Working for the Man

How many hours of your peasant life are spent working for the feudal lords? A lot:

This year, Americans have to work until July 15 to pay for the burden of government, more than six months.

In a new report, Americans for Tax Reform (ATR) has calculated that Americans will spend a total of 197 days toiling to pay for the cost of government.

[…]

The report, Cost of Government Day, shows that Americans will work 88 days to pay for federal spending; 40 days for state and local spending; and 69 days for total regulatory costs.

Six months of your life next year will be spent working to give a violent agency that’s spending every dollar it can get ahold of to further cement its power in order to steal even more from you. Feudalism never left, we’re the peasants while the state is the manor lord. We’re allowed to keep a portion of what we make for subsistence only because dead people don’t generate wealth that can be stolen.

Facebook is Spying on You and Water is Wet

In news that is sure to shock nobody some information has come to light about Facebook’s method for spying on its users:

Facebook has added sleuthing to its array of data-mining capabilities, scanning your posts and chats for criminal activity. If the social-networking giant detects suspicious behavior, it flags the content and determines if further steps, such as informing the police, are required.

[…]

Facebook’s software focuses on conversations between members who have a loose relationship on the social network. For example, if two users aren’t friends, only recently became friends, have no mutual friends, interact with each other very little, have a significant age difference, and/or are located far from each other, the tool pays particular attention.

The scanning program looks for certain phrases found in previously obtained chat records from criminals, including sexual predators (because of the Reuters story, we know of at least one alleged child predator who is being brought before the courts as a direct result of Facebook’s chat scanning)

For the sake of public relations Facebook made sure to pull an “It’s for the children!” move when they let people in on their little monitoring mechanism. The story talks about an instance where a man in his early 30s tried to pick up a 13 year-old girl. See, it’s good that Facebook spys on its users, they’re protecting the children!

Anybody who is surprised by this news obviously hasn’t been paying attention to Facebook’s business model. Facebook’s customers aren’t their users, it’s their advertisers. Advertisers pay Facebook money because Facebook’s users voluntarily give up a great deal of personal information that can be used to better target ads. As their business model involves mining personal data from users so the monitoring tools are already in place. It’s trivial to include certain phrases indicating criminal behavior in their data mining system.

The golden rule of the Internet is that you shouldn’t use third-party services to do anything illegal. Whether you’re selling drugs or plotting to overthrow the Republic of Elbonia do it with encrypted communication methods that aren’t controlled by third-parties. You should probably give only information you’re comfortable with the whole world knowing to third-party services as well.

The Reds are Invading Minnesota

It appears as though I’ll soon have to run to the wilderness and fight for my survival against the invading Red Army. They’ve already sent their fighter jets in but they’ve had little affect:

A vintage Russian jet was destroyed after crashing Thursday morning in Eden Prairie as it attempted to land for this weekend’s annual air show.

The pilot, who hasn’t been identified, was landing his 1975 MiG-21 at 10 a.m. at Flying Cloud Airport for this weekend’s Wings of the North AirExpo. Officials said the jet’s parachute, which helps slow the aircraft, was deployed, but appeared to collapse and detach, causing the plane to overshoot the runway.

I’ll be honest, I wasn’t expecting to hear about MiGs crashing in my area… ever.

So Much for Fences

The Secure Fence Act of 2006 granted possible funding to a, at the time, hypothetical fence, to be build on the border of the United States and Mexico. In 2008 the Reinstatement of the Secure Fence Act of 2008 was passed into law, which had the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) build 700 miles of fence (on a 1969 mile border, you can see how effective it is). Finally senator Jim DeMint tried introducing a “Finish the Fense” bill that would have required the DHS to complete the 700 mile fence (at the time they had only completed 34.3 miles according to DeMint’s site). Needless to say a lot of time, effort, and money has been invested into build a fence for nothing:

Two sophisticated tunnels probably built to smuggle drugs into the United States have been found on the border with Mexico.

The tunnels were more than 200m (656ft) long and had lighting and ventilation.

A US agent said their design “wasn’t something that an ordinary miner could have put together”.

More than 150 tunnels have been found criss-crossing the US-Mexico border since 1990; most were crude passageways.

That’s the funny thing about fences, you can simply tunnel under them. Sinking resources into building a fence to separate the United States and Mexico is nothing but wasted effort. The problem comes from the fact that smuggling drugs is a very lucrative business so great deals of resources will be spend on bypassing any mechanism designed to keep them. Mexicans crossing the border in search of work are also going to find ways of bypassing any barriers to entry because they stand the chance to make a great deal of money (compared to working in Mexico) in the United States.

Possible Violations of the Geneva Conventions

Only the most ruthless and vile nation would violate the Geneva Conventions on the treatment of prisoners of war, right? If that’s the case then we can likely include the United States on the list of ruthless and vile nations:

Prisoners inside the U.S. military’s detention center at Guantanamo Bay were forcibly given “mind altering drugs,” including being injected with a powerful anti-psychotic sedative used in psychiatric hospitals. Prisoners were often not told what medications they received, and were tricked into believing routine flu shots were truth serums. It’s a serious violation of medical ethics, made worse by the fact that the military continued to interrogate prisoners while they were doped on psychoactive chemicals.

That’s according to a recently declassified report (.pdf) from the Pentagon’s inspector general, obtained by Truthout after a Freedom of Information Act Request. In it, the inspector general concludes that “certain detainees, diagnosed as having serious mental health conditions being treated with psychoactive medications on a continuing basis, were interrogated.” The report does not conclude, though, that anti-psychotic drugs were used specifically for interrogation purposes.

The claim that the drugs were being administered to treat “mental health conditions” is likely nothing more than a mechanism to get around the Geneva Conventions. One thing the Geneva Conventions prohibit is the use of drugs to interrogate prisoners [PDF]:

The essence of coercion is the compulsion of a person by a superior force, often a government, to do or refrain from doing something involuntarily. The intentional application of an unlawful force that robs a person of free will is coercive. However, circumstances that cause a person to reevaluate a course of action, even if deception is instrumental, may arguably be non-coercive pressure. Under the interpretation set forth in FM 34-52, “physical or mental torture and coercion revolve around the elimination of the source’s free will.”46 These activities, along with “brainwashing,” are not authorized, it explains, but are not to be confused with the psychological techniques and ruses presented in the manual. FM 34-52 includes in the definition of mental coercion “drugs that may induce lasting and permanent mental alteration and damage.” This appears to reflect a change from earlier doctrine, which prohibited the use of any drugs on prisoners unless required for medical purposes.47

Footnote 47 has more specific details:

47 See Stanley J. Glod and Lawrence J. Smith, Interrogation under the 1949 Prisoners of War Convention, 21 MIL. L. REV. 145, 153-54 (1963)(citing JAGW 1961 / 1157, 21 June 21, 1961).

In an opinion by The Judge Advocate General of the Army reviewing the employment of [“truth serum”] in the light of Article 17, it was noted that Article 17 justly and logically must be extended to protect the prisoner against any inquisitorial practice by his captors which would rob him of his free will. On this basis it was held that the use of truth serum was outlawed by Article 17. In addition, its use contravenes Article 18, which states in part : “. . . no prisoner of war may be subject to . . . . medical or scientific experiments of any kind which are not justified by the medical, dental, or hospital treatment of the prisoner concerned and carried out in his interest.” The opinion declared that “. . . the suggested use of a chemical “truth serum” during the questioning of prisoners of war would be in violation of the obligations of the United States under the Geneva Convention Relative to the Treatment of Prisoners of War.” From this opinion it seems clear that any attempt to extract information from an unwilling prisoner of war by the use of chemicals, drugs, physiological or psychological devices, which impair or deprive the prisoner of his free will without being in his interest, such as a bonafide medical treatment, will be deemed a violation of Articles 13 and 17 of the Convention.

The 1987 version of FM 34-52 suggested that the use of any drugs for interrogation purposes amounted to mental coercion. FM 34-52 ch. 1 (1987).

Administering drugs for interrogation isn’t allowed under the conventions but administering drugs for medicinal reasons is a humanitarian action. Thus it’s easy to get around the Geneva Conventions if you want to interrogate prisoners with drugs, you merely have to claim the prisoners have mental conditions and administer the drugs for strictly medicinal reasons. As these prisoners are being held in a secret prison where no third-party doctor can come in and examine the prisoners any diagnosis of mental disorders is unverifiable. Isn’t that convenient?

More Information Regarding the Zimmerman Case Released

Miguel over at Gun Free Zone noted that 284 pages of information relating to the Zimmerman case have been released. I haven’t had time to do anything more than skim through it so far but I can say that any accusations of racism against Zimmerman can be put to rest now. I also haven’t found any mention of evidence supporting the charges brought against them, which leads me to further believe that Florida State Attorney General Angela Corey’s motives in bringing the charges were political. If Corey managed to get a guilty verdict against Zimmerman she would be seen as a hero to those who want to hang the man. At the very least it would be enough publicity to write a book and do a speaking tour.

Even if Zimmerman is ruled innocent is life is likely ruined. It won’t matter what evidence is brought forth demonstrating Zimmerman’s innocence, there are numerous people so emotionally invested in his guilt that there will likely be attempts on the man’s life. In all likelihood he’ll never be able to sleep with both eyes closed again. That, more than anything else, is the tragedy of actions taken based on public opinion.

The State Won’t Spy on You Unless it Does

With the increased use of drones in domestic airspace the Air Force went on record claiming they won’t use them to spy on American citizens unless it’s done accidentally:

Collected imagery may incidentally include US persons or private property without consent,” reads the instruction (.pdf), unearthed by the secrecy scholar Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists. That kind of “incidental” spying won’t be immediately purged, however. The Air Force has “a period not to exceed 90 days” to get rid of it — while it determines “whether that information may be collected under the provisions” of a Pentagon directive that authorizes limited domestic spying.

In other words, if an Air Force drone accidentally spies on an American citizen, the Air Force will have three months to figure out if it was legally allowed to put that person under surveillance in the first place.

It appears that there is another caveat to add to the list, when the Air Force is training drone pilots:

Holloman sits on almost 60,000 acres of desert badlands, near jagged hills that are frosted with snow for several months of the year — a perfect training ground for pilots who will fly Predators and Reapers over the similarly hostile terrain of Afghanistan. When I visited the base earlier this year with a small group of reporters, we were taken into a command post where a large flat-screen television was broadcasting a video feed from a drone flying overhead. It took a few seconds to figure out exactly what we were looking at. A white S.U.V. traveling along a highway adjacent to the base came into the cross hairs in the center of the screen and was tracked as it headed south along the desert road. When the S.U.V. drove out of the picture, the drone began following another car.

“Wait, you guys practice tracking enemies by using civilian cars?” a reporter asked. One Air Force officer responded that this was only a training mission, and then the group was quickly hustled out of the room.

I like how the trainees were whisked out of the room before the reporter could inquire further about this apparent breech of the Air Force’s accidental spying only promise. I’m sure the Air Force will destroy any footage collected during these training sessions within 90 days so everything will be nice and legal.

How Does that Work

There’s nothing about this story that doesn’t sound fishy:

A woman celebrating the weekend before her 25th birthday was fatally shot Sunday when she hugged an off-duty police officer while dancing at a party, causing the officer’s service weapon to fire, according to police and her mother.

[…]

According to Stephens, the woman “embraced the officer from behind, causing the holstered weapon to accidently discharge.” The bullet punctured Miller’s lung and hit her heart, and she died at a hospital.

I’ve been mulling this over with some of my friends and we’ve come up with a few possibilities. The only way the officer’s story could hold up, as far as my friends and I are concerned, is if the firearm was in a shoulder holster and when the gun was holstered by the officer something got into the trigger guard. Why a shoulder holster? Because the bullet punctured the woman’s heart and thus must have been aimed either up or a chest level.

Occam’s razor states that the simplest explanation is probably the correct one though and the simplest explanations are the cop either had the gun unholstered in a pocket or pulled the weapon out of his holster to mess with it. I really can’t see the officer’s story holding up as most holsters would prevent the trigger from being activated by mere pressure and he was wearing the holster on his hip the gun was either upside down or the bullet perfectly ricocheted off of the ground. At this point I’m not buying the officer’s story, it just doesn’t add up.

FBI Finally Offering a Reward for Information Pertaining to Brian Terry’s Murder

The Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) are finally offering a reward for information pertaining to Brian Terry’s murderer:

The FBI has offered a $1m (£644,000) reward for information on four suspects wanted over the killing of a US border patrol agent in December 2010.

What the FBI isn’t offering is a reward for the capture of those who allowed Fast and Furious to happen in the first place and have been busily trying to cover it up every since Terry’s murder. If I were the head of the FBI I’d offer a $1 million reward for anybody who could obtain a copy of the documents Eric Holder was granted executive privilege to withhold.

It’s not Your Property

It’s not your property, it’s the state’s. Any attempt to use your property outside of the permissions granted to you buy the lords state will be punished by imprisonment:

A Phoenix man has been sentenced to 60 days in jail after he refused to stop hosting Bible studies in the privacy of his home – in violation of the city’s building code laws.

However, the Phoenix city prosecutor’s office said the violations have nothing to do with religious freedom — and everything to do with public safety.

“It came down to zoning and proper permitting,” said Vicki Hill, the chief assistant city prosecutor. “Any time you are holding a gathering of people continuously as he does — we have concerns about people being able to exit the facility properly in case there is a fire — and that’s really all this comes down to.”

According to court documents provided to Fox News Radio, Michael Salman was found guilty in the City of Phoenix Court of 67 code violations. He was sentenced to 60 days in jail along with three years probation and a $12,180 fine. He could be jailed as early as next week unless the U.S. Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals grants an emergency injunction.

That’s right, Mr. Salman will suffer 60 days in a cage, three years of probation, and a $12,180 fine because he was under the mistaken assumption that he owned his property. As this story demonstrates people aren’t allowed to own property in the United States (or anywhere else that I’m aware of), you can only gain permission from the state to use property for the reasons they allow.