Tag Archives: Collection

Panel Set to Recommend Modest Changes to NSA Surveillance Programs

Mother Jones

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I’ve been wondering recently whatever happened to that task force on surveillance activities, and today brings news that they’re just about to release their recommendations. First up is this:

The proposal likely to gain the most attention would revamp the NSA phone records program….The proposal to have that data held by a phone company or a third party would effectively end the controversial NSA practice known as bulk collection. NSA could collect data only after meeting a new higher standard of proof.

That would be a step in the right direction. If the phone record program continues, there’s no reason the data can’t be held by a separate agency, available to the NSA only after they obtain a particularized subpoena for it. Done properly, this would provide access to all the information they need and is unlikely to slow them down in any serious way. There’s also this:

Another likely recommendation, officials say, is the creation of an organization of legal advocates who, like public defenders, would argue against lawyers for the N.S.A. and other government organizations in front of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the nation’s secret court that oversees the collection of telephone and Internet “metadata” and of wiretapping aimed at terrorism and espionage suspects. Mr. Obama has already hinted that he objects to the absence of any adversarial procedures in front of the court’s judges.

That’s also a good step. It’s absurd that the FISA court works without anyone arguing against the government’s position. Other expected recommendations include:

Civilian leadership for the NSA.
Splitting the NSA’s code making group away from the rest of the agency.
Presidential approval for spying on foreign leaders.
Codifying and announcing stricter standards to protect the privacy of foreign citizens.

In the end, I suspect that most of this will amount to very little. But it’s better than nothing. Thanks, Edward Snowden.

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Panel Set to Recommend Modest Changes to NSA Surveillance Programs

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NRA: Our Elephant Gun Owned by a Guy Who Shot a Baby With an Elephant Gun Is a "Treasure"

Mother Jones

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In addition to fighting furiously to keep guns in our warm, live hands, the National Rifle Association celebrates guns pried from cold, dead hands in its National Firearms Museum, “one of the world’s finest museum collections dedicated to firearms.” The museum’s Treasure Collection includes everything from Annie Oakley’s guns to Dirty Harry’s Smith & Wesson. Another item in the trove, which the NRA tweeted about yesterday, is an elephant rifle that belonged to Henry Morton Stanley, the 19th-century British American journalist and “explorer” who marauded through east, southern, and central Africa.

The 22-pound rifle, which fired a quarter-pound of lead with each shot “was considered heavy artillery,” explains NRA museum senior curator Doug Wicklund in the clip above. With it, Stanley shot 16 elephants during his 1871 trek in search of the missionary and doctor David Livingstone. Yet the NRA doesn’t mention that when he wasn’t shooting charismatic megafauna with his elephant guns, Stanley was shooting people with them.

As Stanley related in his own accounts, he repeatedly used his big guns to intimidate and kill people he encountered on his African travels. Here’s how he dealt with some of the “savages” who got in the way of his trans-continental journey in 1875:

I discharged my elephant rifle, with its two large conical balls, into their midst…My double-barreled shotgun, loaded with buckshot, was next discharged with terrible effect, for, without drawing a single bow or launching a single spear, they retreated up the slope of the hill…

Twice in succession I succeed in dropping men determined on launching the canoes, and seeing the sub-chief who had commanded the party that took the drum, I took deliberate aim with my elephant rifle at him. That bullet, as I have since been told, killed the chief and his wife and infant, who happened to be standing a few paces behind him, and the extraordinary result had more effect on the superstitious minds of the natives than all previous or subsequent shots.

On getting out of the cove we saw two canoes loaded with men coming out in pursuit from another small cove. I permitted them to come within one hundred yards of us, and this time I used the elephant rifle with explosive balls. Four shots killed five men and sank the canoes.

The final body count of this incident, Stanley claimed, was 14 dead and 8 wounded, presumably including the baby and its mother. Due to tales such as this, Stanley gained a reputation for indiscriminate slaughter. George Bernard Shaw described him as a “wild-beast man, with his elephant gun, and his atmosphere of dread and murder.” Fellow expeditionist Richard Burton observed, “Stanley shoots negroes sic as if they were monkeys.” Though the elephant gun in the NRA’s collection is likely not the one fired in the passage above, it’s not surprising that the gun lobby isn’t volunteering the larger story behind the trigger-happy owner of this “special treasure.”

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NRA: Our Elephant Gun Owned by a Guy Who Shot a Baby With an Elephant Gun Is a "Treasure"

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Dot Earth Blog: An Update on Risks of Abrupt Jolts from Global Warming

The chances of abrupt jolts from climate change are mostly low in this century, but a pretty sure bet down the line. Can humans deal with that? View original article:  Dot Earth Blog: An Update on Risks of Abrupt Jolts from Global Warming ; ;Related ArticlesAn Update on Risks of Abrupt Jolts from Global WarmingPanel Says Global Warming Carries Risk of Deep ChangesOff the Shelf: ‘Climate Casino’: An Overview of Global Warming ;

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Dot Earth Blog: An Update on Risks of Abrupt Jolts from Global Warming

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How "Pawn Stars" Got Involved in Bob Dylan’s Amazing Interactive Music Video

Mother Jones

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You’ve probably seen the video by now. (Even if you have, watch it again, above.) It’s the year’s most innovative music video—and it was made for Bob Dylan’s “Like a Rolling Stone,” which was released 48 years ago. Vania Heymann, the music video’s 27-year-old Israeli director, created sixteen different “channels,” including a CNBC-type news channel, a movie channel, and a sports broadcast. On each one, the celebrities, actors, and hosts go about their daily business—but while lip-syncing to the lyrics of Dylan’s landmark composition. It’s an awesome interactive experience, and my description doesn’t really do it justice. (Like I said, watch it, flip through it.)

The music video, which was posted earlier this week, coincides with the release of The Complete Album Collection Vol. One, Dylan’s 47-CD box set. The video includes TV channels featuring comedian Marc Maron, The Price Is Right host and ReasonTV darling Drew Carey, rapper Danny Brown, and History‘s Pawn Stars cast members Austin “Chumlee” Russell and Rick Harrison.

“The lyrics including ‘pawn’ was a happy coincidence from our end,” Joel Patterson, a Pawn Stars producer, told me. “The fact that Bob Dylan had appeared on Pawn Stars in the past made it an easy ‘yes.'” The video took just “a few hours” to shoot, he adds: “Rick and Chumlee both knew the song pretty well already.”

According to Patterson, Russell and Harrison are huge Dylan fans; in the aforementioned Pawn Stars episode, Russell has a signed copy of Dylan’s critically maligned album Self Portrait. As for Dylan, Patterson says, his manager “communicated a while back that…he likes the show. He also told us Dylan was extremely pleased with his appearance on Pawn Stars.”

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How "Pawn Stars" Got Involved in Bob Dylan’s Amazing Interactive Music Video

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Could Carl Sagan Have Defeated Climate Denial?

Mother Jones

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Yesterday at the Library of Congress, a stunning list of science luminaries—from Bill Nye the Science Guy to Neil deGrasse Tyson to White House science adviser John Holdren—joined one extremely funny science aficionado (Family Guy creator Seth MacFarlane) to celebrate the late astronomer and television star Carl Sagan. The occasion was the opening of the “Seth MacFarlane Collection” of Sagan’s personal papers: 1,705 boxes of Sagan’s letters, notes, and writings now reside at the Library. The event also felt much like a preview of the coming Fox series Cosmos: A SpaceTime Odyssey, a remake of the show that made Sagan famous, that will be hosted by deGrasse Tyson and produced by MacFarlane and Sagan’s widow, Ann Druyan.

One of the leading themes, however, was political. Speaker after speaker used the occasion to lament the way science is treated in the United States today, usually leading with the example of climate change. Science is suffering from “politicization on steroids,” said MacFarlane. “We took a big, big hit when we lost Carl Sagan,” he added later. Holdren remarked that Sagan “would have loved” President Obama’s comment in June that when it comes to climate, “we don’t have time for a meeting of the Flat Earth Society.” Steven Soter, a writer on the original Cosmos series, added that Sagan would have been “appalled” by today’s attacks on climate scientists, and that he would have “deeply altered the landscape” on the climate issue were he still alive.

Sagan died in 1996 after two years of struggling with myelodysplasia, a bone marrow disease. He was 62. During his life, he became the public face of science in the US and around the world thanks to the Emmy-award-winning Cosmos, which first aired on PBS in 1980 to great acclaim. He also published many widely read science books, campaigned for nuclear arms control and space exploration, and was a visionary who not only imagined what life might be like elsewhere in the galaxy but actually endeavored to search for it (a quest embodied in Sagan’s novel Contact)—all the while denouncing UFO aficionados who failed to play by the rules of science and skepticism.

The notion that, today, Sagan would have been deeply engaged with the climate issue is highly plausible. In publicizing the threat of “nuclear winter” in the early 1980s, Sagan was basically outlining the possible consequences of a human-induced climate-alteration (albeit one that would freeze us rather than fry us). In fact, Sagan gained recognition as an astronomer for his research on the greenhouse effect of Venus, work that later inspired NASA climate researcher James Hansen.

Carl Sagan at the founding of the Planetary Society. NASA JPL/Wikimedia Commons

And yet it doesn’t take anything away from Sagan’s unrivaled legacy to say that the problems we face today are perhaps too large even for him. The truth is that to celebrate what made Sagan so great and so successful as science’s emissary to the public is to simultaneously realize why the challenges faced by science in the public arena today are so vast and intractable.

David Morrison, a doctoral student of Sagan’s and an astrophysicist who now directs the Carl Sagan Center for Study of Life in the Universe at the SETI Institute, wondered aloud yesterday whether if he were alive today, Sagan would have been much more successful at fighting off nonsense than the rest of us. In answering the question, Morrison observed that in Sagan’s heyday, the days of the Cosmos series, a few networks still dominated television. That meant that when Sagan was on TV (whether on PBS or doing one of his regular guest appearances on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson), your chances were very high of actually seeing him, because there just weren’t many other things to watch. By contrast, when the much-awaited Cosmos sequel airs on Fox, viewers will have the option of flipping to anything from reality cooking shows to paranormal pseudo-documentaries to politicized news.

For a brief trip down memory lane (and to see how science on TV used to look), here’s the opening of the original Cosmos:

According to Fox, Sagan’s Cosmos was ultimately seen by 750 million people. But nobody talking about science today gets the attention of audiences as vast as Sagan’s, due to fundamental changes in the structure of the media.

At the same time, we can also see that some of the battles that Sagan engaged in the 1980s—over Ronald Reagan’s “Star Wars” program and so-called nuclear winter—were dress rehearsals for the intense science politicization over issues like climate change that we live with today. In these conflicts, academic scientists and a few celebrity allies, like Sagan, clashed with conservative scientists affiliated with think tanks like the George C. Marshall Institute, who defended the science behind “Star Wars” and challenged nuclear winter.

That’s still the basic blueprint for how political science conflicts play out, but perhaps as a result of so many of them, political conservatives in the US have grown increasingly distrustful of the scientific community, as documented in a recent study by sociologist Gordon Gauchat. This was not something Sagan had to face. Heading into the 1980s, surveys assessing public trust in science did not show a big difference between left and right:

Declining trust in science among conservatives since 1980. Gordon Gauchat

In other words, Sagan was a science communicator and a science hero in an era in which we weren’t nearly as polarized over science, or sorted into politicized boxes due to our media choices. Today it’s just different, and a whole lot harder. And thus while there is little doubt that Sagan’s “heir apparent” (in MacFarlane’s words), Neil deGrasse Tyson, is at least as talented as Sagan was, the overarching context has changed fundamentally.

The true challenge for science communication and outreach today, accordingly, is to figure out how to counteract these two momentous trends—let’s call them politicization and fragmentation—and bring science to everybody once again.

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Could Carl Sagan Have Defeated Climate Denial?

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An Angel By My Side: Amazing True Stories of the Afterlife – Jacky Newcomb

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An Angel By My Side: Amazing True Stories of the Afterlife

Jacky Newcomb

Genre: Spirituality

Price: $2.99

Publish Date: November 6, 2006

Publisher: Harper Element

Seller: HarperCollins


Following the hugely popular ‘An Angel Saved My Life’, comes another collection of powerful true stories of communication with those in the Afterlife. Includes real-life amazing rescues, mysterious dream visitations, near death experiences and miraculous recoveries. In the follow up to her first collection of stories entitled ‘An Angel Saved My Life’, Jacky Newcomb is back with more incredible, inspiring true life dramas and what happens when those from the afterlife intervene in our darkest hour of need. The book includes: • Miraculous survival stories which defy explanation. • Amazing rescues – mysterious strangers who proved to be angels in disguise. • People who came back from the brink of death – what is it really like to die? • Remarkable medical recoveries – spirit intervention to set the clock back on a person's 'time to go'. • Dream visitations by spirits – angels and spirit friends entering or creating dreams to give important messages. • The psychic power of children and their interaction with angels. • Incredible psychic animals – pets who came back from the dead to protect their owners. Reviews Praise for An Angel Saved My Life: ‘A beautiful read that will inspire and touch all who read it, and bring them to the realization we are always surrounded by angels.’ – Tony Stockwell, star of LIVINGtv’s ‘Psychic Detective’ About the author Jacky Newcomb, aka 'The Angel Lady', is becoming the UK's best-known expert on all things angelic. Jacky runs her own column, as a mystical agony aunt, for CHAT Its Fate magazine. She is a regular contributor to many other magazines, including Prediction, Fate &amp; Fortune and Woman's Own. She is one of the UK's leading angel teachers and holds workshops at venues all over the UK. She is teacher at Colin Fry's International College of Spiritual Science &amp; Healing in Ramsbergsgarden Sweden.

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An Angel By My Side: Amazing True Stories of the Afterlife – Jacky Newcomb

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Russia Preparing Patrols of Arctic Shipping Lanes

The military said the regular patrols are meant to protect the thousands of miles of coastline suddenly open to other countries’ ships on a regular basis. Continue reading:  Russia Preparing Patrols of Arctic Shipping Lanes ; ;Related ArticlesE.P.A. Is Expected to Set Limits on Greenhouse Gas Emissions by New Power PlantsU.S. Coal Companies Scale Back Export GoalsJudge Blocks Shipment of Oil Equipment Through Idaho Forest ;

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Russia Preparing Patrols of Arctic Shipping Lanes

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Op-Ed Contributor: How We Learned Not to Guzzle

Over the past 40 years, we have found so many innovative ways to save energy that we more than doubled the economic productivity of our oil, natural gas and electricity. Original source: Op-Ed Contributor: How We Learned Not to Guzzle Related Articles Economic Scene: Counting the Cost of Fixing the Future China’s Plan to Curb Air Pollution Sets Limits on Coal Use and Vehicles Dot Earth Blog: From the Fire Hose: Warming Slowdown, Deep-Ocean Waves, Canadian Crude Inferno

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Op-Ed Contributor: How We Learned Not to Guzzle

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National Briefing | West: California: Fires Prompt Air Quality Warning

Air quality officials are warning San Joaquin Valley residents of potential health hazards because of increasing ozone levels and smoke from lingering wildfires. Read article here:  National Briefing | West: California: Fires Prompt Air Quality Warning ; ;Related ArticlesRescued Hens Fly Cross-Country, No Flapping Required, to Find New LivesNational Parks Try to Appeal to MinoritiesDot Earth Blog: Can Storytelling Be Factual and Effective? ;

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National Briefing | West: California: Fires Prompt Air Quality Warning

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Can Storytelling Be Factual and Effective?

A scientist explores ways to communicate factually and effectively with a Hollywood script doctor and an improv star. Continue at source:  Can Storytelling Be Factual and Effective? ; ;Related ArticlesAssessing the Role of Global Warming in Extreme Weather of 2012What is Journalism For?‘Hurricane Marco Rubio’ – A Winning Climate Campaign? ;

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Can Storytelling Be Factual and Effective?

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