theatlantic | A strange story about MSNBC host Joy
Reid has been unfolding for a week. It began when a Twitter user with
about 1,000 followers, @Jamie_Maz, dug up what appeared to be homophobic posts on Reid’s defunct blog, the Reid Report. They were similar in nature to posts that Reid apologized for as “insensitive” back in December, after @Jamie_Maz brought those to light.
The
new round of posts contain a lot of cliche gay jokes about Charlie
Crist and others, concerns that “adult gay men tend to be attracted to
very young, post-pubescent types, bringing them ‘into the lifestyle,’”
and commentary like “part of the intrinsic nature of ‘straightness’ is
that the idea of homosexual sex is ... well ... gross ... even if you
think that gay people are perfectly lovely individuals.”
The
triumph of the gay-rights movement has been so complete and fast that
it’s easy to forget that 10 years ago—in the same election that swept
Barack Obama to the White House—California voters passed a state constitutional amendment
banning same-sex marriage. Attitudes changed, the moral arc bent, and
now, a lot fewer people disparage gay people like this than did in 2006.
A liberal talk-show host would and should be embarrassed and ashamed by
these posts popping up, but Reid apologized once, and could have done
so again.
Instead, Reid released a statement to Mediaite
saying that she’d been hacked and was not responsible for the posts.
“In December I learned that an unknown, external party accessed and
manipulated material from my now-defunct blog, The Reid Report, to
include offensive and hateful references that are fabricated and run
counter to my personal beliefs and ideology,” Reid said.
The posts
had been dug up on the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, which
maintains copies of many pages on the web. When Reid said she’d been
hacked, many jumped to the conclusion that it was the Wayback Machine
that had been hacked. On its blog, the Internet Archive said that Reid’s
lawyers had contacted them about a possible hack, but that they had no
indication that one had occurred.
“This past December, Reid’s
lawyers contacted us, asking to have archives of the blog
(blog.reidreport.com) taken down, stating that ‘fraudulent’ posts were
‘inserted into legitimate content’ in our archives of the blog,” they
wrote. “Her attorneys stated that they didn’t know if the alleged
insertion happened on the original site or with our archives (the point
at which the manipulation is to have occurred, according to Reid, is
still unclear to us).”
On review, the Internet Archive “found nothing to indicate tampering or hacking of the Wayback Machine versions.”
truthdig | Exactly 200 days before the crucial midterm election that will
determine whether Republicans maintain control of Congress, the
Democratic National Committee filed a 66-page lawsuit that surely cost
lots of money and energy to assemble.
Does the lawsuit target
purveyors of racist barriers to voting that block and deflect so many
people of color from casting their ballots?
No.
Well,
perhaps this ballyhooed lawsuit aims to ensure the rights of people who
don’t mainly speak English to get full access to voting information?
Unfortunately, no.
Maybe it’s a legal action to challenge the ridiculously sparse voting booths provided in college precincts?
Not that either.
Announced with a flourish by DNC Chair Tom Perez, the civil lawsuit—which
reads like a partisan polemic wrapped in legalisms—sues the Russian
government, the Trump campaign and operatives, as well as WikiLeaks and
its founding editor, Julian Assange.
It’s hard to imagine that
many voters in swing districts—who’ll determine whether the GOP runs the
House through the end of 2020—will be swayed by the Russia-related
accusations contained in the lawsuit. People are far more concerned
about economic insecurity for themselves and their families, underscored
by such matters as the skyrocketing costs of health care and college
education.
To emphasize that “this is a patriotic—not
partisan—move,” Perez’s announcement of the lawsuit on April 20 quoted
one politician, Republican Sen. John McCain, reaching for the hyperbolic
sky: “When you attack a country, it’s an act of war. And so we have to
make sure that there is a price to pay, so that we can perhaps persuade
the Russians to stop these kind of attacks on our very fundamentals of
democracy.”
Setting aside the dangerous rhetoric about “an act of
war,” it’s an odd quotation to choose. For Russia, there’s no “price to
pay” from a civil lawsuit filed in the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of New York. As the DNC well knows, any judgment
against such entities as the Russian Federation and the general staff of
its armed forces would be unenforceable.
The DNC’s lawsuit
amounts to doubling down on its fixation of blaming Russia for the
Democratic Party’s monumental 2016 loss, at a time when it’s essential
to remedy the failed approaches that were major causes of Hillary
Clinton’s defeat in the first place. Instead of confronting its fealty
to Wall Street or overall failure to side with working-class voters
against economic elites, the Democratic National Committee is ramping up
the party leadership’s 18-month fixation on Russia Russia Russia.
After
a humongous political investment in depicting Vladimir Putin as a
pivotal Trump patron and a mortal threat to American democracy,
strategists atop the Democratic Party don’t want to let up on seeking a
big return from that investment. Protecting the investment will continue
to mean opposing the “threat” of détente between the world’s two
nuclear superpowers, while giving the party a political stake in
thwarting any warming of the current ominously frigid relations between
Moscow and Washington.
In truth, the party’s Russia fixation
leaves significantly less messaging space for economic and social issues
that the vast majority of Americans care about far more. Similarly, the
Russia obsession at MSNBC (which routinely seems like “MSDNC”) has left
scant airtime for addressing, or even noting, the economic concerns of
so many Americans. (For instance, see the data in FAIR’s study, “Russia or Corporate Tax Cuts: Which Would Comcast Rather MSNBC Cover?”)
But
even some of the congressional Democrats who’ve been prominent
“Russiagate” enthusiasts have recognized that the lawsuit is off track.
When Wolf Blitzer on CNN
asked a member of the House Intelligence Committee, Jackie Speier,
whether she believes that Perez and his DNC team “are making a big
mistake by filing this lawsuit,” the California congresswoman’s reply
was blunt: “Well, I’m not supportive of it. Whether it’s a mistake or
not we’ll soon find out.” Speier called the lawsuit “ill-conceived.”
The
most unprincipled part of the lawsuit has to do with its targeting of
Assange and WikiLeaks. That aspect of the suit shows that the DNC is
being run by people whose attitude toward a free press—ironically
enough—has marked similarities to Donald Trump’s.
techcrunch | A new — and theoretical — system for blockchain-based data storage
could ensure that hackers will not be able to crack cryptocurrencies
once the quantum era starts. The idea, proposed by researchers at the
Victoria University of Wellington in New Zealand, would secure
cryptocurrency futures for decades using a blockchain technology that is
like a time machine.
To
understand what’s going on here we have to define some terms. A
blockchain stores every transaction in a system on what amounts to an
immutable record of events. The work necessary for maintaining and
confirming this immutable record is what is commonly known as mining.
But this technology — which the paper’s co-author Del Rajan claims will make up “10 percent of global GDP… by 2027” — will become insecure in an era of quantum computers.
Therefore
the solution to store a blockchain in a quantum era requires a quantum
blockchain using a series of entangled photons. Further, Spectrum
writes: “Essentially, current records in a quantum blockchain are not
merely linked to a record of the past, but rather a record in the past,
one that does not exist anymore.”
Yeah, it’s weird.
From the paper intro:
Our
method involves encoding the blockchain into a temporal GHZ
(Greenberger–Horne–Zeilinger) state of photons that do not
simultaneously coexist. It is shown that the entanglement in time, as
opposed to an entanglement in space, provides the crucial quantum
advantage. All the subcomponents of this system have already been shown
to be experimentally realized. Perhaps more shockingly, our encoding
procedure can be interpreted as non-classically influencing the past;
hence this decentralized quantum blockchain can be viewed as a quantum
networked time machine.
In short, the quantum
blockchain is immutable because the photons that it contains do not
exist at the current time but are still extant and readable. This means
the entire blockchain is visible but cannot be “touched” and the only
entry you would be able to try to tamper with is the most recent one. In
fact, the researchers write, “In this spatial entanglement case, if an
attacker tries to tamper with any photon, the full blockchain would be
invalidated immediately.”
Is this possible? The researchers note that the technology already exists.
ieee | Chinese researchers have put forward a new quantum cryptography
standard that could, if confirmed, substantially increase the speed of
encrypted messages. The proposed new standard has been simulated on
computers although not yet tested in the lab.
Quantum cryptography, the next-generation of secret messages whose
secrecy is guaranteed by the laws of quantum mechanics, has been in the
news recently. Last fall a group from the Chinese Academy of Sciences
transmitted quantum cryptographically encoded communications (via
satellite) to a ground station in Vienna, Austria.
The communications included quantum-encoded images and a 75-minute
quantum-cryptographically secured videoconference, consisting of more
than 2 gigabytes of data. IEEE Spectrum reported on the event at the time. And now, as of last month, the entire project has been detailed in the journal Physical Review Letters.
Media coverage of the event stressed its significance in moving
toward a so-called “quantum Internet.” Yet the quantum internet would
still be a distant dream when quantum cryptography can only mediate one
or, at most, a few quantum-secured communications channels. To scale up
to anything worthy of the name quantum Internet, quantum cryptography
would need to generate not only thousands of cryptographic keys per
second. Rather, a scalable quantum crypto system should aspire to
key-generation rates closer to billions per second or greater—in the
gigahertz (GHz) range and up, not kilohertz (kHz).
cosmos |For a few minutes each night in certain parts of China, the
brightest light in the sky is the lurid glow of the Micius satellite,
shooting a green laser down to Earth as it swings through space 500
kilometres above. When conditions are right, you might also see a red
beam lancing back through the darkness from one of the ground stations
that send signals in reply.
Micius is not your average
telecommunications satellite. On 29 September 2017, it made history by
accomplishing an astonishing feat, harnessing the mysterious qualities
of quantum entanglement – what Einstein called ‘spooky action at a
distance’ – to ‘teleport’ information into space and back again. In doing so, it enabled the first intercontinental phone call – a video call, in fact, between Beijing and Vienna – that was completely unhackable.
The weird science of quantum physics that powers Micius is at the heart of a technology arms race. On one side are quantum computers,
still in their infancy but with enormous potential once they grow in
power. Among their most prized, and feared, applications is the capacity
to cut through the complex mathematical locks that now secure computer
encryption systems – the ones that mean you can confidently conduct
financial transactions over the internet. On the other side is the only
sure defence – encryption techniques that also rely on the laws of
quantum physics.
Until recently scientists had managed to make
quantum encryption work only across distances of a hundred kilometres or
so. The Chinese scientists behind Micius have now reached around the
world. It brings the ultimate prize tantalisingly closer. “I envision a
space-ground integrated quantum internet,” says Pan Jianwei, whose team
became frontrunners in the quantum communications race after Micius
switched on.
NewYorker | “History teaches, but
has no pupils,” the Marxist philosopher Antonio Gramsci wrote. That
line comes to mind when I browse in the history section of a bookstore.
An adage in publishing is that you can never go wrong with books about
Lincoln, Hitler, and dogs; an alternative version names golfing, Nazis,
and cats. In Germany, it’s said that the only surefire magazine covers
are ones that feature Hitler or sex. Whatever the formula, Hitler and
Nazism prop up the publishing business: hundreds of titles appear each
year, and the total number runs well into the tens of thousands. On
store shelves, they stare out at you by the dozens, their spines steeped
in the black-white-and-red of the Nazi flag, their titles barking in
Gothic type, their covers studded with swastikas. The back catalogue
includes “I Was Hitler’s Pilot,” “I Was Hitler’s Chauffeur,” “I Was
Hitler’s Doctor,” “Hitler, My Neighbor,” “Hitler Was My Friend,” “He Was
My Chief,” and “Hitler Is No Fool.” Books have been written about
Hitler’s youth, his years in Vienna and Munich, his service in the First
World War, his assumption of power, his library, his taste in art, his
love of film, his relations with women, and his predilections in
interior design (“Hitler at Home”).
Why do these books pile up in
such unreadable numbers? This may seem a perverse question. The
Holocaust is the greatest crime in history, one that people remain
desperate to understand. Germany’s plunge from the heights of
civilization to the depths of barbarism is an everlasting shock. Still,
these swastika covers trade all too frankly on Hitler’s undeniable flair
for graphic design. (The Nazi flag was apparently his
creation—finalized after “innumerable attempts,” according to “Mein Kampf.”) Susan Sontag, in her 1975 essay “Fascinating Fascism,”
declared that the appeal of Nazi iconography had become erotic, not
only in S & M circles but also in the wider culture. It was, Sontag
wrote, a “response to an oppressive freedom of choice in sex (and,
possibly, in other matters), to an unbearable degree of individuality.”
Neo-Nazi movements have almost certainly fed on the perpetuation of
Hitler’s negative mystique.
Americans have an especially
insatiable appetite for Nazi-themed books, films, television shows,
documentaries, video games, and comic books. Stories of the Second World
War console us with memories of the days before Vietnam, Cambodia, and
Iraq, when the United States was the world’s good-hearted superpower,
riding to the rescue of a Europe paralyzed by totalitarianism and
appeasement. Yet an eerie continuity became visible in the postwar
years, as German scientists were imported to America and began working
for their former enemies; the resulting technologies of mass destruction
exceeded Hitler’s darkest imaginings. The Nazis idolized many aspects
of American society: the cult of sport, Hollywood production values, the
mythology of the frontier. From boyhood on, Hitler devoured the
Westerns of the popular German novelist Karl May.
In 1928, Hitler remarked, approvingly, that white settlers in America
had “gunned down the millions of redskins to a few hundred thousand.”
When he spoke of Lebensraum, the German drive for “living space” in Eastern Europe, he often had America in mind.
Among recent books on Nazism, the one that may prove most disquieting for American readers is James Q. Whitman’s “Hitler’s American Model: The United States and the Making of Nazi Race Law”
(Princeton). On the cover, the inevitable swastika is flanked by two
red stars. Whitman methodically explores how the Nazis took inspiration
from American racism of the late nineteenth and early twentieth
centuries. He notes that, in “Mein Kampf,” Hitler praises America as the
one state that has made progress toward a primarily racial conception
of citizenship, by “excluding certain races from naturalization.”
Whitman writes that the discussion of such influences is almost taboo,
because the crimes of the Third Reich are commonly defined as “the nefandum,
the unspeakable descent into what we often call ‘radical evil.’ ” But
the kind of genocidal hatred that erupted in Germany had been seen
before and has been seen since. Only by stripping away its national
regalia and comprehending its essential human form do we have any hope
of vanquishing it.
nursingclio | Genetic counseling, as the previous two posts in this series
suggested, has a lot to offer for navigating the tricky decisions things
like prenatal testing and preimplantation genetic diagnosis raise.
Well, in this post I’d like to make things a little more complicated. Enter the sheer messiness of history.
I still believe genetic counseling is the best approach we have right
now for helping prospective parents with hard choices, but it has a
complicated — and not so distant — past that continues to shape
counselors’ ways of interacting with clients and their decisions.
A LITTLE REVIEW
In the first post
I shared a little bit of the history of genetic counseling in the
United States and gave some examples of how, today, it can help
prospective parents understand why they’re being tested and what those
tests might mean. The second post
discussed the history of blame and disability more broadly and
introduced the fact that ideas about what disability means have changed
over time — often significantly.
I’ve argued that genetic counseling has the potential to address
feelings of blame, guilt, and confusion in the face of genetic testing
results. Further, it can help answer questions like: What will life
actually be like for parents and their children? What do genetic tests
say and what don’t they say? What are the options after having a test?
My optimism about genetic counseling, evident in these two posts, is
tempered by the fact that it has a complex and challenging past with
origins in eugenics ideology that have influenced the way counseling is
provided today. In a sense what I’m suggesting is that genetic
counseling still has a lot of issues that need to be talked about and
worked on, but that it’s way better than nothing.
Lets take a look at what I mean about how eugenic ideas shaped genetic counseling.
EUGENIC BEGINNINGS
Most of the first genetic counselors in the 1940s, 1950s, and 1960s
were human geneticists, but the origins of human genetics lay in
eugenics. Early genetic counselors identified self-proclaimed
eugenicists like Charles Davenport, founder of the Eugenics Record
Office at Cold Spring Harbor — one of the nation’s leading eugenics
institutions between 1910 and the 1930s — as some of the first human
geneticists in the United States. And four of the first five presidents
of the American Society of Human Genetics, founded in 1948, were also
board members of the American Eugenics Society.[1]
Human geneticists tried to distance themselves from aspects of the
traditional eugenics movement, particularly its racial prejudices and
some of its scientific methods, but were still concerned about the
eugenic effects of their work. They worried about what effect their
counseling might have on the population as a whole.
gizmodo | Imagine a scenario, perhaps a few years from now, in which Canada
decides to release thousands of mosquitoes genetically modified to fight
the spread of a devastating mosquito-borne illness. While Canada has
deemed these lab-made mosquitoes ethical, legal and safe for both humans
and the environment, the US has not. Months later, by accident and
circumstance, the engineered skeeters show up across the border. The
laws of one land, suddenly, have become the rule of another.
If
modern science can can defy the boundaries of borders, who exactly
should be charged with deciding what science to unleash upon the world?
A
version of this hypothetical scenario is already unfolding in the UK.
Last year, the British government gave scientists the green light to
genetically engineer human embryos. But in the US and most other
nations, this possibility is still both illegal and morally fraught.
Opponents to the practice argue that it risks opening up a Pandora’s Box
of designer babies and genetically engineered super-humans. Even many more neutral voices argue that the technology demands further scrutiny.
And
yet, the UK, at the vanguard of genetic engineering human beings, has
already opened that box. In 2015, the British government approved the
use of a controversial gene-editing technology to stop devastating
mitochondrial diseases from being passed on from mothers to their future
children. And last February, the UK granted the first license in the
world to edit healthy human embryos for research. Recently, a Newsweek headline asked whether the scientists of this small island nation are in fact deciding the fate of all of humanity. It is a pretty good question.
This alarming ethical conundrum has not escaped the notice of global governments. A National Intelligence Council report
released this month concluded that “genome editing and human
enhancement” are “likely to pose some of the most contentious values
questions in the coming decades.” Advancements in these arenas, the
report said, “will affect relations between states.”
Dr. Calhoun was a researcher at the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).
In his most famous experiment, four breeding pairs of mice were moved
into a mouse utopia. There were unlimited supplies of food, water and
bedding. The area was disease free, the temperature perfectly
controlled, and the researchers even cleaned the place monthly. As close
to heaven as a mouse could get. All that they lacked was infinite space. There was, however, room for 3,000 mice.
Mice, for those who are unaware,
are actually quite social creatures in the right conditions. They take
on group roles, mark out territories, and develop hierarchies if their
environment allows. It is this behavior that Calhoun wished to affect,
and study. He described the experiment in terms of four “eras”,
summarized here.
Days 0-100: The era called “Strive”. During which the mice were getting used to the new world, territories were established.
Days 100-315: The “Exploit”
period. The population doubled every 60 or so days. Normal social
behavior was noted here, and the population took full advantage of its
unlimited resources.
Days 315-600: The “Equilibrium”
period. It was here that the social roles of mice began to break down.
Mice born during this period found they lacked space to mark out
territories in, and random acts of violence among the mice began to
occur. Many males simply gave up on trying to find females. These males
retreated into their bedding and rarely ventured out. Simply eating,
sleeping, and grooming. Calhoun dubbed these narcissistic loners “The Beautiful Ones”. They also tended to be rather stupid.
Days 600-800: The “Die”
phase. The population, which maxed-out at 2,200, began to decline. No
surviving births took place after day 600, and the colony ultimately
died out. Individuals removed from the colony and placed in similar
units continued to demonstrate erratic behavior and also failed to
reproduce. The mice were remarkably violent at this time, for little
reason.
A formula was written to explain what happened to the
mice, how the population continued to crash even after conditions began
to improve again. Calhoun felt there were truly two deaths for the
mice: the first death was a spiritual one, leading to the
decline into chaos and madness. After that event, no recovery was
possible for the mice. The second was physical, and inevitable after the
first.
Counterpunch | It feels as if world events are in overdrive, and sometimes it’s hard
to escape the thought that that there is no longer much point in trying
to analyse, or make sense of, a trajectory increasingly out of control.
I see little evidence that those of us in the segment of the world
political spectrum likely to read these words need much persuasion — nor
that those who consider us dupes of the Evil Vladimir, or apologists
for what was once called the “Yellow Peril”, could ever have any
inclination to even glance at the arguments and sentiments of those they
consider so utterly deluded.
In fact, the plethora of information (both truth and lies), and the
amazing communicative possibilities most of us now have at our disposal,
have brought with them a world in which no one is very often persuaded
of anything: for every fact we present, they have access to an official
or cleverly crafted lie with convincing-looking documentation that
demonstrates our ostensible mendacity and subversion.
What pre-internet thinker – is it possible that bygone age ended only
20 years ago for most of us? — would have ever thought that a
technological world in which every voice can be heard worldwide would
solidify, rather than threaten, the role of propaganda in public life?
or that near-universal access to technology enabling impressively
thorough research, at incredible speed, would be one of the major
factors in eliminating political consensus and rendering nearly obsolete
the recognition of facts as such?
Well, perhaps there are brilliant minds out there who foresaw it all.
But consider me dumbfounded. While there is a range of similarities
between our world today and those described by Orwell and Huxley in
their famous novels of future horror, there are other aspects that
render this a different universe altogether, and one that continues to
shock me.
Assuming that it WERE in fact possible to persuade people who accept
their governments’ colossal lies and distortions that those same lies
are in fact exactly that – lies — one would be required to acquaint most
of them with the most basic facts of recent history. For remarkably,
almost unbelievably, in a world where all of us have limitless
information and history at our fingertips, most people know nothing
about recent history – and the vast majority is not even curious about
it.
‘Most White Americans, as a general statement, think they are better
than the rest of the world. And most Americans have scant knowledge
about the rest of the world. So the belief in cultural (and moral)
superiority is based on what? The answer is not simple, but as a general
sort of response, this trust in “our” superiority is built on violence.
On an ability to be effectively violent. Most British, too, think they
are superior to those “wogs” south of their emerald isle. But since the
setting of the sun on Empire, “officially”, the British hold to both a
sense of superiority and a deep panic-inducing sense of inferiority — at
least to their American cousins. They are still better than those
fucking cheese eating frogs or the krauts or whoever, but they accept
that the U.S. is the sort of heavyweight champ of the moment. Meanwhile,
the tragic and criminal fire at Grenfell Towers in London elicited a
public discourse that perfectly reflected the class inequality of the
UK, but also reflected, again, the colonialist mentality of the ruling
party and their constituency … But that is exactly it. The colonial
template is one etched in acid in the collective imagination of the
West. At least the English-speaking West. Expendable natives…which is
what Jim Mattis sees everywhere that he dumps depleted uranium and Willy
Pete. It is what Madeleine Albright saw in Iraq or Hillary Clinton in
Libya or Barack Obama in Sudan, Yemen, and…well… four or five other
countries. It is what most U.S. police departments see in neighborhoods
ravaged by poverty. As in those old Tarzan films, when the sound of
drums is heard, the pith helmeted white man notes…”the natives are
restless tonight”. When one discusses Syria, the most acute topic this
week, remember that for Mad Dog and Boss Trump, or for the loopy John
Bolton, these are just natives in need of pacification. Giving money to
ISIS or Daesh, or whoever, as a cynical expression of colonial
realpolitik, is nothing out of the ordinary. It is what the UK and US
have done for a long while. It’s Ramar of the Jungle handing out beads
to the *natives*.’ (John Steppling, “The Sleep of Civilization”)
medicalnewstoday | The potentially catastrophic consequences of an exponentially growing
global population is a favorite subject for writers of dystopian
fiction.
The most recent example, Utopia - a forthcoming David Fincher-directed series for HBO
- won critical acclaim in its original incarnation on UK television for
its depiction of a conspiracy-laden modern world where the real threat
to public health is not Ebola or other headline-friendly communicable viruses, but overpopulation.
Fears over the ever-expanding number of human bodies on our planet are
not new and have been debated by researchers and policy makers for
decades, if not centuries. However, recent research by University of Washington demographer Prof. Adrian Raftery
- using modern statistical modeling and the latest data on population,
fertility and mortality - has found that previous projections on
population growth may have been conservative.
"Our new projections are probabilistic, and we find that there will
probably be between 9.6 and 12.3 billion people in 2100," Prof. Raftery
told Medical News Today. "This projection is based on a
statistical model that uses all available past data on fertility and
mortality from all countries in a systematic way, unlike previous
projections that were based on expert assumptions."
Prof. Raftery's figure places up to an additional 5 billion people more
on the Earth by 2100 than have been previously calculated.
A key finding of the study is that the fertility rate in Africa is
declining much more slowly than has been previously estimated, which
Prof. Raftery tells us "has major long-term implications for
population."
medium |Earlier this summer, I presented the American Nations:
the eleven regional cultures that comprise the United States and North
America. Their existence explains much about our history, our constitutional arrangements,
and, indeed, our political fissures — past and present. If you have any
ancestors who were living in North America prior to the Civil War, the
existence of these rival nations is likely reflected in parts of your
family tree and, according to a recent study published in Nature Communications, may very well have left a mark on your DNA.
I couldn’t miss this study, because shortly after it came out, readers of my 2011 book, American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America,
were stuffing my inbox and flooding my social media feeds with it. A
glance at the thumbnail illustration that accompanied the study made it
clear why: Unbeknownst to the scientists who’d written the paper, the
map depicting the key results of their research on the patterns of
genetic variation in North America over time and space mirrored the
American Nations map to an uncanny degree.
This
is remarkable because the American Nations paradigm is resolutely not
about genetics or genealogy. Rather, it’s built on the late cultural
geographer Wilbur ZeFrolinsky’s Doctrine of First Effective Settlement,
which argues that when a “new” society is settled, the cultural
characteristics of the initial settlement group will have a lasting and
outsized effect on the future trajectory of that society — even if their
numbers were very small and those of later immigrants of different
origins were very large. These lasting characteristics, which inform the
dominant culture of entire regions of North America, are passed down
culturally, not genetically, which explains why the Dutch-settled area
around New York City still has obvious and distinct characteristics
inherited from Golden Age Amsterdam, even though the portion of people
there reporting Dutch ancestry to census takers is a vanishingly small
0.2 percent. Culture is learned, not inherited.
And yet the Nature
study — powered by the enormous cross-referenced genomics and genealogy
databases of Ancestry.com — reveals that the regional cultures have
left a significant genetic imprint as well. That’s because members of a
regional culture tended to mate with one another, rather than with
people from rival areas, even when those rivals lived nearby, in the
very same colony or state.
“Who
we are today — the genetics of Americans all over the place — is the
result of all kinds of cycles of reproductive isolation and the release
of that isolation,” says Catherine A. Ball, a geneticist and the chief
scientific officer at Ancestry who oversees the company’s DNA work. “Who
your mates would be was linked to geography, politics, religion, war,
and all of that is showing today in people walking on the streets and
who they are related to.”
Ball wasn’t familiar with American Nations
before I spoke with her, but the results show that the boundaries of
the regional cultures were very real when it came to human reproduction,
creating reproductive clusters centuries ago that geneticists have been
able to recreate through the examination of nearly a million living
Americans’ DNA.
ieet | For the sake of the children, let’s control human breeding. No one
should be permitted to reproduce until they pass a battery of tests.
Does that proposal enrage you? Go ahead, hate me. Call me vile names
like “Neo-Nazi-Elitist-Baby-Killing-Totalitarian-Sicko.” Or simply
“Eugenicist.” I don’t care. I know I’m right.
It’s blatantly clear that 15-year-old intoxicated half-wits can
easily spawn, but should they? Hell no. Let’s control human breeding,
please. Let’s keep babies away from buffoons, and let’s test fetuses
meticulously to guarantee healthy infants. No one should be permitted to
reproduce unless and until they pass a battery of tests.
Philosophers, psychologists, and social workers have advanced this
idea for 30+ years, notably Hugh LaFollette in his seminal essay, “Licensing Parents” (1980), and Peg Tittle, editor of Should Parents Be Licensed?
(2004). Their suggested reform—based on humanitarian concerns for the
rights of children—is always booed down hysterically with the shrill
vocabulary that I listed above.
But the reformers are right. Completely. Ethically. I agree with
Joseph Fletcher, who notes, “It is depressing…to realize that most
people are accidents,” and with George Schedler, who states, “Society
has a duty to ensure that infants are born free of avoidable defects.”
Traditionalists regard pregnancy and parenting as a natural right
that should never be curtailed. But what’s the result of this
laissez-faire attitude? Catastrophic suffering. Millions of children
born disadvantaged, crippled in childhood, destroyed in adolescence.
Procreation cannot be classified as a self-indulgent privilege—it needs
to be viewed as a life-and-death responsibility.
Look at it this way: adoption centers don’t allow knuckleheads to
walk out with a child; they maintain standards that we should apply to every wannabe parent.
Below I’ve compiled a list of deplorable situations caused by flawed
individuals who should not be allowed to impregnate, gestate, reproduce,
and parent because they’re mentally, physically, emotionally, or
genetically unsuitable for the ambitious task.
theintercept | DRONES ARE A TOOL, not a policy. The policy is assassination.
While every president since Gerald Ford has upheld an executive order
banning assassinations by U.S. personnel, Congress has avoided
legislating the issue or even defining
the word “assassination.” This has allowed proponents of the drone wars
to rebrand assassinations with more palatable characterizations, such
as the term du jour, “targeted killings.”
When the Obama administration has discussed drone strikes publicly,
it has offered assurances that such operations are a more precise
alternative to boots on the ground and are authorized only when an
“imminent” threat is present and there is “near certainty” that the
intended target will be eliminated. Those terms, however, appear to have
been bluntly redefined to bear almost no resemblance to their commonly understood meanings.
The first drone strike outside of a declared war zone was conducted more than 12 years ago, yet it was not until May 2013 that the White House released a set of standards and procedures
for conducting such strikes. Those guidelines offered little
specificity, asserting that the U.S. would only conduct a lethal strike
outside of an “area of active hostilities” if a target represents a
“continuing, imminent threat to U.S. persons,” without providing any
sense of the internal process
used to determine whether a suspect should be killed without being
indicted or tried. The implicit message on drone strikes from the Obama
administration has been one of trust, but don’t verify.
The Intercept has obtained a cache of secret slides that
provides a window into the inner workings of the U.S. military’s
kill/capture operations at a key time in the evolution of the drone wars
— between 2011 and 2013. The documents, which also outline the internal
views of special operations forces on the shortcomings and flaws of the
drone program, were provided by a source within the intelligence
community who worked on the types of operations and programs described
in the slides. The Intercept granted the source’s request for
anonymity because the materials are classified and because the U.S.
government has engaged in aggressive prosecution of whistleblowers. The
stories in this series will refer to the source as “the source.” Fist tap Dale
The source said he decided to provide these documents to The Intercept
because he believes the public has a right to understand the process by
which people are placed on kill lists and ultimately assassinated on
orders from the highest echelons of the U.S. government. “This
outrageous explosion of watchlisting — of monitoring people and racking
and stacking them on lists, assigning them numbers, assigning them
‘baseball cards,’ assigning them death sentences without notice, on a
worldwide battlefield — it was, from the very first instance, wrong,”
the source said. Fist tap Dale
muckrock | As
part of a request for records on Antifa and white supremacist groups,
WSFC inadvertently bundles in “EM effects on human body.zip”
When you send thousands of FOIA requests, you are bound to get some
very weird responses from time to time. Recently, we here at MuckRock
had one of our most bizarre gets yet - Washington State Fusion Center’s
accidental release of records on the effects of remote mind control.
arstechnica | One-shot cures for diseases are not great for business—more
specifically, they’re bad for longterm profits—Goldman Sachs analysts
noted in an April 10 report for biotech clients, first reported by CNBC.
The investment banks’ report, titled “The Genome Revolution,” asks
clients the touchy question: “Is curing patients a sustainable business
model?” The answer may be “no,” according to follow-up information
provided.
Analyst Salveen Richter and colleagues laid it out:
The potential to deliver “one shot cures” is one of the
most attractive aspects of gene therapy, genetically engineered cell
therapy, and gene editing. However, such treatments offer a very
different outlook with regard to recurring revenue versus chronic
therapies... While this proposition carries tremendous value for
patients and society, it could represent a challenge for genome medicine
developers looking for sustained cash flow.
For a real-world example, they pointed to Gilead Sciences, which
markets treatments for hepatitis C that have cure rates exceeding 90
percent. In 2015, the company’s hepatitis C treatment sales peaked at
$12.5 billion. But as more people were cured and there were fewer
infected individuals to spread the disease, sales began to languish.
Goldman Sachs analysts estimate that the treatments will bring in less
than $4 billion this year.
“[Gilead]’s rapid rise and fall of its hepatitis C franchise
highlights one of the dynamics of an effective drug that permanently
cures a disease, resulting in a gradual exhaustion of the prevalent pool
of patients,” the analysts wrote. The report noted that diseases such
as common cancers—where the “incident pool remains stable”—are less
risky for business.
To get around the sustainability issue overall, the report suggests
that biotech companies focus on diseases or conditions that seem to be
becoming more common and/or are already high-incidence. It also suggests
that companies be innovative and constantly expanding their portfolio
of treatments. This can “offset the declining revenue trajectory of
prior assets." Lastly, it hints that, as such cures come to fruition,
they could open up more investment opportunities in treatments for
“disease of aging.” Fist tap Dale
theconservativetreehouse | If you look at Robert Mueller from the position of trying to protect
his cherished Deep State institutions from horrible Trump swamp
draining…. things begin to take a more accurate context. The only way
for Mueller to protect his Swamp Allies and Institutions, was to
generate leverage against Trump.
Having established only political leverage, nothing factually
unlawful or illegal, the Mueller investigation begins to dry up.
Leverage diminishes.
Without direct leverage against President Trump, Team Mueller moved
to position leverage against those Trump cares about… that’s a secondary
approach; but the secondary leverage approach is fraught with public
noting Mueller is on a “witch hunt”… the investigation into outlying
Trump allies becomes transparent in motive. Support for Mueller erodes
amid independent-minded people.
Enter Rudy Giuliani, a political and legal Subject Matter Expert – with direct knowledge of evidence held
by NYPD and NY FBI field office of gross criminal conduct by Hillary
Clinton. (Weiner Laptop etc) Buried by SDNY Clinton Allies.
With Special Counsel Mueller having exhausted most of his
investigative leverage, Giuliani enters to negotiate Mueller’s exit and
discuss his team’s path of retreat and image face-saving.
The discussion from Mueller’s perspective will not center around
Trump, but rather center around how much risk to Hillary Clinton, and by
extension political allies within FBI and DOJ – including Obama White
House, Mueller will permit.
Mueller will be looking to protect the interests of Obama, Clinton,
Lynch, Comey, Brennan, Clapper, etc. and negotiating degrees of risk to
the institutions each represents. This is the political horsetrading
phase. The leverage cards held by each participant are laid on the table
for discussion. Low leverage officials will be sacrificed by Mueller to
protect those holding more leverage.
Giuliani is a well qualified person to present the Trump
administration position within these negotiations. They are essentially
negotiating who faces criminal prosecution and who doesn’t.
Ultimately protecting Obama and Clinton will be of higher importance
to Mueller. If Mueller doesn’t protect Clinton, he knows her team will
destroy everyone if she goes down. That scorched earth approach is a
historic part of Team Clinton’s leverage. The stronger the evidence is
against Clinton the more people Mueller will have to give up to protect
her. The stronger the evidence against the corrupt institutions, the
bigger the officials Mueller will have to sacrifice to save them.
Negotiating all this with Robert Mueller will likely be Rudy Giuliani’s primary job.
Likely the general public will never know the ultimate deal
decisions. We will only be able to gauge the scale of corruption by the
officials Mueller agrees to sacrifice.
bloomberg | Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein told President Donald Trump
last week that he isn’t a target of any part of Special Counsel Robert
Mueller’s investigation or the probe into his longtime lawyer, Michael
Cohen, according to several people familiar with the matter.
Rosenstein,
who brought up the investigations himself, offered the assurance during
a meeting with Trump at the White House last Thursday, a development
that helped tamp down the president’s desire to remove Rosenstein or
Mueller, the people said.
After the meeting, Trump told some of his closest advisers that it’s
not the right time to remove either man since he’s not a target of the
probes. One person said Trump doesn’t want to take any action that would
drag out the investigation.
The change in attitude by the president comes after weeks of
attacks on the special counsel and the Justice Department, raising
questions about whether he might take drastic steps to shut down the
probes.
The
shift gives some breathing room for Mueller, as well as Rosenstein, who
has been criticized strongly by House Republicans for being slow to
comply with requests for classified documents. Last week’s meeting was
set up in part to allow Rosenstein to assuage Trump’s frustration with
his decisions.
U.S. stocks pared their decline on the news. The
S&P 500 Index closed down 0.6 percent in New York trading after an
earlier slump of as much as 1 percent.
Rosenstein’s message may
have been based on a technicality. Trump may not officially be a target,
but Mueller hasn’t ruled out making him one at some point in the
future, according to a U.S. official with knowledge of the unfolding
investigation.
NYTimes | High in the Sierra Nevada mountains of Spain, an international team of researchers set out four buckets to gather a shower of viruses falling from the sky.
Scientists have surmised there is a stream of viruses circling the planet, above the planet’s weather systems but below the level of airline travel. Very little is known about this realm, and that’s why the number of deposited viruses stunned the team in Spain. Each day, they calculated, some 800 million viruses cascade onto every square meter of the planet.
Most of the globe-trotting viruses are swept into the air by sea spray, and lesser numbers arrive in dust storms.
“Unimpeded by friction with the surface of the Earth, you can travel great distances, and so intercontinental travel is quite easy” for viruses, said Curtis Suttle, a marine virologist at the University of British Columbia. “It wouldn’t be unusual to find things swept up in Africa being deposited in North America.”
The study by Dr. Suttle and his colleagues, published earlier this year in the International Society of Microbial Ecology Journal, was the first to count the number of viruses falling onto the planet. The research, though, is not designed to study influenza or other illnesses, but to get a better sense of the “virosphere,” the world of viruses on the planet.
Generally it’s assumed these viruses originate on the planet and are swept upward, but some researchers theorize that viruses actually may originate in the atmosphere. (There is a small group of researchers who believe viruses may even have come here from outer space, an idea known as panspermia.)
Whatever the case, viruses are the most abundant entities on the planet by far. While Dr. Suttle’s team found hundreds of millions of viruses in a square meter, they counted tens of millions of bacteria in the same space.
Mostly thought of as infectious agents, viruses are much more than that. It’s hard to overstate the central role that viruses play in the world: They’re essential to everything from our immune system to our gut microbiome, to the ecosystems on land and sea, to climate regulation and the evolution of all species. Viruses contain a vast diverse array of unknown genes — and spread them to other species.
Last year, three experts called for a new initiative to better understand viral ecology, especially as the planet changes. “Viruses modulate the function and evolution of all living things,” wrote Matthew B. Sullivan of Ohio State, Joshua Weitz of Georgia Tech, and Steven W. Wilhelm of the University of Tennessee. “But to what extent remains a mystery.”
theguardian | Scientists have created a mutant enzyme that breaks down plastic
drinks bottles – by accident. The breakthrough could help solve the
global plastic pollution crisis by enabling for the first time the full
recycling of bottles.
The new research was spurred by the discovery in 2016 of the first bacterium that had naturally evolved to eat plastic, at a waste dump in Japan. Scientists have now revealed the detailed structure of the crucial enzyme produced by the bug.
The international team then tweaked the enzyme to see how it had
evolved, but tests showed they had inadvertently made the molecule even
better at breaking down the PET (polyethylene terephthalate) plastic
used for soft drink bottles. “What actually turned out was we improved
the enzyme, which was a bit of a shock,” said Prof John McGeehan, at the
University of Portsmouth, UK, who led the research. “It’s great and a
real finding.”
The mutant enzyme takes a few days to start breaking down the plastic
– far faster than the centuries it takes in the oceans. But the
researchers are optimistic this can be speeded up even further and
become a viable large-scale process.
“What we are hoping to do is use this enzyme to turn this plastic
back into its original components, so we can literally recycle it back
to plastic,” said McGeehan. “It means we won’t need to dig up any more
oil and, fundamentally, it should reduce the amount of plastic in the
environment.”
About 1m plastic bottles are sold each minute around the globe and, with just 14% recycled, many end up in the oceans where they have polluted even the remotest parts,
harming marine life and potentially people who eat seafood. “It is
incredibly resistant to degradation. Some of those images are horrific,”
said McGeehan. “It is one of these wonder materials that has been made a
little bit too well.”
However, currently even those bottles that are recycled can only be
turned into opaque fibres for clothing or carpets. The new enzyme
indicates a way to recycle clear plastic bottles back into clear plastic
bottles, which could slash the need to produce new plastic.
“You are always up against the fact that oil is cheap, so virgin PET
is cheap,” said McGeehan. “It is so easy for manufacturers to generate
more of that stuff, rather than even try to recycle. But I believe there
is a public driver here: perception is changing so much that companies
are starting to look at how they can properly recycle these.”
APNews | For more than two years, a U.S. agency secretly infiltrated Cuba’s
underground hip-hop movement, recruiting unwitting rappers to spark a
youth movement against the government, according to documents obtained
by The Associated Press.
The idea was to use Cuban musicians “to
break the information blockade” and build a network of young people
seeking “social change,” documents show. But the operation was
amateurish and profoundly unsuccessful.
On at least six occasions,
Cuban authorities detained or interrogated people involved in the
program; they also confiscated computer hardware, and in some cases it
contained information that jeopardized Cubans who likely had no idea
they were caught up in a clandestine U.S. operation. Still, contractors
working for the U.S. Agency for International Development kept putting
themselves and their targets at risk, the AP investigation found.
They
also ended up compromising Cuba’s vibrant hip-hop culture — which has
produced some of the hardest-hitting grassroots criticism since Fidel
Castro came to power in 1959. Artists that USAID contractors tried to
promote left the country or stopped performing after pressure from the
Cuban government, and one of the island’s most popular independent music
festivals was taken over after officials linked it to USAID.
The
program is laid out in documents involving Creative Associates
International, a Washington, D.C., contractor paid millions of dollars
to undermine Cuba’s communist government. The thousands of pages include
contracts, emails, preserved chats, budgets, expense reports, power
points, photographs and passports.
The work included the creation
of a “Cuban Twitter” social network and the dispatch of inexperienced
Latin American youth to recruit activists, operations that were the
focus of previous AP stories.
“Any assertions that our work is
secret or covert are simply false,” USAID said in a statement Wednesday.
Its programs were aimed at strengthening civil society “often in places
where civic engagement is suppressed and where people are harassed,
arrested, subjected to physical harm or worse.”
Creative Associates did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
strategic-culture | When
it comes to creating bogus news stories and advancing false narratives,
the British intelligence services have few peers. In fact, the Secret
Intelligence Service (MI-6) has led the way for its American “cousins”
and Britain’s Commonwealth partners – from Canada and Australia to India
and Malaysia – in the dark art of spreading falsehoods as truths.
Recently, the world has witnessed such MI-6 subterfuge in news stories
alleging that Russia carried out a novichok nerve agent attack against a
Russian émigré and his daughter in Salisbury, England. This propaganda
barrage was quickly followed by yet another – the latest in a series of
similar fabrications – alleging the Syrian government attacked civilians
in Douma, outside of Damascus, with chemical weapons.
It
should come as no surprise that American news networks rely on British
correspondents stationed in northern Syria and Beirut as their primary
sources. MI-6 has historically relied on non-official cover (NOC) agents
masquerading primarily as journalists, but also humanitarian aid
workers, Church of England clerics, international bankers, and hotel
managers, to carry out propaganda tasks. These NOCs are situated in
positions where they can promulgate British government disinformation to
unsuspecting actual journalists and diplomats.
For
decades, a little-known section of the British Foreign Office – the
Information Research Department (IRD) – carried out propaganda campaigns
using the international media as its platform on behalf of MI-6. Years
before Syria’s Bashar al-Assad, Iraq’s Saddam Hussein, Libya’s Muammar
Qaddafi, and Sudan’s Omar al-Bashir became targets for Western
destabilization and “regime change.” IRD and its associates at the
British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC) and in the newsrooms and
editorial offices of Fleet Street broadsheets, tabloids, wire services,
and magazines, particularly “The Daily Telegraph,” “The Times,”
“Financial Times,” Reuters, “The Guardian,” and “The Economist,” ran
media smear campaigns against a number of leaders considered to be
leftists, communists, or FTs (fellow travelers).
These
leaders included Indonesia’s President Sukarno, North Korean leader
(and grandfather of Pyongyang’s present leader) Kim Il-Sung, Egypt’s
Gamal Abdel Nasser, Cyprus’s Archbishop Makarios, Cuba’s Fidel Castro,
Chile’s Salvador Allende, British Guiana’s Cheddi Jagan, Grenada’s
Maurice Bishop, Jamaica’s Michael Manley, Nicaragua’s Daniel Ortega,
Guinea’s Sekou Toure, Burkina Faso’s Thomas Sankara, Australia’s Gough
Whitlam, New Zealand’s David Lange, Cambodia’s Norodom Sihanouk, Malta’s
Dom Mintoff, Vanuatu’s Father Walter Lini, and Ghana’s Kwame Nkrumah.
After
the Cold War, this same propaganda operation took aim at Serbian
President Slobodan Milosevic, Sinn Fein leader Gerry Adams, Venezuela’s
Hugo Chavez, Somalia’s Mohamad Farrah Aidid, and Haiti’s Jean-Bertrand
Aristide. Today, it is Assad’s, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban’s,
and Catalonian independence leader Carles Puigdemont’s turn to be in
the Anglo-American state propaganda gunsights. Even Myanmar leader Aung
San Suu Kyi, long a darling of the Western media and such propaganda
moguls as George Soros, is now being targeted for Western visa bans and
sanctions over the situation with Muslim Rohingya insurgents in Rakhine
State.
FrontPage |In the Western world, knowledge
of history is poor -- and the awareness of history is frequently
poorer. For example, people often argue today as if the kind of
political order that prevails in Iraq is part of the immemorial Arab and
Islamic tradition. This is totally untrue. The kind of regime
represented by Saddam Hussein has no roots in either the Arab or Islamic
past. Rather, it is an ideological importation from Europe -- the only
one that worked and succeeded (at least in the sense of being able to
survive).
In 1940, the French government
accepted defeat and signed a separate peace with the Third Reich. The
French colonies in Syria and Lebanon remained under Vichy control, and
were therefore open to the Nazis to do what they wished. They became
major bases for Nazi propaganda and activity in the Middle East. The
Nazis extended their operations from Syria and Lebanon, with some
success, to Iraq and other places. That was the time when the Baath
Party was founded, as a kind of clone of the Nazi and Fascist parties,
using very similar methods and adapting a very similar ideology, and
operating in the same way -- as part of an apparatus of surveillance
that exists under a one-party state, where a party is not a party in the
Western democratic sense, but part of the apparatus of a government.
That was the origin of the Baath Party.
When the Third Reich collapsed,
and after an interval was replaced by the Soviet Union as the patron of
all anti-Western forces, the adjustment from the Nazi model to the
Communist model was not very difficult and was carried throughout
without problems. That is where the present Iraqi type of government
comes from. As I said before, it has no roots in the authentic Arabic or
Islamic past. It is, instead, part of the most successful and most
harmful process of Westernization to have occurred in the Middle East. When Westernization failed in
the Middle East, this failure was followed by a redefinition and return
to older, more deep-rooted perceptions of self and other. I mean, of
course, religion.
Religion had several
advantages. It was more familiar. It was more readily intelligible. It
could be understood immediately by Muslims. Nationalist and socialist
slogans, by contrast, needed explanation. Religion was less impeded.
What I mean is that even the most ruthless of dictatorships cannot
totally suppress religiously defined opposition. In the mosques, people
can meet and speak. In most fascist-style states, openly meeting and
speaking are rigidly controlled and repressed. This is not possible in
dealing with Islam. Islamic opposition movements can use a language
familiar to all, and, through mosques, can tap into a network of
communication and organization.
HuffPo | During the final months of World War II, Hitler saw his dreams for a
Third Reich crumble as Allied Forces turned the tides of war. Hitler
became increasingly desperate for results and for propaganda wins to
maintain morale. He sought counsel from Otto Skorzeny, the leader of Operation Greif,
which used German soldiers to infiltrate their opponents by adapting
enemy languages, uniforms and customs. Skorzeny was the twisted genius
who had dressed Nazi soldiers in American uniforms in an effort to
spread rumors of Eisenhower’s assassination and demoralize the Allies.
In 1943, Skorzeny led the rescue mission that freed Benito Mussolini
from prison. In 1944, he organized a secret unit of German suicide
bombers.
As the Nazi war effort failed, Hitler designated Skorzeny to create a
new secret underground resistance movement—a terrorist unit calledWerwolf.
The Werewolves’ sole purpose would be to attack the Allies after the
war was over. They were to perform random acts of violence around
Europe, sabotage rebuilding efforts, and destabilize governments in a
guerrilla effort to build the Third Reich.
Many of the Werewolves were captured by the Allied Forces or
abandoned their posts before unleashing much terror on Europe, but some
fled to the Middle East.
Skorzeny Sets Up Shop In The Middle East
In Infield’s 1981 biography, Skorzeny: Hitler’s Commando,
Infield describes how Skorzeny went to Egypt, where he recruited a
staff of former SS officers to mask themselves as converted Muslims and
train elite young Mujahideen and the Egyptian Army in terrorist tactics.
Infield knew and interviewed Skorzeny, and uncovered a great deal of
information relevant to the terrorism we are fighting today.
It was Skorzeny who trained Arab volunteers in guerrilla warfare
tactics to use against the British troops stationed in the Suez Canal
zone. Palestinian refugees also received commando training, and Skorzeny
planned their initial strikes into Israel via the Gaza Strip in
1953-1954.
One of these young Palestinians was Yasser Arafat, who went on to
become the leader of the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO). The
PLO was formed by Palestinian refugees seeking to claim land rights. It
was their terrorist arm, Black September, that carried out the horrific
kidnapping and murder of eleven Israeli athletes and coaches at the 1972
Olympics in Munich.
The Nazi link to Islamic extremism and terrorist tactics is clear. Nazis, Islamists, and the Making of the Modern Middle East
also explores the Nazi political influence on radical Islamic political
organisations, including the Muslim Brotherhood (founded in Egypt in
1928) and the Arab Socialist Ba’ath Party of Syria founded in 1947.
Former Nazis not only trained Islamic extremists in terror tactics, they
also encouraged a nationalistic, socialist and genocidal political
agenda in them.
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