I updated my RSS feeds, which caused feed readers to repost them. Sorry about the reposts.
All posts by James O'Keefe
I moved Spontaneous Ideas again
I moved Spontaneous Ideas to another tumblr blog so that others can post to it and I can free up the old blog to be my lifestream. The domain and feeds and the like should update. If you get extra messages in your RSS feed besides this one, just ignore them.
“Obscure security makes school suck”
James Stephenson has an article on Boing Boing on how "Obscure security makes school suck". It is brief and well worth the read. Here are a few excerpts:
The thing to remember about the public schools of today is that
students are treated worse than criminals. Everyone is presumed guilty
until proven innocent.…
A common justification for [surveillance] cameras is that they make students safer,
and make them feel more secure. I can tell you from first hand
experience that that argument is bullshit. Columbine had cameras, but
they didn't make the 15 people who died there any safer. Cameras don't
make you feel more secure; they make you feel twitchy and paranoid.
Some people say that the only people who don't like school cameras are
the people that have something to hide. But having the cameras is a
constant reminder that the school does not trust you and that the
school is worried your fellow classmates might go on some sort of
killing rampage.…
In northern Virginia, the measures are even more Draconian. They
have heavily-armed and -armored police officers roaming the halls.
Students undergo a mandatory security orientation during their first
week of middle school. In it, a police officer goes through the
implements they carry at all times. The police women who performed the
demo I attended showed us how she was always wore a bulletproof vest,
and carried handcuffs, cable-tie style restraints, a large knife, a can
of mace, and a retractable steel baton. "It's nonlethal, kids," she
said. "But you don't want me to have to shatter your kneecaps with it."She also wore a pistol with exactly thirteen rounds: one in the
chamber, 12 in the clip. She could have taken out a terrorist or two;
which I guess that is what they were expecting some of us to be. At the
tender age of 12, this made quite an impression of me, and I still
remember the event clearly. But these methods were useless in keeping
me or any of my classmates safe. They didn't stop the kid who flashed a
gun at me, or the bully who took a swipe at me with a switchblade.…
Some people say youngsters are more disrespectful than ever before. But
if you were in an environment where you were constantly being treated
as a criminal, would you still be respectful? In high school, one of my
favorite English teachers never had trouble with her students. The
students in her class were the most well behaved in the school–even if
they were horrible in other teachers' classes. We were well-mannered,
addressed her as "Ma'am," and stood when she entered the room. Other
teachers were astonished that she could manage her students so well,
especially since many of them were troublemakers. She accomplished this
not though harsh discipline, but by treating us with respect and being
genuinely hurt if we did not return it.…
Petty acts of rebellion–and innocent little covert activities–kept
our spirits up. The school's computer network may have been censored,
but the sneakernet is alive and well. Just like in times past, high
school students don't have much money to buy music, movies or games,
but all are avidly traded at every American high school. It used to be
tapes; now it's thumbdrives and flash disks. My friends and I once
started an underground leaflet campaign that was a lot of fun. I even
read about a girl who ran a library of banned books out of her locker.
These trivial things are more important than they seem because they make
students feel like they have some measure of control over their lives.
Schools today are not training students to be good citizens: they are
training students to be obedient.
location, location, location
In the spur of the moment I signed up on a few location-aware social networks. I am not sure how useful they will be to me when all of my friends who are on it live on the west coast and I live on the east coast. Facebook becoming more location-aware, as the rumors indicate, might solve that problem. However, at this time of year, my locations are pretty constrained: home, work, kids' schools, coffee shop, grocery store, soccer practice. Me thinks I am not the target demographic.
I just had to read one more thing …
Of course I had to check my RSS feeds one last time before I went to bed and came across this piece from Boing Boing on the CIA torture memos:
Salon's Mark Benjamin went spelunking in the recently released CIA
torture memos and comes back with a stomach-churning account of the
waterboarding practiced at Gitmo. This fine-tuned torture process
repeatedly took its victims to the brink of death (one victim was
waterboarded 180+ times) until many of them simply gave up on breathing
and tried to allow themselves to drown, only to be revived by unethical
medical personnel who collaborated with the war criminals conducting
the torture.The
documents also lay out, in chilling detail, exactly what should occur
in each two-hour waterboarding "session." Interrogators were instructed
to start pouring water right after a detainee exhaled, to ensure he
inhaled water, not air, in his next breath. They could use their hands
to "dam the runoff" and prevent water from spilling out of a detainee's
mouth. They were allowed six separate 40-second "applications" of
liquid in each two-hour session – and could dump water over a
detainee's nose and mouth for a total of 12 minutes a day. Finally, to
keep detainees alive even if they inhaled their own vomit during a
session – a not-uncommon side effect of waterboarding – the prisoners
were kept on a liquid diet. The agency recommended Ensure Plus."This is revolting and it is deeply disturbing," said Dr. Scott
Allen, co-director of the Center for Prisoner Health and Human Rights
at Brown University who has reviewed all of the documents for
Physicians for Human Rights. "The so-called science here is a total
departure from any ethics or any legitimate purpose. They are saying,
'This is how risky and harmful the procedure is, but we are still going
to do it.' It just sounds like lunacy," he said. "This fine-tuning of
torture is unethical, incompetent and a disgrace to medicine."
As a friend noted, waterboarding isn't simulated drowning, it is drowning. "Enhanced interrogation techniques" are just mealy mouthed words for hiding the war crimes that our government carried out.
Of course VP Cheney was a "big supporter of waterboarding" as reported to ABC News via Andrew Sullivan & The Atlantic:
KARL: Did you more often win or lose those battles, especially as
you got to the second term?CHENEY: Well, I suppose it depends on which battle you're talking
about. I won some; I lost some. I can't…(CROSSTALK)
KARL: … waterboarding, clearly, what was your…
CHENEY: I was a big supporter of waterboarding. I was a big
supporter of the enhanced interrogation techniques that…KARL: And you opposed the administration's actions of doing away
with waterboarding?CHENEY: Yes.
It is too late to impeach him, but there is no statute of limitations on trying war criminals.
On the failure of the government’s response to the financial crisis
Sadly this post at Naked Capitalism sums up the failure of the government’s response to the financial crisis and the barriers to expanding the economy. “Extend and pretend” and a bit of CYA seems to be the order of the day.
If things are looking up, there is quite a long way to go:
Gene Sharp interview
Robin Young of WBUR's Here and Now program interviewed Gene Sharp of the Albert Einstein Institute about nonviolent resistance in Iran and elsewhere. One of my favorite quotes is:
A regime that tortures merits resistance.
True of Iran, the US and many countries.
By Will Alone: The Game
This site came about because of a nonviolent direct action miniatures game I have been working on. I haven't done much with it since 2007, but if you want you can find the rules I wrote:
I have play tested it a few times, pictures of which you can see from the front page.
Send comments to me via jokeefe at jamesokeefe dot org or voice/txt to (617) 863-0385.
That will have to do until I get around to updating them.
You’ve been robbed! – Repeat
My site seems to be experiencing a bit of a spike in traffic (coming from some interesting sources), so I thought, in these poor economic conditions, that I would link to my post on the latest income inequality stats: You've been robbed!
It is my most popular post and interestingly many people are finding it without actually googling for it or following it from somewhere else.
A Consumer Controlled Credit Reporting Coop (C3RC)
With the various cases of credit data getting lost or stolen (Social Security Administration, TJX among others), I have found that if I want to keep tabs on who is accessing my credit history, I have to pay one of the credit reporting agencies a monthly fee. This strikes me as strange considering it is my credit history. I generated it, thank you very much, and where fees and interest are involved, I paid for it.
There is a serious need of a consumer controlled credit reporting bureau. One where I get to see my data any time I want, have an easy way to correct problems and approve/reject requests to view it. Perhaps I could get money back when someone wants to view it.
Such a coop should also use alternative data on a person’s payment history: phone, gas and other utility bills. In this regard, at least Payment Reporting Builds Credit provides such an alternative.