Freedom is scary, but lack
of freedom is scarier
 
The Editor’s Notes
by Ken Holder
[email protected]

Attribute to L. Neil Smith’s The Libertarian Enterprise
It sez here I have to tell you: “As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.” Now, I thought and assumed you already knew that, but it appears that I have to tell you right out and assume you are too dumb to know. So, consider yourself told. There, I have now met the Federal requirements and stuff.
Reading. Yes, I’ve been reading:
My Country and My People, by Lin Yutang
 Tells about China back before WW2 and the commie takover.
Tells about China back before WW2 and the commie takover.
History of Western Philosophy, by Bertrand Russell.
One of the 20th century’s leading logicans take a logical look at the ideas
of some of the great thinkers. Very logical it is. Yes. Logical.

August 1914, by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
 About the opening Russian/German battle of WW1.
About the opening Russian/German battle of WW1. 
Three books by Chinese science-ficiton writer Liu Cixin (or Cixin Liu if you want his family name at the end):
The Three-Body Problem (Remembrance of Earth’s Past Book 1), by Cixin Liu

The Dark Forest (Remembrance of Earth’s Past Book 2), by Cixin Liu 

Death’s End (Remembrance of Earth’s Past Book 3), by Cixin Liu 

I’m only about half-way through the second book, but it’s a fine tale!
The Road, by Cormac McCarthy 
 This one is very grim, with a sort-of-but-not-exactly a happyish
ending. Grim.
This one is very grim, with a sort-of-but-not-exactly a happyish
ending. Grim.
The Great Warming: Climate Change and the Rise and 
Fall of Civilizations, by Brian Fagan — mostly about the Medieval 
warm period (ca. 800-1300)

The City & The City, by China Miéville. A truly
astonishing tour-de-force of story-telling. It takes a while even to
figure out what’s going on. It seems to be a murder mystery, but
the setting/world is so strange and bizzare, that half the
fun is just gradually coming to understand the place where it is
taking place. Brilliant, and highly recommended:

Kraken, by China Miéville. This one is set in
London, and, ya see, there is this giant squid preserved in a museum
and it gets stolen. The whole gaint tank it's in and all. Suspicion
immediately fally on a religion that worships the giant squid. There
are also a pair of scary evil bad-guys. And… And … well,
it is dang good.

Embassytown, by China Miéville. Most science
fictional aliens are not really all that alien. These ones are. Very,
very alien. The humans in the story keep thinking they have figured
these guys out, but … no.

And a few rather interesting articles:
On Psychopathy and Power
by Caitlin Johnstone
I often say that we have found ourselves ruled by psychopaths 
because we have a system wherein (A) those who are willing to do anything 
to anyone are rewarded with immense wealth, and (B) immense wealth 
translates directly to immense political power.
Add in the fact that studies have shown that wealth itself kills 
off empathy and compassion, and you’ve got yourself a perfect recipe for 
a plutocratic dystopia dominated by antisocial personality disorder.
I’m not really interested in getting into the specific clinical 
diagnoses of psychopathy and sociopathy for the purposes of this 
discussion.
What I’m talking about here is a specific slice of humanity that is 
neurologically wired in such a way that they experience the world more as 
a series of puzzles which can be manipulated around to get them them 
whatever they want regardless of who it hurts, rather than experiencing a 
world full of fellow sentient beings with whom you can have deep, 
meaningful connections and interactions. Not all people who are diagnosed 
as psychopaths are high-functioning enough to manipulate people at high 
levels, and not everyone who manipulates people in this way would 
necessarily be diagnosed as a psychopath or even a sociopath. Feel free 
to mentally substitute whatever term you prefer.
Whatever you want to call it, people who have this condition (and 
are able to avoid prison) tend to do quite well for themselves by our 
society’s standards. Because they don’t see other people as anything 
other than tools and resources, they don’t let empathy and compassion 
stand in their way when viciousness and exploitation will help them 
achieve their goals. Because they don’t value connections with other 
people, they don’t see narratives and descriptions as paths toward deeper 
understanding, but as tools which can be twisted and distorted in order 
to secure themselves more wealth, status, sex, or whatever else they 
want. They quickly rise to the top in corporate and financial settings, 
in media institutions, in government agencies, and in politics. In modern 
society this ability is a natural advantage that the rest of us simply 
cannot compete with.
[Read More]
Without encryption, we will lose all privacy. 
This is our new battleground
by Edward Snowden
In every country of the world, the security of computers keeps the 
lights on, the shelves stocked, the dams closed, and transportation 
running. For more than half a decade, the vulnerability of our computers 
and computer networks has been ranked the number one risk in the US 
Intelligence Community’s Worldwide Threat Assessment – that’s higher than 
terrorism, higher than war. Your bank balance, the local hospital’s 
equipment, and the 2020 US presidential election, among many, many other 
things, all depend on computer safety.
And yet, in the midst of the greatest computer security crisis in 
history, the US government, along with the governments of the UK and 
Australia, is attempting to undermine the only method that currently 
exists for reliably protecting the world’s information: encryption. 
Should they succeed in their quest to undermine encryption, our public 
infrastructure and private lives will be rendered permanently unsafe.
In the simplest terms, encryption is a method of protecting 
information, the primary way to keep digital communications safe. Every 
email you write, every keyword you type into a search box – every 
embarrassing thing you do online – is transmitted across an increasingly 
hostile internet. Earlier this month the US, alongside the UK and 
Australia, called on Facebook to create a “backdoor”, or fatal flaw, into 
its encrypted messaging apps, which would allow anyone with the key to 
that backdoor unlimited access to private communications. So far, 
Facebook has resisted this.
If internet traffic is unencrypted, any government, company, or 
criminal that happens to notice it can – and, in fact, does – steal a 
copy of it, secretly recording your information for ever. If, however, 
you encrypt this traffic, your information cannot be read: only those who 
have a special decryption key can unlock it.
I know a little about this, because for a time I operated part of 
the US National Security Agency’s global system of mass surveillance. In 
June 2013 I worked with journalists to reveal that system to a 
scandalised world. Without encryption I could not have written the story 
of how it all happened – my book Permanent Record – and got the 
manuscript safely across borders that I myself can’t cross. More 
importantly, encryption helps everyone from reporters, dissidents, 
activists, NGO workers and whistleblowers, to doctors, lawyers and 
politicians, to do their work – not just in the world’s most dangerous 
and repressive countries, but in every single country.
[Read More]
Well, those ought to hold you for a while. Stay deplorable, my friends!
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