retroactivebakeries:

adz:

Autonomous Trap 001

“What you’re looking at is a salt circle, a traditional form of protection—from within or without—in magical practice. In this case it’s being used to arrest an autonomous vehicle—a self-driving car, which relies on machine vision and processing to guide it. By quickly deploying the expected form of road markings—in this case, a No Entry glyph—we can confuse the car’s vision system into believing it’s surrounded by no entry points, and entrap it.”

-James Bridle

“I cast hold person on the car.”

Africa Trade Meeting Has No Africans After US Visa Denials

theunitofcaring:

Each year, the University of Southern California brings delegations from Africa to meet with business leaders, government officials and others in the U.S. But this year, the African summit has no Africans. All were denied visas.

Visa issues are not uncommon for people traveling from African nations. During her prior three summits, Mary Flowers saw a high percentage of her attendees at the African Global Economic and Development Summit, unable to attain visas.

“Usually we get 40 percent that get rejected but the others come,” said Flowers, chair of the African Global Economic and Development Summit. “This year it was 100 percent. Every delegation. And it was sad to see, because these people were so disheartened.”

Flowers estimated that she lost about 100 attendees, including speakers and government officials. The countries affected included Sierra Leone, Guinea, Ghana, Nigeria, Ethiopia and South Africa.

As far as I know, individual visa denials are not subject to any kind of legal review and Trump’s government can in fact just do this.

Africa Trade Meeting Has No Africans After US Visa Denials

justsomeantifas:

Here’s your dose of “What the Fuck Is Going On” news (March 17th, 2017 edition)

  • A Fox News commentator, Andrew Napolitano, suggested on Fox and Friends that the British intelligence agency GCHQ aided in Obama’s wiretapping of Trump Tower – again a claim Trump continues to tout with no evidence. The administration repeated these comments about GCHQ and when Trump was questioned about these allegations he blamed it on Fox News. Trump claimed that his administration actually didn’t say anything, instead they just quoted what they heard on Fox News and since he didn’t make an opinion on the statement it doesn’t count as saying anything. He then went on to tell the press You shouldn’t be talking to me. You should be talking to Fox.” (source)
  • Fox News then responded: “Fox News cannot confirm Judge Napolitano’s commentary. Fox News knows of no evidence of any kind that the now-president of the United States was surveilled at any time, any way. Full stop.” (source) GCHQ also released a statement saying that the comments are “utterly ridiculous.” (source)
  • Senate Intelligence Committee leaders also released a joint statement today saying that they didn’t find any evidence to back up Trump’s claims about Trump Tower being wiretapped by Obama. Trump still isn’t backing away from his claim, however he did say that he didn’t necessarily mean “wiretapping,” despite using those exact fucking words.  (source)
  • Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said that the administration is going to break away from diplomatic efforts to talk North Korea out of a nuclear confrontation. This move signals that a military response might become an option. (source) Tillerson also cut his visit to South Korea short today, citing “fatigue,” skipping out a dinner with South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se and acting President and Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn. (source)
  • A laptop computer containing sensitive intelligence was stolen from a Secret Service agent’s vehicle. However, the Secret Service made a statement saying that the laptop contains multiple layers of security and encryption and they’re not permitted to have classified information on their laptops. (source
  • The House Budget Committee advanced the American Health Care Act (Trumpcare/GOPcare) The vote was 19-17 meaning three conservatives voted against the bill. The White House is now working hard to make sure that this bill will pass in the House, because they republicans cannot afford to lose more than 21 votes. (source) However, the GOP Freedom Caucus still opposes the bill. (source)
  • It has been exposed that former U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara, who was removed from his post by the Trump administration last week, was overseeing an investigation into stock trades made by the president’s health secretary, Tom Price. During Price’s confirmation hearings there were major concerns regarding the investments he made while serving in Congress. (source)
  • Two employees at the National Institutes of Health have forwarded emails to the press to show that the Department of Health and Human Services, Tom Price is sending them (what they call) propaganda. (source)
  • The National Campaign to Prevent Teen and Unplanned Pregnancy did extensive research on areas in the U.S. where women have limited access to publicly funded clinics that offer birth control, and where Planned Parenthood is the ONLY full-service reproductive health clinic. According to their research, 105 counties fall into this category and would be affected by the defunding of Planned Parenthood. (source + full list of counties)
  • Here’s an article I would suggest reading about multiple scientist’s fears when it comes to the cuts to medical and science research that Trump is proposing and how it will hurt future generations.

  • Oklahoma Sen. Ralph Shortey turned himself in yesterday after the Cleveland County district attorney filed three felony charges against the lawmaker, including e”ngaging in child prostitution, engaging in prostitution close to a church, and transporting a minor for prostitution.” Shortey has been a major advocate of “family values.” (source)
  • The federal government has approved a $100 million in emergency funding for Flint, Michigan as part of recovery efforts following the city’s drinking water crisis. Funding will go toward replacing lead service lines in the city and improving corrosion controls there. (source)
  • George Conway is being considered by Trump to be the head of the Justice Department’s civil division. Conway was previously considered for the role of solicitor general but the job went to another. Conway is also Kellyanne Conway’s husband. (source)
  • Trump cited a satirical article to promote his health care bill because it was titled “Trump’s budget makes perfect sense and will fix America, and I will tell you why.” Too bad he didn’t read the rest of the article where it said things like “America has been soft and weak for too long. ‘BUT HOW WILL I SURVIVE ON THIS BUDGET?’ you may be wondering. ‘I AM A HUMAN CHILD, NOT A COSTLY FIGHTER JET.’ You may not survive, but that is because you are SOFT and WEAK, something this budget is designed to eliminate.” (source)
  • Jason Hairston is set to serve as an Interior liaison for the White House. Hairston is a former NFL player and close friend of Trump. (source)
  • One of Mike Pence’s top political allies is an investor in the conservative news organization that was granted exclusive access to cover Secretary of State Rex Tillerson’s latest overseas. The ally, Nick Ayers, is part owner of the Independent Journal Review. (source)
  • Trump met with German Chancellor Angela Merkel today where he appears to ignore her request for a handshake. He also ignored her pleas regarding immigration and refugees. 
  • And now your daily reminder that: Flint, Michigan still doesn’t have clean water. Standing Rock still needs your support. The American infrastructure report card still averages poorly with the rating of a “D+”

Finally, if you would like to support “What the Fuck Is Going On” news and it’s almost-daily posts you can visit my Patreon by clicking here

surreal:

surreal:

i know ive blogged abt this before but does anyone else remember the study on the children w/ a broken furby who like. removed its skin and cut it into as many pieces as those who were present for the ceremony to be taken far away and buried as a means of appeasing it?? & they like?? defined the skin as the ghost and the rest as the goblin and both were angry that the children had killed it??????????????? please

I read about it in Sherry Turkle’s Alone Together: Why We Expect More from Technology and Less from Each Other. here:

image

Keep reading

journalismfucked100years:

priceofliberty:

thefeelofavideogame:

skypig357:

snazsy:

thevoluntaryist:

We live in an America where the CIA devoted resources to figuring out how to spy on you through your tv. And you’re worried about Russia…

It’s incredible that people are surprised by this. 

Unless you’re on a watchlist, they’re not that interested in you.

Not to mention the sheer amount of volume such a thing produces. And the lack of ability to do much about most of it. You’re only going to feel repercussions if you’re doing terrorist shit. No civilian court can touch it

let me try and put this in a way idiots on tumblr can understand

AUTHORITARIAN👏STATES👏USE👏PERPETUAL👏SURVEILLANCE👏TO👏INTIMIDATE👏CITIZENS👏AND👏STIFLE👏DISSENT👏AND👏CAN👏USE👏IT👏WITH👏VAGUE👏LAWS👏TO👏FIND👏EXCUSES👏TO👏PROSECUTE👏ANYONE👏THEY👏WISH👏YOU👏FUCKING👏NIMRODS

Persistent mass surveillance has a quantifiable “chilling effect” on the First Amendment

Mass surveillance has opened the door to civil rights violations of non-terrorist citizens who are being watched

New abuses of surveillance technologies by Federal agencies are uncovered by FISA on a near-daily basis

During the Civil Rights movement and the Vietnam War, for example, the FBI—as well as many individual police departments around the nation—conducted illegal operations to spy upon and harass political activists; they spied on Occupy Wall Street and the DHS spied on the TEA Party movement as well as other “right-wing extremists”.

This latest leak shows that the CIA has all of these technologies and proliferates them to other entities who want this information all the time. You need your privacy to protect yourself and your information. If you have nothing to hide, you have plenty to hide:

The line “if you’ve got nothing to hide, you have nothing to worry about” is used all too often in defending surveillance overreach. It’s been debunked countless times in the past, but with the line being trotted out frequently in response to the NSA revelations, it’s time for yet another debunking, and there are two good ones that were recently published. First up, we’ve got Moxie Marlinspike at Wired, who points out that, you’re wrong if you think you’ve got nothing to hide, because our criminal laws are so crazy, that anyone sifting through your data would likely be able to pin quite a few crimes on you if they just wanted to. 

Julian Sanchez points out:

Some of the potentially sensitive facts those records expose becomes obvious after giving it some thought: Who has called a substance abuse counselor, a suicide hotline, a divorce lawyer or an abortion provider? What websites do you read daily? What porn turns you on? What religious and political groups are you a member of?

Some are less obvious. Because your cellphone’s “routing information” typically includes information about the nearest cell tower, those records are also a kind of virtual map showing where you spend your time — and, when aggregated with others, who you like to spend it with. 

We simply cannot possibly know when something is going to incriminate us and the State is not above scapegoating individuals or coercing them into submission. James Duane, a professor at Regent Law School and former defense attorney, notes:

Estimates of the current size of the body of federal criminal law vary. It has been reported that the Congressional Research Service cannot even count the current number of federal crimes. These laws are scattered in over 50 titles of the United States Code, encompassing roughly 27,000 pages. Worse yet, the statutory code sections often incorporate, by reference, the provisions and sanctions of administrative regulations promulgated by various regulatory agencies under congressional authorization. Estimates of how many such regulations exist are even less well settled, but the ABA thinks there are ”nearly 10,000.”

Supreme Court Justice Breyer elaborates:

The complexity of modern federal criminal law, codified in several thousand sections of the United States Code and the virtually infinite variety of factual circumstances that might trigger an investigation into a possible violation of the law, make it difficult for anyone to know, in advance, just when a particular set of statements might later appear (to a prosecutor) to be relevant to some such investigation.

Not just the State, but anyone could draw suspicion against you if they had the right information with the right circumstances. We are entitled to our privacy, and these institutions must be held to account. 

I just posted an article about Snowden speaking at SXSW about how the NSA literally collects every single piece of data, every scrap of conversation. They collect EVERYTHING and KEEP IT ALL.

mehreenkasana:

mehreenkasana:

Reading about Congress bills can be dry, so here’s a quick thread on the eight bills (among 2,000 – according to Al Jazeera English) introduced since Trump took office in January.

I will update this post with a link explaining each bill – which has far-reaching and devastating consequences for Americans, especially low-income Americans – in a very short bit.

Here is a brief description of each bill in easy-to-understand language.

roscoerackham:

shinykari:

lady-feral:

hollowedskin:

cannon-fannon:

boneyardchamp:

Your professor will not be happy with you if he says the Stanford Prison Experiment shows human nature and you say it shows the nature of white middle class college-aged boys.

Like he will not be happy at all.

For real though. That experiment. Scary shit.

This reminds me of a discussion that I read once which said Lord of the Flies would have turned out a hell of a lot differently if it was a private school of young girls (who are expected to be responsible and selfless instead), or a public school where the children weren’t all from an inherently entitled, emotionally stunted social class (studies have shown that people in lower socioeconomic classes show more compassion for others).

Or that the same premise with children raised in a different culture than the toxic and opressive British Empire and it’s emphasis on social hierarchy and personal wealth and status.

And that what we perceive as the unchangable truth deep inside humanity because of things like Lord of the Flies and the Stanford Prison Experiment, is just the base truths about what happens when you remove any accountabilty controlling one social group with an overwhelming sense of entitlement and an inability to feel compassion.

I will always reblog this.

I just wanna say that the Lord of the Flies was explicitly written about high-class private school boys to make this exact point. Golding wrote Lord of the Flies partially to refute an earlier novel about this same subject: The Coral Island by

R.M. Ballantyne. Golding thought it was absolutely absurd that a bunch of privileged little shits would set up some sort of utopia, so his book shows them NOT doing that.

This is also generally true about most psychological experiments.

There’s an experiment called “The Ultimatum Game”. It goes something like this.

  1. Subject A is given an amount of money (Say, $100).
  2. Subject A must offer Subject B some percentage of that money.
  3. If Subject B accepts Subject A’s offer, both get the agreed upon amount of money. If Subject B refuses, no one gets any money.

The most common result was believed to be that people favored 50/50 splits. Anything too low was rejected; people wanted fairness. This was believed to be universal.

And then a researcher went to Peru to do the experiment with members of the indigenous Machiguenga population, and was baffled to find that the results were totally different.

Because, to the Machiguenga, refusing any amount of free money (even an unfair amount) was considered crazy.

So the researcher took his work on the road (to 14 other ‘small scale’ societies and tribes) , and to his shock found the results varied wildly depending on where the test was done. 

In fact, the “universal” result? Was an outlier. 

And that’s the problem. 96% percent of test subjects for psychological research come from 12% of the population. Stuff that we consider to be universal facts of human nature… even things like optical illusions, just… aren’t.

 You can read an article about it here.  But the crux of it is that psychology is plagued with confirmation bias, and people are shaped more by their environment than we realize. 

nativenews:

baapi-makwa:

http://www.citypages.com/restaurants/a-plan-to-turn-hiawatha-golf-course-into-minneapolis-first-food-forest/416059773

this is awesome 😊

The city would plant everything from raspberries and blackberries to maple trees and hazelnut trees, as well as shoreline plants like katniss (also known as duck potato) and medicinal herbs like echinacea.

Imagine a forest filled with edible plants, berries, hazelnuts, and maple trees, bordered by hiking trails. A place where you can learn to forage and harvest while enjoying a beautiful lake and natural wetlands.

Now imagine that the forest is located on the edge of Minneapolis.

This is what Ryan Seibold and Russ Henry are trying to create near Lake Hiawatha.

Parts of the nearby Hiawatha Golf Course have been closed since a 2014 flood, and are expected to reopen this spring. This spurred the Minneapolis Parks and Recreation Board to explore options for rebuilding the course to make it more flood resistant.

Yet these plans stalled when it was discovered that the board was pumping more groundwater from the course – and into the already-polluted Lake Hiawatha – than allowed by the state. The city was left to decide whether to keep pumping or let the former wetland reclaim its territory.

Henry, a landscape designer who is running for a Park Board seat, says replacing the course with a food forest would turn a big problem into a big benefit.

The restored wetland would act as a natural filter, blocking major pollutants from storm water sewers and bringing back animals and plants displaced by the course, he says.

Put simply, a food forest is a woodland that uses native trees, shrubs, and plants that are both edible and medicinal. The city would plant everything from raspberries and blackberries to maple trees and hazelnut trees, as well as shoreline plants like katniss (also known as duck potato) and medicinal herbs like echinacea.

Intended to be low-maintenance and self-maintaining once established, the plants are designed to not only build soil but to attract pollinators. (Plants like milkweed are especially beneficial for bees and monarch butterflies.)

According to Seibold, the plants would be available for people to forage and harvest as needed. The idea is to teach people to understand the connection between plants and animals, as well as learn when to harvest sustainably.

“You’re growing the food, but you’re also growing the community around the food,” Seibold says.

There would have to be some sort of foraging training to ensure the plants are available for everyone, Henry adds.

When he got his first job in a nursery 20 years ago, Henry says plants were just green things he couldn’t begin to tell apart. Since then, nature has opened up to him, and he would love for the kids of Minneapolis to have the same opportunity.

By learning more about what they’re able to take from nature, Henry says that people might feel more empowered to grow food in their own yards, to embrace nature and sustainable development, and to encourage friends and neighbors to do the same.

Seibold and Henry say they’ve been getting positive feedback. The park board has until July to decide what to do with the land, but Henry says it may have already decided to reconstruct the golf course.

Either way, the men will continue their work.

Seibold is working with the board to establish a fruit and nut tree orchard on the east side of the lake, and Henry is helping to coordinate a food innovation lab on March 16 in the Food Building in northeast Minneapolis. The event will showcase ideas for ensuring better soil and water quality, as well as new harvesting techniques and agro projects.

The FCC is stopping 9 companies from providing federally subsidized Internet to the poor

sale-aholic:

spiletta42:

vamdae:

tikkunolamorgtfo:

fromchaostocosmos:

sale-aholic:

trump and the GOP want to take  the Internet from poor people.

It is a method if restricting people’s access to information and knowledge.

As a librarian, this is unacceptable.

You need the internet to get a job nowadays also,

The US Government just took a stance on “should poor kids be able to do their homework?” and that stance is “No!”

So the game plan, I’m guessing, is to force poor kids to fall behind, as an excuse to drag “underperforming” students out of the classroom and into coal mines where our new Secretary of Education thinks they belong.

All of this and it is so depressing but WE have to continue to fight this Regime!

The FCC is stopping 9 companies from providing federally subsidized Internet to the poor