Stick to baseball, 12/31/16.

No Insider pieces and no Klawchat this week, between the lack of MLB activity, a little holiday-related travel, and me just generally taking it easy this week. I did review the boardgame City of Spies: Estoril 1942 for Paste, and have reviews coming up for Doom, Kodama, and Inis.

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And now, the links…

  • Texas is making rapid progress in becoming the nation’s worst backwater, from anti-gay laws to wiping out abortion clinics to reducing environmental protections to a statewide cut in special education resources, as detailed in this Houston Chronicle investigative report on how tens of thousands of disabled children in Texas aren’t getting the education help they deserve.
  • This New York Times profile on an Iraq War veteran suffering from PTSD who was convicted of a home invasion highlights how little we do for soldiers returning from active combat duty, and how costly the war in Iraq has been in human lives.
  • I thought the Telegraph had the best piece on George Michael’s career, life, and death at age 53, possibly the result of a heroin addiction. If you haven’t heard his 1990 album, Listen Without Prejudice, Volume 1, it stands up incredibly well today for its mixture of styles that, at the time, was seen as a disappointment by fans who wanted him to remain a bubblegum pop star. And the same publication also wrote how horrible Gene Kelly was to a 19-year-old Debbie Reynolds during the filming of Singing in the Rain, and how Fred Astaire came to the rescue.
  • Security expert Bruce Schneier, who coined the term “security theater” to refer to all the things we do to appear to make our lives safer, points out that TSA Pre-Check also won’t work, as it just provides a second way for a would-be terrorist to beat the system and get on a plane. He links to a former TSA administrator’s post explaining Pre-Check’s vulnerabilities, but the two disagree on the solution – Schneier wants less pre-flight screening for everyone, rather than for a select few, saying that terrorists are going to pick ‘clean’ operatives no matter what we do.
  • This longread on Olympian Debbie Thomas’ descent into mental illness and poverty is from March, but I just found it this week and it’s one of the best and most awful stories I’ve read in the last few months. Thomas won a bronze medal in Calgary in 1988, became a doctor, but has lost everything in the last few years as a result of bipolar disorder.
  • Donald Trump took credit for Sprint’s decision, made in April, to add 5000 jobs in the U.S., and here’s a partial list of media outlets who repeated his lie in headlines without pointing out its untruth. Yes, there’s more to an article than a headline, but I know from experience many people will read the headline and then move along … but will still send me an angry email about a headline I didn’t write. (Editors write headlines, not writers.)
  • A New York Times investigation found rampant bribery among Homeland Security officials charged with protecting our borders. I doubt there’s a simple solution to this: no private or public entity will pay agents more than defeating the security is worth to those trying to do so.
  • The same Russian hacker group that has been accused of trying to influence our election placed malware on a computer at the main electric utility in Vermont, raising concerns about an attack on our infrastructure.
  • Meanwhile, the Russian government has also been supporting far-right movements across Europe in an attempt to destabilize EU states, finding success in Hungary, Estonia, and Bulgaria, along with the rise of the neo-Nazi National Front Party in France.
  • “More than a third of the almost 200 people who have met with President-elect Donald Trump since his election last month, including those interviewing for administration jobs, gave large amounts of money to support his campaign and other Republicans this election cycle.” So begins this Politico story on the rising kleptocracy in Washington, where money buys you direct access like we haven’t seen in decades (under either party).
  • Another neo-Nazi group is planning an armed march in Whitefish, Montana, where its founder’s mother lives. There’s more background, and information on the community’s response, in this audio piece from NPR, which describes businesses putting menorahs in windows to show support and solidarity this week.
  • Jane Coaston of MTV.com looks at the roots and insolubility of the Syrian civil war.
  • New York issued the first (known) birth certificate for an intersex person – that is, one that states the person’s sex as “intersex,” referring to someone born with physical and genetic characteristics of both sexes, often including sexual organs. This is law catching up to science, but I ask you, North Carolina and Texas and Mississippi and every bigot out there trying to make life miserable for people unlike you: What bathroom would you like her to use?
  • In 2018 and 2020, remember how the Republicans stole a Supreme Court seat by refusing to even hold a hearing for Merrick Garland, nominated to fill that vacancy by President Obama.
  • The political crisis in Burundi, sparked by the questionable re-election of Pierre Nkurunziza to a third term as President, was not helped when he hinted he might run again in 2020. The Burundian constitution limits the president to a single re-election, and his decision to run roughshod over that clause led to 500 deaths and over 300,000 refugees leaving the country.
  • An open letter from 23 activists, many of them Nobel laureates, calls for the UN Security Council to stop ethnic cleansing in Burma against the Rohingya minority – and criticizes Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi for her inaction on this issue.
  • That Gambian election a few weeks ago that appeared to end the tyrannic rule of President Yahya Jammeh? Yeah, well, so much for that, as Jammeh is trying to annul the results and declare himself the winner. Senegal, which surrounds Gambia on all but the latter’s tiny coastal border, has said a military intervention is only a “last resort.”
  • Fortune looks at the recent spate of frauds among tech startups, asking whether this is a growing trend giving the amount of VC money flying around.

Comments

  1. To be fair, the Vermont electric company might have come from the computer’s user going to a malware infested site instead of the Russian’s directly trying to hack into the system. It doesn’t seem like enough information is available to say which it is.

    http://www.cnbc.com/2016/12/31/code-associated-with-russia-hacking-found-on-vermont-utility-computer.html

    • Agreed. I think the story is that they had access, potentially, because the malware was there. If this were a random group of hackers from China, it wouldn’t be a story at all, but it appears to be the same group involved in the election hacking incident.

  2. Thanks for linking that-I’m glad that Schneier is speaking up about the vulnerabilities, but I’m not hopeful that anyone’s listening. His conclusion, that the threat of terrorism isn’t nearly as great as we’re making it out to be is not going to find many sympathetic ears, but the data backs him up.

    Cory Doctorow has a piece up on BoingBoing with some more details on the Russian malware in Vermont: http://boingboing.net/2016/12/31/no-russia-didnt-hack-vermon.html The risk is real, but this is another case where the headlines have been more sensationalist than the story merits.

    • the threat of terrorism isn’t nearly as great as we’re making it out to be

      I’m nobody’s pundit, but I think this belief – that ISIS is about to show up at your doorstep – is a big factor in Trump winning.

    • The irrational fear is not even the fear that ISIS is going to show up on your doorstep — “they” very well could — but rather the fear that “them” doing so would actually result in anything major occurring. Most would-be lone wolf terrorists in the U.S. get caught (by the FBI, to be clear, not TSA) before they can really do much of anything besides plan. There are wanna-be ISIS soldiers all over the country, and the vast, vast majority are never going to do anything besides get arrested, charged with providing material support to terrorists, and go to jail. THAT realization would solve a lot of our country’s fear about terrorists, not just telling people that ISIS won’t actually come to their hometown.

  3. https://theintercept.com/2016/12/31/russia-hysteria-infects-washpost-again-false-story-about-hacking-u-s-electric-grid/

    Pretty much all stories about “Russian Hacking” are probably best just ignored. It’s just cold war 2.0 propoganda.

    • Mateo – I linked to the Burlington Free Press article that your (very good) link said included the real statement from the utility.

    • I’m sure I’m in the very small minority here, but I can’t help but see anything by Greenwald on Russia as suspect due to his ties to Snowden and WikiLeaks at this point. There’s a lot to praise Greenwald for over the years (he’s broken some important stories), but I have a hard time trusting him when it comes to Russia at this point.

    • I don’t think Greenwald’s really tied to WikiLeaks. He’s certainly been plenty critical of their “leak everything, innocents be damned” actions in recent years. There’s definitely a difference between Greenwald/Snowden and WikiLeaks, even before they went all-in on getting Trump elected.

  4. There is no link to the story on George Michael. Thanks!

  5. “Will Keenan’s driver’s license say intersex or non-binary? What happens if the Supreme Court orders the State Department to add a third gender to passports as a result of the Zzyym case? As of today, the details are unclear—but the increased momentum of the third-gender movement is unequivocal, and government agencies that issue identity documents will have to grapple with the changes in 2017.”

    Why do such documents need to list gender at all?

    • Maybe for on-the-spot identification purposes? Describe me: “a slight 5’6″ male brown eyes brown hair” tells you more than “a slight 5’6″ person brown eyes brown hair.”

    • More than a photo? Doesn’t the ability to identify your gender by site rely on all sorts of gender norms which many people increasingly fall outside of?

    • A photo won’t always be available for dissemination, while the descriptions provided by the license will. Think of a police “Be-On-the-LookOut” (BOLO), which goes over radio. Imagine being a police officer getting a vague description, which is enough of a pain in the ass, then imagine you can’t even eliminate half the population because you aren’t given the sex of the person you’re looking for. Driver’s licenses aren’t for you, or for the cashier at the liquor store; at their core, they’re for law enforcement, which needs as much information as possible to ensure accurate identification.

    • But isn’t part of what we’re realizing is that being told someone is “male” doesn’t necessarily tell you much in terms of what they look like?

    • For a small portion of the population, yes, that’s absolutely correct; but removing that piece of information from driver’s licenses affects the vast majority of the population where it is absolutely an identifying factor.

  6. Happy New Year to you and yours, Keith! Thank you for not sticking to baseball, especially in these times.

    • Thank you, Aaron. Happy New Year to you as well. I promise not to stick to baseball, especially not in the next four years.