COINTELPRO first strike or feral libertarians? “ifeminism” anti-N.O.W. protest

Since they protested in favor of Starbucks, I’m leaning towards feral libertarians, but this is almost as absurd as it is scary.

Disguised as well scrubbed “freedom-loving” acitvists, this really offensive group is using the web to organize protests AGAINST movements for social change. The anti-NOW, anti-feminist flyer is incredibly ignorant, implying that feminism is about women hating men and seeking “special privileges” from the the government. They offer instead something called “ifeminism”, where no one asks for equality under the law or other silly democractic concepts–but hey, you’re free to be a stripper. So clueless and un-informed it could only have been written by a CIA libertarian who just got dumped by his girlfriend. Either that or someone took the SubGenius too seriously. Chilling.

[via Bloc de Foie Gras de Canard]

Chilean Sea Bass: More Than an Identity Problem

Hundreds of chefs, restaurateurs and dealers across the country have agreed to participate in “Take a Pass on Chilean Sea Bass.” The fish (which isn’t a bass at all, it’s a Patagonian toothfish) is being overfished to the point of extinction as environmental laws struggle to keep up with hungry American pallets driven onward by marketing. The punchline to the story (if you can say such a thing) is that commercial fishermen in Antarctic waters have now begun substituting a related fish, which they call Antarctic toothfish for “Chilean Sea Bass.”

Lowercase Sound

Paging John Cage

“Lowercase sound” is the name given to a loose movement in electronic music that emphasizes very quiet sounds and the long, empty silences between them.

Created largely by scientists, techies and experimental musicians, lowercase recordings are frequently based on the magnification of minute sounds through a computer, typically a Macintosh.

Recent compositions include a bubbling symphony of boiling tea kettles, the gentle hiss of blank tapes being played through a stereo and the soft bumps of helium balloons hitting the ceiling.

A photo tour of the old Pacific Electric Glendale-Burbank line

pe-fargoAt my old house in Silver Lake, the site in this photograph (Allesandro and Fargo) was about a half-mile away. Certainly within walking distance. I suppose it’s hackneyed to whine nostalgic about the good old days of Los Angeles’ forgotten mass transit, but damnit – we could have used this! Now the right-of-way is long gone. Thanks guys…

Ice reservoirs found on Mars

Hitting the wires today in full force. The BBC leaks a story that NASA is announcing that vast quantities of water ice exist just below the Martian surface. If melted, the ice would create a water ocean that could cover the entire planet to a depth of 500 meters.

OK, I’m waiting patiently to sign up for the first trip.

[via damn near everyone]

Afghanistan Maps for Pilots Were Delayed by Foul-Ups

Remember back at the beginning of the Afghanistan campaign, the Defense Department bought up all of the photographs taken by private surveillance satellites? Ever wonder what happened to them?

For nearly a month after the bombing campaign began, pilots had to make do with old Russian maps of Afghanistan, because the American intelligence community was slow to figure out how to process and distribute satellite photographs from a private contractor, the officials say.

Once Air Force officers discovered that thousands of the fresh, high-resolution satellite pictures were sitting on CD-ROM’s in storage at a military base here, they skirted the bureaucracy and began ferrying the photographs themselves directly to a forward air base in Saudi Arabia. But the episode underscores the way American intelligence’s management of spy satellite technology has encountered problems in trying to integrate information from the private sector.

[via RRE]

Echelon Gave Authorities Warning Of Attacks

One question I did have about the Current Situation was “what happened to Echelon?” You would think that with all the money poured into it that it would have vacuumed up some hits. Apparently it did, but the real intelligence breakdown here is in putting together the big picture from all this data.

The FAZ, quoting unnamed German intelligence sources, said that the Echelon spy network was being used to collect information about the terrorist threats, and that U.K. intelligence services apparently also had advance warning. The FAZ, one of Germany’s most respected dailies, said that even as far back as six months ago western and near-east press services were receiving information that such attacks were being planned.

Within the American intelligence community, the warnings were taken seriously and surveillance intensified, the FAZ said. However, there was disagreement on how such terrorist attacks could be prevented, the newspaper said.

[via RRE]