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Candidate speaks at Hitler birthday party

Posted on April 24th, 2008 at 12:23 by John Sinteur in category: ¿ʞɔnɟ ǝɥʇ ʇɐɥʍ

[Quote:]

A congressional candidate is defending his speech to a group celebrating the anniversary of Adolf Hitler’s birth, saying he appeared simply because he was asked.

Tony Zirkle, who is seeking the Republican nomination in Indiana’s 2nd District, stood in front of a painting of Hitler, next to people wearing swastika armbands and with a swastika flag in the background for the speech to the American National Socialist Workers Party in Chicago on Sunday.

“I’ll speak before any group that invites me,” Zirkle said Monday. “I’ve spoken on an African-American radio station in Atlanta.”

And you think that makes it all right? You are too stupid to hold office.


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  1. Well, at least now we know where this pinhead stands… Hopefully his opponents can take full advantage of this gaffe.

High School Project on Genocide Was a Portent of Real-Life Events

Posted on April 24th, 2008 at 12:17 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

In 1993, when Travis Hofmann was a freshman of 15, he had traveled little beyond the sand hills that surrounded his hometown, Alliance, Neb. He was the son of a railroad engineer, a trumpeter in the high school band, with a part-time job changing the marquee and running the projector at the local movie theater.

In Travis’s class in global geography at Alliance High School, however, the teacher introduced the outside world with the word and concept of genocide. The teacher, Tim Walz, was determined that even in this isolated place, perhaps especially in this isolated place, this county seat of 9,000 that was hours away from any city in any direction, the students should learn how and why a society can descend into mass murder.

[..]

“The Holocaust is taught too often purely as a historical event, an anomaly, a moment in time,” Mr. Walz said in a recent interview, recalling his approach. “Students understood what had happened and that it was terrible and that the people who did this were monsters.

“The problem is,” he continued, “that relieves us of responsibility. Obviously, the mastermind was sociopathic, but on the scale for it to happen, there had to be a lot of people in the country who chose to go down that path. You have to make the intellectual leap to figure out the reasons why.”

So Mr. Walz took his students — Brandon Bell, the wrestler; Beth Taylor, the cheerleader; Lanae Merwin, the quiet girl always reading some book about Queen Elizabeth; and all the other children of mechanics, secretaries and a town dentist — and assigned them to study the conditions associated with mass murder. What factors, he asked them to determine, had been present when Germans slaughtered Jews, Turks murdered Armenians, the Khmer Rouge ravaged their Cambodian countrymen?

[..]

For nine weeks through the winter and early spring that school year, through the howling blizzards and the planting of the first alfalfa on the plains, the class pored over data about economics, natural resources and ethnic composition. They read about civil war, colonialism and totalitarian ideology. They worked with reference books and scholarly reports, long before conducting research took place instantly online.

[..]

When the students finished with the past, Mr. Walz gave a final exam of sorts. He listed about a dozen current nations — Yugoslavia, Congo, some former Soviet republics among them — and asked the class as a whole to decide which was at the greatest risk of sliding into genocide.

Their answer was: Rwanda. The evidence was the ethnic divide between Hutus and Tutsis, the favoritism toward Tutsis shown by the Belgian colonial regime, and the previous outbreaks of tribal violence. Mr. Walz awarded high marks.

[..]

THE next April, in 1994, Mr. Walz heard news reports of a plane carrying the Rwandan president, Juvenal Habyarimana, being shot down. He told himself at the time, “This is not going to end up good.”

It did not.

[..]

“You have to understand what caused genocide to happen,” Mr. Walz said, with those grim anniversaries in mind. “Or it will happen again.”


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the banality of evil

Posted on April 24th, 2008 at 12:12 by John Sinteur in category: Mess O'Potamia

[Quote:]

ASHCROFT: No.  No it doesn’t violate the Geneva Conventions.  As for other laws, well, the U.S. is a party to the United Nations Convention against Torture.  And that convention, well, when we join a treaty like that we send it to the Senate to be ratified, and when the Senate ratifies they often add qualifiers, reservations, to the treaty which affect what exactly we follow.  Now, I don’t have a copy of the convention in front of me…

ME: (holding up my copy) I do! (boisterous applause and whistling from the audience)  Would you like to borrow it?

[..]

ME: Actually, Mr. Ashcroft, my question was about this other document. (laughter and applause)  This other document is a section from the judgment of the Tokyo War Tribunal.  After WWII, the Tokyo Tribunal was basically the Nuremberg Trials for Japan.  Many Japanese leaders were put on trial for war crimes and crimes against humanity, including torture.  And among the tortures listed was the “water treatment,” which we nowadays call waterboarding…

ASHCROFT: (interrupting) This is a speech, not a question.  I don’t mind, but it’s not a question.

ME: It will be, sir, just give me a moment.  The judgment describes this water treatment, and I quote, “the victim was bound or otherwise secured in a prone position; and water was forced through his mouth and nostrils into his lungs and stomach.”  One man, Yukio Asano, was sentenced to fifteen years hard labor by the allies for waterboarding American troops to obtain information.  Since Yukio Asano was trying to get information to help defend his country–exactly what you, Mr. Ashcroft, say is acceptible for Americans to do–do you believe that his sentence was unjust? (boisterous applause and shouts of “Good question!”)

ASHCROFT: (angrily) Now, listen here.  You’re comparing apples and oranges, apples and oranges.  We don’t do anything like what you described.

ME: I’m sorry, I was under the impression that we still use the method of putting a cloth over someone’s face and pouring water down their throat…

ASHCROFT: (interrupting, red-faced, shouting) Pouring!  Pouring! Did you hear what she said?  ”Putting a cloth over someone’s face and pouring water on them.”  That’s not what you said before!  Read that again, what you said before!

ME: Sir, other reports of the time say…

ASHCROFT: (shouting) Read what you said before! (cries of “Answer her fucking question!” from the audience)  Read it!

ME: (firmly) Mr. Ashcroft, please answer the question.

ASHCROFT: (shouting) Read it back!

ME: “The victim was bound or otherwise secured in a prone position; and water was forced through his mouth and nostrils into his lungs and stomach.”

ASHCROFT: (shouting) You hear that?  You hear it?  ”Forced!”  If you can’t tell the difference between forcing and pouring…does this college have an anatomy class?  If you can’t tell the difference between forcing and pouring…

ME: (firmly and loudly) Mr. Ashcroft, do you believe that Yukio Asano’s sentence was unjust?  Answer the question. (pause)

ASHCROFT: (more restrained) It’s not a fair question; there’s no comparison.  Next question! (loud chorus of boos from the audience)


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The CIA’s Odd Man Out

Posted on April 24th, 2008 at 9:32 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

So last week 26 Americans, most of them CIA employees, went on trial in Milan for kidnapping, albeit in absentia and to little notice here. They are fugitives from justice, with international warrants issued for their arrests.

The central figure in the case has always been “Mr. Bob,” Robert Seldon Lady, a bear-like man with a pasha’s grin who spent a lifetime in the CIA.

He and his wife loved Italy so much they bought a house in the foothills of the Alps and retired there in 2004.

Months later an urgent call came, warning Lady to get out of Dodge — don’t even pack.

The cops were on their way.

Tipped off, the Ladys successfully fled the country. But they left behind a bonanza of evidence in their dream home, not the least of which was a CIA surveillance photo of the kidnap victim, Osama Mustafa Hasan Nasr, known as Abu Omar.

How dumb can you get? Sometimes it seems the CIA’s ineptitude knows no bounds.

[..]

“I’ll probably be convicted,” Lady told Cole. “But I won’t go to the trial, and I’ll never see Italy again.”

In the ultimate irony, his house could end up the property of al Qaeda suspect Abu Omar, who’s recovering in Egypt from wounds suffered at the hands of Egyptian interrogators, to whom the CIA delivered him in February 2003.

Italian investigators, tracing Lady’s cell phone calls, put him in Cairo the same time Omar was there.

So it’s hard to be too sympathetic for his plight.

Except for this: He was abandoned on the field.

The CIA has disowned him. It hasn’t provided him a lawyer, or helped him pay for one. Lady is on his own.

[..]

“Leaders used to protect those below from the top as they went up,” Lady groused. “It’s a way of harnessing the loyalty of those they led.”

He is bitter. “Now they protect the top. They manage down and step on anyone below.”

I bet CIA campus recruiters don’t talk about that.


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Edwards Backers Team Up With Obama

Posted on April 24th, 2008 at 9:25 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]

No, John Edwards has not yet endorsed a candidate.

But nearly 50 of his most prominent backers lined up behind Senator Barack Obama today, in a gesture designed to give Mr. Obama a heavy boost of support less than two weeks before the North Carolina primary on May 6.


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Comments:

  1. Fabulous about Edwards backers endorsing Obama - they are backing the right guy. Now I hope Edwards will finally endorse Obama.

Don’t drink the water!

Posted on April 24th, 2008 at 9:21 by John Sinteur in category: If you're in marketing, kill yourself

[Quote:]

Two signs on the doors leading from the visitors’ clubhouse at U.S. Cellular Field to the first-base dugout read, “NO BOTTLED WATER ON THE BENCH.”

What’s this? Athletes can’t drink water? Even in the humid Chicago summers?

Here’s the explanation I got:

Gatorade is Major League Baseball’s “official sports drink.” So instructions were sent that no player could be seen drinking anything but Gatorade in the dugout. Not even Aquafina, which is the “official water” of MLB. Not even bottles of water with the labels removed.

White Sox clubhouse personnel said if players take bottled water onto the bench, all the bottled water will be removed from the clubhouse as punishment.

So remember, the biggest threat to baseball isn’t steroids or HGH or amphetamines or runaway ticket prices or four-hour games.

It’s water.


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Comments:

  1. drinking a 7-8 glass of water in summers help us in summers to keep our body temprature low.

  2. I’ve got only one word: Idiocracy (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0387808/quotes)

  3. It better be a joke. If it isn’t I hope the law suites start soon!

    Despite the smoke and mirrors marketing, the top three ingredients of Gatorade are water, sucrose syrup, high fructose corn syrup.

    In other words, it is soda pop without the fizz.

    In other words it is a sugar rush with a few electrolytes thrown in.

    In other words it is unhealthy garbage.

    High fructose corn syrup is a health hazard that is in far too many processed foods and responsible for many of the health problems facing most Americans, like obesity and heart disease.

    It is unbelievable that that they would not permit athletes to drink water, the one thing necessary for proper hydration.

    If they are really banning water in favor of Gatorade, I would urge the players union to sue the league and Gatorade for forcing players to drink what is essentially a long-term danger to their health.

    And sent an email to the MLBPA saying as much.

  4. Uhm, the major health risk from high fructose corn syrup is obesity. Athletes who consume Gatorade do so because they’re exercising and burning a lot of calories; the idea is that the calories in the sports drink enable better athletic performance and are burned, not converted to fat. So in fact, putting HFCS into Gatorade is actually an appropriate use that has a legitimate purpose and with normal use would not lead to obesity. So perhaps you should be a bit more nuanced?

    You’ll find that the wikipedia article on HFCS doesn’t cite any substantive evidence that HFCS has health effects any different from regular sugar.

Cartoons

Posted on April 24th, 2008 at 8:43 by John Sinteur in category: Cartoon


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Lizards Rapidly Evolve After Introduction to Island

Posted on April 23rd, 2008 at 21:48 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

Italian wall lizards introduced to a tiny island off the coast of Croatia are evolving in ways that would normally take millions of years to play out, new research shows.

In just a few decades the 5-inch-long (13-centimeter-long) lizards have developed a completely new gut structure, larger heads, and a harder bite, researchers say.

I’m sure Ben Stein disapproves…


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Cartoons

Posted on April 23rd, 2008 at 20:21 by John Sinteur in category: Cartoon


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Muslim call to adopt Mecca time

Posted on April 23rd, 2008 at 12:21 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

Muslim scientists and clerics have called for the adoption of Mecca time to replace GMT, arguing that the Saudi city is the true centre of the Earth.

Mecca is the direction all Muslims face when they perform their daily prayers.

The call was issued at a conference held in the Gulf state of Qatar under the title: Mecca, the Centre of the Earth, Theory and Practice.

And before you think they’re just religious nutcases, they’re really just feeling bitter about the past:

He said the English had imposed GMT on the rest of the world by force when Britain was a big colonial power, and it was about time that changed.


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Comments:

  1. Well, if I remember well, the center of the world is in the town of Mezőtúr in Hungary.
    Though, better would be to make Earth flat, and abolish timezones. That would solve this problem, and the problem of half of my friend sleeping when I am awake.

Chris Matthews: The Media Created “Delusion” That Hillary Can Win

Posted on April 23rd, 2008 at 11:31 by John Sinteur in category: Indecision 2008

[Quote:]

Chris Matthew started off the Pennsylvania primary coverage with a bang tonight. Shortly after 6, seated by co-anchor Keith Olbermann, Matthews called the primary, and thus his coverage tonight, basically moot. “This contest is essentially over,” he proclaims to Keith. “Barack Obama is going to win the most elected delegates.”

He went on to say of the media, “Trying to keep this game going, we’ve created the delusion that somehow this race is still open.”

Follow the money. The media needs the candidates to spend as much as possible on advertising, it’s in their best interest to keep this going..


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Comments:

  1. What you say may be true, but is it the media’s role to decide when the contest is over? I agree that they’re playing it up much more than I personally care for–but the contest in ongoing, it’s important, and IMO if the media decided to stop covering it, that’d be a far bigger scandal.

    Let’s face it–there’s a market for the coverage. We have seen that market, and it is us(*).

    (*) the greater us, that is, rather than you+me.

  2. Two days ago, Hillary needed to win each remaining state with at least 66% of the votes. Today, she’ll need each remaining state with at least 76% of the votes. Yet they say she won. Two days ago, it was all about the super delegates. Today, it is all about the super delegates. Nothing’s changed, yet “she’s back in the race”. They deliberately misrepresent the race in their own advantage.

    I guess trying to contact all super delegates and pester them until they say who they support is too much work.

  3. You think the superdelegates haven’t turned off the ringer on their phones yet? I bet they’re getting dozens of daily calls.

    Here’s a quick sampling of headlines:

    CNN: “Analysis: did Clinton win come in time?”
    FoxNews headline: “Big win, Little change”
    MSNBC: “After win, Clinton still the underdog”
    NYTimes: “Clinton Sees Turned Tide; Obama Holds Lead”
    USA today: “Clinton presses case after big Pennsylvania win”
    Washington Post: “Clinton faces a daunting task”
    Seattle Times: “Clinton wins Pa, still underdog”
    LA Times (print ed): “Good night, not goodbye for Clinton”
    Chicago Trib: “And the fight goes on”

    I’m sure you can come up with more skewed headlines from other sources, but these are some of the biggest news outlets, and they’re not shouting “Clinton is BACK”.

    Not to say that I like the coverage I’ve seen. CNN in particular was hard to take in the days before PA.

  4. Well, perhaps I’m overly sensitive because of the distance to all the media from here. The fact that the NOS blatantly plugs everything Hillary does isn’t helping either…

  5. My impression is that Hillary can only win by gathering an overwhelming number of the superdelegates on her side. I don’t really want to get into the debate about the implications of the supers “overriding” the regular delegates, just say that it’s an open route, and it will not be resolved until the regular primaries are over. Thus, the voting and the campaigning will continue. The point being that while we may not like the tone of the press, the race goes on no matter how the press treats it.

  6. true - so I’ll have to continue grumbling, then.

PA election results

Posted on April 23rd, 2008 at 9:33 by John Sinteur in category: Cartoon, Indecision 2008


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Eskadra myśliwców.

Posted on April 23rd, 2008 at 9:10 by John Sinteur in category: Great Picture

[Quote:]


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Comments:

  1. Eskadra mysliwców == (jet) fighter squadron.
    Lovely photo!

  2. Eskadra mysliwców => (jet) fighter squadron.
    Lovely photo!

Lynchings in Congo as penis theft panic hits capital

Posted on April 23rd, 2008 at 8:49 by John Sinteur in category: Pastafarian News

[Quote:]

Police in Congo have arrested 13 suspected sorcerers accused of using black magic to steal or shrink men’s penises after a wave of panic and attempted lynchings triggered by the alleged witchcraft.

Reports of so-called penis snatching are not uncommon in West Africa, where belief in traditional religions and witchcraft remains widespread, and where ritual killings to obtain blood or body parts still occur.

Rumors of penis theft began circulating last week in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo’s sprawling capital of some 8 million inhabitants. They quickly dominated radio call-in shows, with listeners advised to beware of fellow passengers in communal taxis wearing gold rings.

Purported victims, 14 of whom were also detained by police, claimed that sorcerers simply touched them to make their genitals shrink or disappear, in what some residents said was an attempt to extort cash with the promise of a cure.

“You just have to be accused of that, and people come after you. We’ve had a number of attempted lynchings. … You see them covered in marks after being beaten,” Kinshasa’s police chief, Jean-Dieudonne Oleko, told Reuters on Tuesday.

I just checked the calendar, and yes, it is 2008. Amazing that this still happens…


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DRM sucks redux: Microsoft to nuke MSN Music DRM keys

Posted on April 23rd, 2008 at 6:41 by John Sinteur in category: Intellectual Property, Microsoft

[Quote:]

Customers who have purchased music from Microsoft’s now-defunct MSN Music store are now facing a decision they never anticipated making: commit to which computers (and OS) they want to authorize forever, or give up access to the music they paid for. Why? Because Microsoft has decided that it’s done supporting the service and will be turning off the MSN Music license servers by the end of this summer.

The name “PlaysForSure” should have been a dead giveaway.

Never buy something with DRM.


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Statins, cholesterol, health; fancy employee compensation, EBITDA, and company value

Posted on April 23rd, 2008 at 6:35 by John Sinteur in category: Robber Barons

[Quote:]

Have public company Boards learned any lesson from Enron? A March 31, 2008 article [sadly not online] about Stan O’Neal, the former CEO of Merrill Lynch, suggests not.

The Board at Merrill Lynch Enronized their company by promising to pay Stan O’Neal roughly $50 million per year if he made some numbers look good. One of the numbers that they wanted to see improved was Return on Equity. O’Neal managed to improve it by using the company’s cash to buy back stock. By reducing the amount of equity in the firm, whatever profit they managed to earn in a given year would be a larger percentage of the remaining equity. Unfortunately, for a company that faces risk, reducing the cash supply inevitably means courting disaster.

The Board also decided to give bonuses to executives based on where Merrill ranked in the business of creating mortgage-backed securities. O’Neal and colleagues managed to grab the number-one spot by 2005, near the tail-end of the real estate bubble. Merrill would buy up garbage mortgages from retail banks, mortgages that by 2005 hardly anyone else wanted. These were loans on houses that had never been independently appraised to homeowners who had never proved that they had any source of income. Merrill’s goal was to package up this junk and sell it to fools in the institutional investment community. This worked great for a while and Merrill pocketed a lot of fees. By 2006, however, the supply of fools to buy up baskets of junk mortgages was dwindling. Merrill could have simply stopped buying the mortgages, but that would have resulted in a loss of fees and a reduction in executive salaries. O’Neal, who had been the Chief Financial Officer of Merrill, and his subordinates decided to continue buying the junk mortgages and wrapping them up into CDOs but, because nobody out there was dumb enough to buy the CDOs, keep the CDOs for themselves and account for them at the value that they wished they could have sold them for. Merrill ended up with $32 billion in nearly worthless debt. O’Neal retired with the savings from his $50 million per year salary plus a lot of bonuses and retirement extras.

[..]

So… if you’re on a Board and you decide to compensate a manager with anything other than cash or a long-term stock option, make sure that you’re not granting compensation based on a number that the manager can easily manipulate. Keep in mind that managers are often a lot more clever in doing things that will benefit themselves than things that will benefit the company.


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radio for back up!

Posted on April 22nd, 2008 at 21:53 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

My friend and I were photographing in the town. I spotted a man being detained by this security guard and a policeman, some kind of altercation was going on, i looked through my zoom lens to see what was happening and then moved on.

Moments later as i walked away this goon jumped in front of me and demanded to know what i was doing. i explained that i was taking photos and it was my legal right to do so, he tried to stop me by shoulder charging me, my friend started taking photos of this, he then tried to detain us both. I refused to stand still so he grabbed my jacket and said i was breaking the law. Quickly a woman and a guy wearing BARGAIN MADNESS shirts joined in the melee and forcibly grabbed my friend and held him against his will. We were both informed that street photography was illegal in the town.
Two security guards from the nearby shopping center THE MALL came running over, we were surrounded by six hostile and aggressive security guards. They then said photographing shops was illegal and this was private land. I was angry at being grabbed by this man so i pushed him away, one of the men wearing a BARGAIN MADNESS shirt twisted my arm violently behind my back, i winced in pain and could hardly breathe in agony.
A policewomen was radioed and came over to question the two suspects ( the total detaining us had risen to seven, a large crowd had now gathered)
The detaining guard released me, i asked the policewoman if my friend and i could be taken away from the six guards, she motioned us to a nearby seat and told all the security people to go. She took our details, name, address, date of birth etc. She wanted to check my camera saying it was unlawful to photograph people in public, i told her this was rubbish. we agreed to come with her and we sat in the back of a police car, she radioed back to the station to check our details, i explained to her the law regarding photography and handed over a MOO card, i asked to take her picture and she said no. We were free to go with no charge. I may press charges for unlawful detention and physical assault by the security guards, watch this space.

luckily my friend videoed some of this so it can be used in evidence.

Here it is

www.flickr.com/photos/photodrift/2422740769/ 


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Comments:

  1. hope you do take civil action (knowing that they probably won’t press criminal charges given the crazy climate now), do you guys have lawyers that take contingent fees rather than retainers?

  2. That depends on the country you’re in. Could be civil actions, could be a complaint procedure. And payment of lawyers differs so much in countries - I could describe what we have over here in the Netherlands, but that would be useless for you. In any case, most countries have a form of “community lawyers” set up to allow you to at least get free legal advice.

UAV Films Own Demise as Russian MiG Shoots it Down

Posted on April 22nd, 2008 at 21:39 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

In this video a Russian MiG-29 fighter aircraft shows up, squeezes off an little air-to-air missle and blows a Georgian UAV out of the sky… on camera.

So we have a Russian MiG taking out a ex-Soviet Georgian unarmed UAV that was doing basic surveillance over Georgian soil (according to the Georgians). Whether that is true or not, I would imagine the political fallout over this incident could get ugly. Seems that there is a bit of unrest over there to begin with. But we can give a big thanks to the Russians and Georgians for this nice video.

Oh, and the Russian’s response: “Nonsense. What would a Russian jet be doing over Georgian territory?”


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Clueless in America

Posted on April 22nd, 2008 at 21:35 by John Sinteur in category: News

[Quote:]

Ignorance in the United States is not just bliss, it’s widespread. A recent survey of teenagers by the education advocacy group Common Core found that a quarter could not identify Adolf Hitler, a third did not know that the Bill of Rights guaranteed freedom of speech and religion, and fewer than half knew that the Civil War took place between 1850 and 1900.

“We have one of the highest dropout rates in the industrialized world,” said Allan Golston, the president of U.S. programs for the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. In a discussion over lunch recently he described the situation as “actually pretty scary, alarming.”

Roughly a third of all American high school students drop out. Another third graduate but are not prepared for the next stage of life — either productive work or some form of post-secondary education.

When two-thirds of all teenagers old enough to graduate from high school are incapable of mastering college-level work, the nation is doing something awfully wrong.

Mr. Golston noted that the performance of American students, when compared with their peers in other countries, tends to grow increasingly dismal as they move through the higher grades:

“In math and science, for example, our fourth graders are among the top students globally. By roughly eighth grade, they’re in the middle of the pack. And by the 12th grade, U.S. students are scoring generally near the bottom of all industrialized countries.”


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Bluetooth surveillance secretly tested in the city of Bath

Posted on April 22nd, 2008 at 20:57 by John Sinteur in category: Privacy, Security

[Quote:]

“In 2001 Jose Emilio Suarez Trashorras was jailed in a Spanish prison for drug related offences. Whilst imprisoned, Trashorras established regular contact with Jamal Ahmidan who was serving time for a petty crime. Both individuals embraced radical Islamic fundamentalist ideas within the prison and were recruited in the Takfir wa al-Hijra group, a Moroccan terrorist groups linked with al-Qaida . Following their release, Ahmidan became the leader of the terrorist cell that conducted the Madrid bombing. In a drugs-for-bombs exchange with a third party, Trashorras provided the explosives for the 13 backpack bombs that killed 191 people and injured hundreds.“

So write Vassilis and Panos Kostakos in the department of computer science and the University of Bath in the UK, who have come up with a system that they say could spot and monitor these kinds of interactions in prisons.

Their idea? Fit inmates with RFID tags that allow their positions to be monitored, and then number crunch the resulting data sets to see who spends the most time with whom.

Not exactly rocket science but the Kostakos’s have an even more frightening idea. Why not test the idea by anonymously monitoring the movements of students, residents and workers of the city of Bath by listening out for their bluetooth-enabled devices as they move around the city. And that’s what they’ve done.

What the Kostakos found is that it is straightforward to capture data on people’s encounters using bluetooth. In fact they captured data on 10,000 unique devices during the 6 month study. Yep, that’s 10,000.

Exactly how much you can tell about these encounters isn’t clear. But hey, this is only a demonstration (either that or they’re keeping schtum about the juicy details).

These days there’s less and less difference between people inside and outside prisons..

Next up: mandatory bluetooth collars for everybody.


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