Tag: ek Politics
Apr 20 2014
After Chernobyl
Apr 18 2014
Auditions
As we all know Stephen Colbert is headed to CBS to take over from David Letterman. That leaves the 11:30 pm spot behind Jon Stewart (also from his production company) open. In these web exclusive videos we see the auditions of the current The Daily Show correspondents for this coveted position.
Admiral Zhao
Jessica Williams
Sam Bee
Jason Jones
I don’t know about you, but I think Jason Jones and Sam Bee are leaving to form a “Happy” News Team.
Apr 16 2014
Matt Taibbi on Democracy Now
The Divide: American Injustice in the Age of the Wealth Gap,
by Matt Taibbi
Over the course of the last twenty years or so, America has been falling deeper and deeper into a bizarre statistical mystery. Take in the following three pieces of information, and see if you can make them fit together.
First, violent crime has been dropping precipitously for nearly two decades. At its peak in 1991, according to FBI data, there were 758 violent crimes per 100,000 people. By 2010 that number had plunged to 425 crimes per 100,000, a drop of more than 44 percent.
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Second: although poverty rates largely declined during the 1990s, offering at least one possible explanation for the drop in violent crime, poverty rates rose sharply during the 2000s. At the start of that decade, poverty levels hovered just above 10 percent. By 2008 they were up to 13.2 percent. By 2009 the number was 14.3 percent. By 2010, 15.3 percent.
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The third piece of information that makes no sense is that during this same period of time, the prison population in America has exploded. In 1991 there were about one million Americans behind bars. By 2012 the number was over 2.2 million, a more than 100 percent increase.
Apr 15 2014
Notes from the Polk Awards
Laura Poitras & Glenn Greenwald Back in U.S. for First Time Since Breaking NSA-Snowden Story
Democracy Now
April 11, 2014
Ten months ago, Laura Poitras and Glenn Greenwald flew to Hong Kong to meet National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden. They soon began exposing a trove of secrets about the NSA and the national surveillance state. They didn’t enter the United States again-until today. In this exclusive video, you can watch Poitras and Greenwald speaking for the first time since their return to the country, on Friday afternoon at the George Polk Awards in New York City. They were joined by their colleagues Ewen MacAskill of The Guardian and Barton Gellman of The Washington Post, who shared with them the George Polk Award for National Security Reporting.
“We Won’t Succumb to Threats”: Journalists Return to U.S. for First Time Since Revealing NSA Spying
Democracy Now
Monday, April 14, 2014
Poitras and Greenwald did not return to the United States until this past Friday, when they flew from Berlin to New York to accept the George Polk Award for National Security Reporting. They arrived not knowing if they would be detained or subpoenaed after Director of National Intelligence James Clapper described journalists working on the NSA story as Snowden’s “accomplices.” At a news conference following the George Polk Award ceremony, Poitras and Greenwald took questions from reporters about their reporting and the government intimidation it has sparked.
“This Award is for Snowden”: Greenwald, Poitras Accept Polk Honor for Exposing NSA Surveillance
Democracy Now
Monday, April 14, 2014
In their acceptance speeches, Poitras and Greenwald paid tribute to their source. “Each one of these awards just provides further vindication that what [Snowden] did in coming forward was absolutely the right thing to do and merits gratitude, and not indictments and decades in prison,” Greenwald said. “None of us would be here … without the fact that someone decided to sacrifice their life to make this information available,” Poitras said. “And so this award is really for Edward Snowden.”
Apr 10 2014
Eric Snowden at the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.
The real deal. All 76 minutes.
Fingerprints and the Phone Dragnet’s Secret “Correlations” Order
By emptywheel
Published April 9, 2014
Yesterday, I noted that ODNI is withholding a supplemental opinion approved on August 20, 2008 that almost certainly approved the tracking of “correlations” among the phone dragnet (though this surely extends to the Internet dragnet as well).
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In spite of the fact that ODNI already (briefly) released Verizon’s name as the provider in question and exacerbated it with this footnote I’m not surprised they’re trying to deny this request.I am, however, intrigued by the language they use to fight the request, given that we’re talking about whether Verizon provides foreign call records under a domestic program.
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From there, ODNI’s declaration goes on to claim that if Verizon’s name were made public, the bad guys would know to avoid Verizon. Which is sort of nonsense, given the reports that Verizon provides not just their own customers’ records, but also those that transit their backbone.But I do find it interesting that, in a discussion about hiding the name of a telecom that was accidentally turning over some significant amount of entirely foreign call records under a program that – because it was targeted at domestic users – subjected those records to greater oversight than the foreign records turned over under EO 12333, ODNI started with a discussion of its EO 12333 authorized overseas collection. Particularly given that we know Verizon provides an enormous amount of that overseas collection.
That is, ODNI says that they can’t reveal Verizon was the provider that accidentally provided foreign call records under a domestic order – in spite of the fact that they already did – because if they do it will endanger its overseas collection.
She only has the 35 minute version mind you.
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