06.28.13

Ricin Mama indicted

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Ricin Kooks at 10:22 am by George Smith

Shannon Richardson was just indicted on three charges of mailing threatening letters, the most famous of which went to the President. If guilty, it’s five years per charge.

“(I will) make sure you wont be runnin this country in the ground any further,” the letter to the Prez said, which along with the other two, were intended to frame her husband.

Richardson’s lawyer requested a mental exam for her a week or so ago & the court granted it. Such a shame that a taste of Hollywood took her down this dark path of ruin.

Goofball quote of the last two weeks, from a national lab research doing rent-seeking on the bank of the ricin case cluster:

There is an urgency to the [Pacific Northwest National Laboratory] work, because for many would-be terrorists, the ease of access and relatively simple production method has made ricin the “weapon of choice,??? David Wunschel said.

Whatever the three involved in the ricin cluster are, “would-be terrorists” doesn’t describe them.

“Ricin Mama,” however, does describe one.


Trivia note: That’s Steve Cropper, best known as guitarist for Booker T. & the MG’s and the Blues Brothers Band, beside southern strategy Boogie Man Lee Atwater in the video.

06.27.13

Pathetic

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Cyberterrorism at 9:12 pm by George Smith

Nothing good was every going to come from unleashing computer viruses on Iran. Now everything about the program appears to have blown up.

From the WaPo:

A retired four-star Marine Corps general who served as the nation’s second-ranking military officer is a target of a Justice Department investigation into a leak of information about a covert U.S.-Israeli cyberattack on Iran’s nuclear program, a senior Obama administration official said.

Retired Gen. James E. “Hoss??? Cartwright served as deputy chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and was part of President Obama’s inner circle on a range of critical national security issues before he retired in 2011.

The administration official said that Cartwright is suspected of revealing information about a highly classified effort to use a computer virus later dubbed Stuxnet to sabotage equipment in Iranian nuclear enrichment plants.

Stuxnet was part of a broader cyber campaign called Olympic Games that was disclosed by the New York Times last year as one of the first major efforts by the United States to use computer code as a destructive weapon against a key adversary.

Cartwright, who helped launch that campaign under President Bush and pushed for its escalation under Obama, was recently informed that he was a “target??? of a wide-ranging Justice Department probe into the leak …

The campaign is believed to have destroyed as many as 1,000 of Iran’s 6,000 centrifuges at the time. But the virus also escaped those closed systems and was subsequently discovered on the Internet, raising concern about the potential that government-sponsored viruses could cause widespread and unintentional harm.

Stuxnet and Olympic Games unleashed a global state-sponsored race to develop malware. As part of secret war against Iran it also triggered retaliations against the US and other nations in the Middle East.

SCOTUS unleashes Lee Atwater political activism

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Ted Nugent, WhiteManistan at 12:29 pm by George Smith

This is an excerpt explaining the southern sentiment, taken from Boogie Man: The Lee Atwater Story.

Boogie Man shows how Atwater motivated the white vote through use of the Nixonian southern strategy of fear of the black man. It put the first Bush in the White House, later providing the framework to unleash GWB on the US.

With WhiteManistan in demographic decline, this week’s SCOTUS decision crippling the Voting Rights Act unleashed the worst of the Deep Southern sentiment on the non-white and poor in every state currently under GOP and Tea Party control since the 2010 elections.

The GOP viscerally understands it can enact predatory laws targeting its enemies faster than US “democracy” can undo them.

One can look at it as being able to wage Civil War 2 without instigating the casus belli of firing on Fort Sumter or assaulting African Americans on Pettus Bridge.

In the United States, the Republican Party threatens the security of many average Americans, daily. In the south, no time was wasted after the Supreme Court ruling into getting to it.


I recommend Boogie Man because it so well illustrates how the grinding bigot animosity of the South made true political power all over the country.

And while it’s people are slowly running out of their time, it has not gone away, still posing a very clear threat to progress and a genuinely civilized nation.


Trivia note: Yes, that’s the Boogie Man in “Ricin Mama.


Right on time, from Ted Nugent’s column at World Net Daily:

Chronic stupidity is killing our republic. The gravest problem our republic faces: Stupid people vote …

The Founding Fathers surely must have forgotten to include a provision in our Constitution to prohibit stupid people from voting, or maybe people back then were more informed and responsible and not as stupid as they are today.

So now, a gaggle of stupid senators from both parties is trying to push some stupid immigration reform bill that, if signed into law, will ultimately make tens of millions of non-American criminals U.S. citizens …

The Republicans who support making criminals citizens want cheap criminal labor. The Democrats want the criminal votes. Meanwhile, those Americans addicted to common sense will be strangled and drowned with insurmountable new debt due to the crushing demand by these “new??? Americans on our social welfare system, which is already broke and unsustainable.

The bigot’s bigot puts his best foot forward, as usual.

06.26.13

What did you learn in WhiteManistan today?

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, WhiteManistan at 12:32 pm by George Smith

The politicians of the New Confederacy don’t let the grass grow under their feet.

No sooner had they blown the vote on law to make abortion virtually impossible in Texas, they came right back with the expressed intent of ramming it through in another special session of the Texas legislature.


And after the re-institution of the rights of gays to marry in California, from the Great Southern Republic of New Kansas:

Rep. Tim Huelskamp said he will file a constitutional amendment later this week to restore DOMA.

The Kansas Republican said he will be joined by other conservatives in supporting that effort.

“My response to this will be later this week to file a federal marriage amendment,??? he said at a Conversation with Conservatives lunch on Wednesday morning.

When Hell freezes over.

However, everyone knows now that the extremists are never stopped, not in 2013 divided America. WhiteManistan wants no part of the future.

Its politicians have deduced they can enact unconstitutional law much faster than it can be undone, in effect bringing on the Cold Civil War riddling the country.

Thought question:

What happens when, before the 2014 elections, WhiteManistan has legislation in place to disenfranchise its enemies at the voting booth? When the people who have voted for years come out in force because they know they’ve been targeted and they are told their papers are not in order by someone who has different color skin, do you think they’ll go home?

That’s not going to happen.

It is heartening to know that it was California’s gay couples who wouldn’t stand for the state’s Prop. 8 banning gay marriage. It was that persistence that pushed it before the Supreme Court, bringing about the repeal of DOMA.


From Kevin Phillips’ American Theocracy , published in 2006:

Within [WhiteManistan’s] most loyal denominations — Southern Baptists, Mormons and Missouri Synod Lutherans — overall theology accords women secondary status. The essential female role is biblical and familial …

In a related vein conservative publications emphasized the importance in the 2004 election of the “baby gap” — the data showing the pro-Bush [white] voters have more children than do Democratic voters. The states where white fertility rates were high went conservative … Conversely, the states were abortion rates were highest supported Kerry.


To religious traditionalists, homosexuality threatened institutions of family and marriage. Eleven states held November 2004 referendums to ban gay marriage. In the seven states where conservative denominations are strong, the propositions carried by huge majorities: 86 percent in Mississippi, 77 percent in Georgia, 76 percent in Oklahoma, 75 percent in Kentucky and Arkansas, and 66 percent in Utah and Montana. Church-going black voters, principally Baptists and Pentecostals, supported the curbs by lopsided margins, increasing the antigay margins in the Deep South (and accounting for much of the small 2004 Republican increase in black support.)

Time moved on, shifting the sands of race demographics undermined the status quo of the Bush years. The country is more polarized now but WhiteManistan is in numerical decline.

Outsized Mormon bankrolling of Proposition 8 gave sleeping California a ban on gay marriage during the 2008 state elections. It won narrowly with a 52 percent majority. It put the state in the awkward position of having gay marriages enacted legally prior to its stand-up with the rest of the polity left to awkwardly look on. Socially, it was always a bad fit, rigged by money. One could perceive it would eventually be undone, somehow.

This was another factor, but not the major one, in the destruction of the GOP within the state. Its strategy of legislatively attacking enemies doesn’t work here anymore. In the intervening years the GOP was driven out of power, its end coming in 2012.

The rest of the country waits. But the neo-Confederates are never idle. They won a big one early in the week. They lost one today.

It’s not a coincidence that the win for the forces of good started in the Golden State and evil’s win in Shelby County, Alabama. The two regions — here and there in the Deep South — could not be farther apart.

06.24.13

Useless tool of cyberwar journalism

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Cyberterrorism, Shoeshine at 12:27 pm by George Smith

I’d skipped this last week because it was a particularly exceptional example of pathetic American journalism, a feature at high button Vanity Fair, on the “terrifying” nature of cyberwar.

It was made for the print edition, so it was completed before the Edward Snowden affair blew the rubbish of it into the trash. It’s standard script-writing, take the pants-wetting stories from anonymous government security sources, embellish with purple prose, and let a couple hackers of either stock smarm or villainy be presented as potentially able to take down portions of the the US with just a few keystrokes because they are so smart.

The latter was old stew over a decade ago.

Anyway, some of the worst of it (no link, Vanity Fair being another website of the infinite download):

On the hidden battlefields of history’s first known cyber-war, the casualties are piling up. In the U.S., many banks have been hit, and the telecommunications industry seriously damaged, likely in retaliation for several major attacks on Iran.

(Did you notice the telecommunications industry was seriously damaged by Iran? Somehow Escape from WhiteManistan missed it.)


Even so, many current and former government officials took account of the brute force on display and shuddered to think what might have happened if the target had been different: the Port of Los Angeles, say, or the Social Security Administration, or O’Hare International Airport. Holy shit, one former national-security official recalls thinking—pick any network you want, and they could do this to it. Just wipe it clean.

(Yes, terrible. Iran could take down the US through cyberspace. Never mind restore from backup. Repeat terrifying script of puny country making entire US infrastructure collapse.)


Asymmetric warfare — unconventional, guerrilla-style attacks on more powerful adversaries, such as the U.S.— is a cornerstone of Iranian military doctrine.

Repeat script third time. Puny country, master of guerrilla cyber-warfare, threatens US infrastructure.


During the second week of September 2012, a new spate of cyber-attacks against American interests began. This time, the targets were on American soil: U.S. banks. A previously unknown group calling itself the Izz ad-Din al-Qassam Cyber Fighters and presenting itself as an organization of Sunni jihadists made an online posting written in broken English, referring to an anti-Islamic video on YouTube called “Innocence of Muslims??? that had sparked riots in the Muslim world the week before. The posting stated that “Muslims must do whatever is necessary to stop spreading this movie All the Muslim youths who are active in the Cyber world will attack to American and Zionist Web bases as much as needed such that they say that they are sorry about that insult.???

Next script: They attacked the financial system. Yes, nothing gets up the sympathy of the man in the street against the outside enemy by telling him someone attacked the websites of giant American banks.


To absorb the gargantuan volume of traffic coming their way, banks had to buy more bandwidth, which telecommunication companies had to create and provide. Telecoms have borne the brunt of these battles, just as the banks have, spending large sums to expand their networks, and to strengthen or replace hardware associated with their “scrubber??? services, which absorb DDoS traffic. Qassam’s first wave of attacks was so intense that it reportedly broke the scrubbers of one of this country’s largest and best-known telecom companies. In December, AT&T executive director of technology security Michael Singer reportedly stated that the attacks posed a growing threat to the telecommunications infrastructure …

Be afraid, very afraid. Because, like … the banks (!) and … AT&T!


A hacker in Iran who appeared to be the prime mover in this group goes by the name of Mormoroth. Some of the information concerning these attack tools was posted to his blog; the blog has since disappeared. His Facebook page includes pictures of himself and his hacker friends in swaggering poses reminiscent of Reservoir Dogs. Also on Facebook, his hacking group’s page bears the slogan “Security is like sex, once you’re penetrated, you’re fucked.???

Another hack, which occurred even as the bank attacks continued through the spring, delivered a still more dramatic financial threat, although its ultimate source was difficult to discern. On April 23, the Twitter account of the Associated Press sent this message: “Breaking: Two Explosions in the White House and Barack Obama Is Injured.??? Faced with this news, the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 150 points—the equivalent of $136 billion in value—within a matter of minutes. Upon learning that the information was false—and that the A.P.’s Twitter account had simply been hacked—the markets rebounded. A group calling itself the Syrian Electronic Army (S.E.A.) claimed credit for the disruption.

Enough, really enough. Perfect Culture of Lickspittle material.

06.23.13

The new Shoeshine kiosk

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 1:25 pm by George Smith

At the core of the iCracked business is a network of iTechs who promise to fix your phone in a flash. Currently their network has 340 iTechs spread over 11 countries. Forsythe said thousands apply, but only 2 percent are accepted. The firm adds 50-70 new iTechs every month.

“We are extremely diligent in who we bring on and who represents us as a company…we background check every single one of them,??? Forsythe said. “We have a five-step interview process.

“One thing’s for sure, the potential market is enormous, the world has more than 1 billion smartphones in use, and researchers estimate the next billion smartphone users to be online by 2015,” it reads.

And still there are 48 million people on foodstamps, many of whom have smartphones that, somehow, make no difference at all to mobility in the US economy.

06.22.13

Three ricin-making machines

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Ricin Kooks at 9:00 am by George Smith

Notify Homeland Security and the press.


Note where ricin paste comes out.



Emits clouds of ricin dusts on demand. Notify Global Strike Drone Command.



Can you spot the American innovation? Not a trick question.

06.21.13

Rock Friday

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle, Ricin Kooks, Rock 'n' Roll at 2:10 pm by George Smith

Does humor belong in music? Ricin Mama says it does. I’m the best rock guitarist and harp player in the national security field, easy.

If this doesn’t make you laugh or smile, you can’t be my friend. Really. That’s what I told ’em on Facebook.


Details: That’s a castor bean extraction machine operating in Malaysia. Obviously, producing a lot of dust. (This is for the thickheaded in the US who still think castor powder is a WMD.)

The economy that produces nothing

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 10:13 am by George Smith

Paul Krugman has gone ballistic on Apple this week. Although he says it’s not judgmental he analyzes the company for its position atop the American business pyramid, explaining the difference between an economy that once depended on production of material goods for profits (I grew up in the shadows of Alcoa and Bethlehem Steel) and one now largely turned over to what he calls “monopoly rents.”

Which is another variation on rent-seeking, the abandonment of producing anything of particular good for society for collecting money off what control of a market will sustain.

Excerpted:

Apple, by contrast, seems barely tethered to the material world. Depending on the vagaries of its stock price, it’s either the highest-valued or the second-highest-valued company in America, but it employs less than 0.05 percent of our workers. To some extent, that’s because it has outsourced almost all its production overseas. But the truth is that the Chinese aren’t making that much money from Apple sales either. To a large extent, the price you pay for an iWhatever is disconnected from the cost of producing the gadget. Apple simply charges what the traffic will bear, and given the strength of its market position, the traffic will bear a lot.

Again, I’m not making a moral judgment here. You can argue that Apple earned its special position — although I’m not sure how many would make a similar claim for Microsoft, which made huge profits for many years, let alone for the financial industry, which is also marked by a lot of what look like monopoly rents, and these days accounts for roughly 30 percent of total corporate profits. Anyway, whether corporations deserve their privileged status or not, the economy is affected, and not in a good way, when profits increasingly reflect market power rather than production.

“You might suspect that this can’t be good for the broader economy, and you’d be right,” he adds. “If household income and hence household spending is held down because labor gets an ever-smaller share of national income, while corporations, despite soaring profits, have little incentive to invest, you have a recipe for persistently depressed demand.”

One wonders what things might be like if Bill Gates had allowed Apple to die when it was on the ropes in desktop computing. I doubt things would be much different but we wouldn’t be surrounded by the smug iJunk servants to the 1 percent and the constant sermonizing on the transforming power of its technological innovation.


Even if you hate it I’m going to shove it at you. Because it’s right on.


One point Krugman didn’t get to in his column was Apple’s destruction of the pop music industry. This also did not depend on any means of production, just leveraging of a design, technology and monopoly power.

While Apple did not invent the technology, the design of its prime bauble — the iPod, allowed it to take the majority of money-making on music sales and redirect it through the iTunes mechanism. In essence, this made Apple the center of the pop music industry in a way that old-fashioned record stores, even chains, tied to location and communities never could be.

If you had told music company execs twenty five years ago that their stuff would all be profit-shifted to Apple and laundered through Luxembourg to avoid paying taxes to Uncle Sam, they would have thrown you out of the room.


Hey, for the second time, did you notice the name change?

06.19.13

Living Like John McAfee

Posted in Culture of Lickspittle at 7:20 pm by George Smith

Better, by far, than his blog. He’s a natural with strippers and could have a real future as an avuncular YouTube entertainer.

And he’s right about the software. Once you get it off your system things work a whole lot better.


Living like John McAfeefrom the archives.

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