. Vice President Al Gore announced Operation Safe Home, a new enforcement program at HUD.
Gore was a former Senator from Tennessee. His hometown of Nashville was
home of the largest private prison company, the Corrections Corporation
of America (CCA). He was joined at the press conference by Secretary of
the Treasury Lloyd Bentsen, Attorney General Janet Reno, Director of
Drug Policy Lee Brown and Secretary of HUD Henry Cisneros who said that the Operation Safe Home initiative would claim $800 million of HUD’s
resources. Operation Safe Home was to receive significant support from
the Senate and House appropriations committees. It turned the HUD Inspector
General’s office from an auditor of program areas to a developer of
programs competing for funding with the offices they were supposed to be
auditing a serious conflict of interest and built-in failure of
government internal controls.
According to the announcement, Operation Safe Home was expected to
“combat violent crime in public and assisted housing.” As part of this
program, the HUD Office of Inspector General
(OIG) coordinated with various federal, state and local enforcement task
forces. Federal agencies that partnered with HUD included the FBI,
the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA), the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms (ATF), the Internal Revenue Service (IRS), the Secret Service,
the U.S. Marshal’s Service, the Postal Inspection Service, the U.S.
Customs Service, the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS) and
the Department of Justice (DOJ). The primary performance measures
reported in the HUD OIG Semi-Annual
Performance Report to Congress for this program are the total number of
asset forfeitures/seizures, equity skimming collections and arrests.
Subsequent intra-agency efforts such as the “ACE” program sponsored by DOJ and initiated by U.S. Attorney’s Offices, working with the DOJ Asset Forfeiture Fund, HUD OIG and HUD Office of General Counsel promoted revenue generating activities as well.
theatlantic | As recently as the 1950s, possessing only middling intelligence was not likely to severely limit your life’s trajectory. IQ wasn’t a big factor in whom you married, where you lived, or what others thought of you. The qualifications for a good job, whether on an assembly line or behind a desk, mostly revolved around integrity, work ethic, and a knack for getting along—bosses didn’t routinely expect college degrees, much less ask to see SAT scores. As one account of the era put it, hiring decisions were “based on a candidate having a critical skill or two and on soft factors such as eagerness, appearance, family background, and physical characteristics.”
The 2010s, in contrast, are a terrible time to not be brainy. Those who consider themselves bright openly mock others for being less so. Even in this age of rampant concern over microaggressions and victimization, we maintain open season on the nonsmart. People who’d swerve off a cliff rather than use a pejorative for race, religion, physical appearance, or disability are all too happy to drop the s‑bomb: Indeed, degrading others for being “stupid” has become nearly automatic in all forms of disagreement.
It’s popular entertainment, too. The so-called Darwin Awards celebrate incidents in which poor judgment and comprehension, among other supposedly genetic mental limitations, have led to gruesome and more or less self-inflicted fatalities. An evening of otherwise hate-speech-free TV-watching typically features at least one of a long list of humorous slurs on the unintelligent (“not the sharpest tool in the shed”; “a few fries short of a Happy Meal”; “dumber than a bag of hammers”; and so forth). Reddit regularly has threads on favorite ways to insult the stupid, and fun-stuff-to-do.com dedicates a page to the topic amid its party-decor ideas and drink recipes.
This gleeful derision seems especially cruel in view of the more serious abuse that modern life has heaped upon the less intellectually gifted. Few will be surprised to hear that, according to the 1979 National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, a long-running federal study, IQ correlates with chances of landing a financially rewarding job. Other analyses suggest that each IQ point is worth hundreds of dollars in annual income—surely a painful formula for the 80 million Americans with an IQ of 90 or below. When the less smart are identified by lack of educational achievement (which in contemporary America is closely correlated with lower IQ), the contrast only sharpens. From 1979 to 2012, the median-income gap between a family headed by two earners with college degrees and two earners with high-school degrees grew by $30,000, in constant dollars. Studies have furthermore found that, compared with the intelligent, less intelligent people are more likely to suffer from some types of mental illness, become obese, develop heart disease, experience permanent brain damage from a traumatic injury, and end up in prison, where they are more likely than other inmates to be drawn to violence. They’re also likely to die sooner.
Guardian | Britain has become a powerbase for a legalised financial mafia, which strips the assets of healthy companies, turns the nation’s housing into a roulette table, launders money for drug cartels and terrorists, then stashes its gains beyond the reach
of police and tax inspectors. Through privatisation, outsourcing and
the private finance initiative, the public sector has been repurposed as
a get-rich-quick scheme for friends in the City, licensed to erect
tollbooths in front of essential services. The media, largely owned by
members of the same class, directs our attention elsewhere: blaming
immigrants for the ills it has inflicted.
It was British lobbying that sank Europe’s soil framework directive and the financial transactions tax. Without a mandate from either Parliament or people, the British trade minister wrote secretly
to the European Commission, insisting that investor-state dispute
settlement should remain in the TTIP. Wherever barriers to the power of
money are being kicked over, there you will find Mr Cameron’s bootprint.
Since the first states were established, they have sought power by
making alliances. The splendid autonomy we are told a Britain out of
Europe would enjoy is an illusion: we would swap one transnational
system for another. The demand to leave Europe in the name of
independence has long been accompanied by a desire to surrender our
sovereignty to the United States. If judged by their own standards, the
Brexit campaigners who foresee a stronger alliance with the US are
traitors, ceding the national interest to a foreign hegemon.
Sixteen years ago, the Conservative party published a draft manifesto in which it proposed
that we should join the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
This remains a plausible outcome of leaving the EU: it is hard to
imagine the business class permitting the UK to stand outside a formal
trading bloc. What this means is swapping a treaty over which we have
had some influence for one in which we have had none.
How do we know that TTIP would tear down public protections? Because the same clauses in NAFTA have already started doing so,
across Canada, the US and Mexico. A closer alliance with the United
States means surrendering to a system which has been signed, sealed and
delivered to the power of money. The US campaign finance system, a
Congress bound and gagged with dollars, a police and military machine
pressed into the service of plutocracy; a media that scarcely bothers to
disguise its own corruption: the political power of money there is
naked, unashamed, even proud.
I suspect that Trump, or at least Trumpery of some kind, represents
the future of US politics, especially if the Democrats fail to connect
with those who are catastrophically alienated from politics. Exciting as
it will be to have a woman in the White House, Hillary Clinton is embedded in corporate power and corporate dollars, strategically unable to connect.
We do not release ourselves from the power of money by leaving the
EU. We just exchange one version for another: another that is even
worse. This is not an inspiring position from which to vote Remain. But
it is a coherent one.
guccifer2 | Worldwide known cyber security company CrowdStrike announced that the
Democratic National Committee (DNC) servers had been hacked by
“sophisticated” hacker groups.
I’m very pleased the company appreciated my skills so highly))) But in fact, it was easy, very easy.
Guccifer may have been the first one who penetrated Hillary Clinton’s
and other Democrats’ mail servers. But he certainly wasn’t the last. No
wonder any other hacker could easily get access to the DNC’s servers.
Shame on CrowdStrike: Do you think I’ve been in the DNC’s networks
for almost a year and saved only 2 documents? Do you really believe it?
Here are just a few docs from many thousands I extracted when hacking into DNC’s network.
They mentioned a leaked database on Donald Trump. Did they mean this one?
nyu | “Friendships provide opportunities to build empathy and practice
social skills,” said Cappella. “Being friends with racially or
ethnically diverse peers can create opportunities for academic and
social learning different from the opportunities afforded by same-race
friendships.”
The current study looked at student and classroom factors that affect
the likelihood of children forming friendships across race. Cappella
and her colleagues used data from the Early Adolescent Development
Study, a longitudinal study of elementary and middle school children in a
racially diverse middle-class suburban school district. Surveys were
collected in the fall and spring of the 1996-7 school year in 53 third-,
fourth-, and fifth-grade classrooms, with a total of 553 African
American and white students participating in the study.
On an individual or student level, the researchers looked at age,
race, and psychosocial factors, including sociability, internalizing
behavior (such as worrying or feeling sad) and externalizing behavior
(such as acting out or getting in trouble). They also examined factors
related to classroom context, including teacher support, whether
teachers treat students with varying levels of academic achievement
differently, and competition among students.
Results suggest that same-race friendships increase over the school
year, with greater increases among white and older children.
Externalizing behavior predicted a greater increase in same-race
friendships, particularly among white students.
Teachers and classroom context influenced student friendships in two
different ways. Classroom support – measured by student perceptions of
teachers’ warmth, respect, and trust – predicted less of an increase in
same-race friendships from fall to spring. In addition, African American
students who perceived that their teachers treated students differently
were more likely to have friendships with white peers over time.
“Teachers’ differential treatment sends messages regarding the value
of different groups. We don’t know if the teachers in this study favored
white students over African American students, as other studies have
shown. But if this is the case, it’s not surprising that African
American students formed more friendships with white peers as they began
to internalize the higher value their teachers placed on white
students,” said Cappella.
The researchers said their study points to the need not just for
diverse schools, but also for teachers to foster classrooms where
students and teachers support one another, and social and academic
hierarchies are not dominant, which could increase the likelihood of
students developing and maintaining interracial friendships.
visualcapitalist |SIMPLE ARITHMETIC SHOWS ONE OF THESE LOANS IS NOT LIKE THE OTHER
What do you get when you combine skyrocketing tuition costs, a lack of growth inhigh-paying jobs,moral hazard, and America’s largest-ever generation of students?
It’s a recipe for a mountain of $1.3 trillion in student loan debt – much of which is not being paid for.
VERY DELINQUENT STUDENTS
With many students graduating with high debt loads, a growing number of students are becoming delinquent on their loans. The most recent estimate by the Federal Reserve Bank of New York estimates the percent of 90+ day delinquent loans to now be at 11.0%.
This puts student loans at a higher delinquency rate than credit cards (7.6%), auto loans (3.5%), and mortgages (2.2%). It’s also particularly interesting because historically credit cards have had the highest rates among all types of consumer credit. Despite this, student loans “passed” credit cards in delinquency frequency at the end of 2012.
Why are student loans the most troubled form of consumer debt right now? It’s the result of a clear mismatch between supply and demand for college-educated workers.
thefederalist | If something horrifying happens, we must ignore due process and
deny Americans their rights. To be safe. This was basically the argument
many conservatives (and Democrats) made post-9/11 to help pass the
Patriot Act, and it’s exactly the argument most liberals are making when
they push gun bans to people on terror watch lists.
If the FBI is conducting a criminal investigation of your suspected
illegal use of a home email server to transmit classified intelligence,
you shouldn’t be allowed to just go and run for president. Obviously.
The idea that we would allow a person who can’t be trusted with our most
vital secrets to hold the most powerful office in the nation is absurd.
It’s just not safe.
It’s worse than that, actually. Being on a watch list would probably be best described—using Hillary’s own euphemism—as
having a “security inquiry.” The Democratic Party nominee is under
criminal investigation by the nation’s prime federal law enforcement
agency. She’s practically guilty. Fist Tap Big Don.
shadowproof | Here we go again. Earlier this year, some were surprised to see Project For The New American Century (PNAC) co-founder and longtime DC fixture Robert Kaganendorseformer Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for president.
They shouldn’t have been. As is now clear from a policy paper [PDF] published last month, the neoconservatives are going all-in on Hillary Clinton being the best vessel for American power in the years ahead.
The paper, titled “Expanding American Power,” was published by theCenter for a New American Security, a Democratic Party-friendly think tank co-founded and led by former Undersecretary of Defense Michèle Flournoy. Flournoy served in the Obama Administration under Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and is widely considered to be the frontrunner for the next secretary of defense, should Hillary Clinton become president.
The introduction to Expanding American Power is written by the aforementioned Robert Kagan and former Clinton Administration State Department official James Rubin. The paper itself was prepared in consultation with various defense and national security intellectuals over the course of six dinners. Among the officials includes those who signed on to PNAC letters calling for the overthrow of Saddam Hussein, such as Elliot Abrams, Robert Zoellick, Craig Kennedy, Martin Indyk, Dennis Ross, and Flournoy herself, whosigned on to a PNAC letter in 2005 calling for more ground troops in Iraq.
The substance of the document is about what one would expect from an iteration of PNAC. The paper cites a highly revisionist history of post-World War II American policymaking, complete with a celebration of America’s selfless motives for every action. Left out is any mention of overthrowing democratically elected and popular governments for US business, or the subsequent blowback for such actions in Latin America, the Middle East, and elsewhere.
For the neocons and liberal interventionists at the Center for a New American Security, the United States has always acted for the benefit of all.
The paper primarily focuses on the economy and defense budget, and American security interests in Europe, Asia, and the Middle East. Supporting the Trans-pacific Partnership (TPP) and the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) are considered the highest priority, as they will bind the main drivers of the US-led “liberal world order”—the US and Europe—closer together.
According to the paper, “Even in a world of shifting economic and political power, the transatlantic community remains both the foundation and the core of the liberal world order.” In other words, the West must maintain control of the planet, for the good of all, of course.
zerohedge | In what may be the pinnacle of hypocrisy, moments ago Hillary Clinton, while speaking live on national security and addressing the Orlando shooting took some time from her constant bashing of the Second Amendment and calling for a ban on assault rifles, to say some less than kind words about Saudi Arabia whom it accused of supporting radical organizations. This is what she said:
The third area that demands attention is preventing radicalization and countering efforts by ISIS and other international terrorist networks to recruit in the United States and Europe.For starters, it is long past time for the Saudis, the Qataris and the Kuwaitis and others to stop their citizens from funding extremist organizations.Andthey should stop supporting radical schools and mosques around the world that have set too many young people on a path towards extremism. We also have to use all our capabilities to counter jihadist propaganda online. This is something that I spend a lot of time on at the State Department.
There is nothing wrong with that statement, as it is the whole truth - Saudi Arabia's involvement in supporting terrorism stretches from Sept 11 all the way through to ISIS - however, where there is a big, and potentially law-breaking, problem is what Jordan's official news agency, Petra News Agency, reported on Sunday citing the Saudi crown price, namely thatSaudi Arabia is a major funder of Hillary Clinton’s campaign to become the next president of the United States.
AsMEE notes, the Petra News Agency published on Sunday what it described as exclusive comments fromSaudi Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman which included a claim that Riyadh has provided 20 percent of the total funding to the prospective Democratic candidate's campaign.
politico | The Democratic presidential primary process may be ending next Tuesday, but the fight among Bernie Sanders supporters to rid the party of superdelegates and install new leadership at the Democratic National Committee is not.
Hawaii Rep. Tulsi Gabbard encouraged her followers on Saturday tosign a petitionending the Democratic Party’s use of superdelegates.
“Whether you are a Bernie Sanders supporter or a Hillary Clinton supporter, we should all agree that unelected party officials and lobbyists should not have a say in who the presidential nominee of our party is,” she wrote in a Facebook post. “That should be left up to the voters.”
Gabbard resigned as a vice chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee in February topublicly endorsethe Vermont senator’s campaign.
Gabbard isn’t alone in the fight: The West Virginia Democratic Party at its state convention Saturday passed a resolution calling for the elimination of superdelegates, or that superdelegates be required “in each state to vote in the same relative proportion as the elected delegates of the state they represent.”
A Foundation of Joy
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Two years and I've lost count of how many times my eye has been operated
on, either beating the fuck out of the tumor, or reattaching that slippery
eel ...
April Three
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4/3
43
When 1 = A and 26 = Z
March = 43
What day?
4 to the power of 3 is 64
64th day is March 5
My birthday
March also has 5 letters.
4 x 3 = 12
...
Return of the Magi
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Lately, the Holy Spirit is in the air. Emotional energy is swirling out of
the earth.I can feel it bubbling up, effervescing and evaporating around
us, s...
New Travels
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Haven’t published on the Blog in quite a while. I at least part have been
immersed in the area of writing books. My focus is on Science Fiction an
Historic...
Covid-19 Preys Upon The Elderly And The Obese
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sciencemag | This spring, after days of flulike symptoms and fever, a man
arrived at the emergency room at the University of Vermont Medical Center.
He ...