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18 Dec 02:01

DNC Unity Reform Commission Takes a Whack at Superdelegates

by Aída Chávez

The Democratic Party’s Unity Reform Commission on Saturday voted nearly unanimously on a series of proposals aimed at reforming the presidential nominating process, including one that would eliminate 60 percent of superdelegates.

The commission, made up of 21 members selected by Hillary Clinton, Sen. Bernie Sanders, and Democratic National Committee Chair Tom Perez, held its final meetings on Friday and Saturday in a conference room at the Marriott Wardman Park hotel in Washington, D.C. The commission also debated reforms to voting registration, caucuses, and general transparency within the party.

Cutting the number of superdelegates, the commission decided, would be a step toward healing wounds from the 2016 primary. Some superdelegates, such as officers of the DNC and elected state chairs, would maintain their status but their vote at the convention would be bound by the results of the state election. It was not a complete win, however. Others, such as governors or members of Congress, would still be free to vote for whichever candidate they prefer, regardless of their state’s preference.

The commission was born at the 2016 Democratic National Convention in response to voter angst with the election process, specifically the DNC’s bias against Sanders. Outrage was reignited last month by Donna Brazile’s memoir “Hacks,” which portrayed the primary as rigged. Brazile was named acting DNC chair during the convention, serving through the general election.

Sanders supporters have been critical of the system and were particularly angered that hundreds of superdelegates pledged to vote for Clinton, giving her a nearly insurmountable lead, even before the primaries had gotten into full swing.

It’s never been about perfection, the commission’s Vice Chair Larry Cohen said of the recommendations, but “large steps if not giant steps” in putting voters first. Cohen was one of the few prominent labor leaders to buck Clinton and endorse Sanders.

“Voters first, in terms of eliminating 400 superdelegates out of 715 on the first ballot for the presidential nomination of the United States,” Cohen said at the meeting.

“Voters first, in saying loud and clear that in primaries, this party stands behind same-day registration, automatic registration, same-day party registration. That this party stands behind a process in every state, in terms of the election of the leadership of the Democratic Party, that is transparent and open and clear and as simple as possible so that activists can get involved and run and not feel like they have no chance.”

But these recommendations are nowhere close to being officially adopted by the Democratic Party. The Unity Commission’s report is only the first step in a wonky process, and victory is anything but assured. After being finalized, the recommendations are sent to the DNC’s rules and bylaws committee, then to all 447 DNC members in the fall of 2018, where two-thirds support will be needed.

Nomiki Konst, a Sanders appointee, was pleased with the results of the commission’s final meeting, saying strong recommendations were made in any areas in the Democratic Party “where there was an opportunity for malfeasance or lack of transparency.”

“We disabled the mechanisms that made superdelegates undemocratic and of the remaining superdelegates, they are bound to the will of the people,” Konst told The Intercept after the meeting. “Ultimately, we have the potential to have a Democratic Party now that reflects the will of the people, and the people will be able to understand what’s happening on the inside. … This is about being the people’s party again.”

Sanders praised the commission’s work on Saturday in a statement, saying the Democratic Party will not become a “vibrant and successful 50 state party until it opens its doors widely to the working people and young people of our country,” and voting to limit the role of superdelegates along with “making our caucuses and primaries more democratic” is the beginning of the process.

“Now it is incumbent on the Democratic Party’s Rules and Bylaws committee and the membership of the DNC to enact these critical reforms as soon as possible,” he said.

Correction: December 12, 2017

This story originally reported that all superdelegates would be bound by the wishes of their state under the new recommendation. But some delegates would retain autonomy. 

Top photo: Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., right, greets DNC Chair Tom Perez, left, on stage as he gets ready to speak to a crowd of supporters at a Democratic unity rally at the Rail Event Center on April 21, 2017, in Salt Lake City, Utah. Sanders and Perez were holding several rallies around the country trying unify the Democratic Party.

The post DNC Unity Reform Commission Takes a Whack at Superdelegates appeared first on The Intercept.

06 Dec 05:55

Audi Expands Research into Synthetic Diesel Fuel

by Kelly Pleskot

Audi has experimented with synthetic diesel fuel for years, and now it’s expanding its research in this field. The automaker will open a new pilot facility in Switzerland to create the fuel that uses water, air, and electricity as raw materials.

Here’s how it works. First, water is split into hydrogen and oxygen through the process of electrolysis. While the oxygen dissipates into the surrounding air, the hydrogen reacts with C02 from the air with the help of microprocess technology, forming long-chain hydrocarbon compounds. Once these compounds are separated, you have Audi e-diesel.

The upcoming plant will have the capacity to produce 105,669 gallons of the synthetic fuel per year. Audi is partnering with Ineratec, a chemical reactor tech company, and Energiedienst AG, an electricity company, on the project. Construction on the new facility will begin early next year.

Since 2014, Audi has been working on synthetic diesel in a facility in Dresden, Germany, with its partner, an energy tech company called Sunfire. This old facility creates synthetic diesel using the same principles, but different technologies. Audi says the new plant in Laufenburg, Switzerland, can produce e-diesel in compact units, making it very economical.

Of course, lab-made fuels are nothing new. But Audi’s ability to use renewable energy to get there is a solid achievement, and perhaps it can shift society’s now skeptical view of diesel. Audi says e-diesel has the potential to make traditional combustion engines operate almost C02-neutrally. That means the fuel results in nearly no net release of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere.

In addition to e-diesel, Audi is also making synthetic methane for the A3, A4, and A5. It has a facility in Werlte, north Germany, for making this fuel, known as Audi e-gas.

Source: Audi

The post Audi Expands Research into Synthetic Diesel Fuel appeared first on Motor Trend.

06 Dec 05:39

Amazon Key security flaw could silently disable Cloud Cam

by Ashley King

The Amazon Key system that recently debuted is designed to help prevent porch piracy that’s on the rise since so many of us receive packages from Amazon. However, the idea of giving even limited strangers with a job access to your home while you’re not there is kinda freaky.

Our own Rob Jackson recently had Amazon Key installed at his home in Baltimore, Maryland and received his first delivery without a hitch. But security researchers from Rhino Security Labs have proved that Amazon’s new system isn’t as secure as they’d like you to think. The Amazon Cloud Cam uses WiFi to connect and showcase what’s happening, so a simple device or laptop that can spoof the home router can disable the Cloud Cam.

Since the Cloud Cam doesn’t alert you that it’s been disconnected and continues to send the last image available, the delivery person could re-enter your house without you being any wiser to the fact. Amazon says it’s highly unlikely that such an attack would occur since drivers are vetted and deliveries are connected to specific drivers, so they would instantly fall under suspicion should something go awry.

Either way, the company plans on addressing the issue to assure its customers they’re safe with Amazon Key installed.

“Later this week, we will deploy an update to more quickly provide notifications if the camera goes offline during delivery.”

That’s a step in the right direction but I still can’t help but feel creeped out by the idea of giving someone access to my home while I’m not there. What do you think?

06 Dec 05:35

Google Drive is killing off the Google Photos tab but you can create a Google Photos folder instead

by Chris Chavez

Google Photos is easily one of the best parts about having a Google account. Unlimited, high-quality backups of your photos and videos (original quality if you have a Pixel), the only downside is the site which doesn’t offer a traditional folder view for managing your media for those that like that sort of thing.

Back in 2015, Google added a convenient tab to quickly access all of your Google Photos from within Google Drive. It made more sense before there was an actual Google Photos app, but either way it was a great way to see all your backed up photos/video inside Google Drive. Well, we hope you didn’t get too attached…

The new Google Photos folder

Starting in early January, Google says they’ll officially be killing off the Google Photos tab but don’t freak out. If you love being able to browse/manage your stored Google Photos media inside of Drive, you can still access them by creating a folder (where everything will be sorted by year/month folders), you’ll just have to enable it inside your settings.

To get a head start — before the Google Photos tab disappears forever — just follow these quick steps:

  1. Open drive.google.com
  2. Tap on the settings button (gear icon)
  3. Click Settings
  4. Click on Create a Google Photos Folder
  5. Click on Done

Why the change? Well, your guess is as good as ours. It’s possible Google is just trying to clean things up a bit or remove a feature that was rarely used or confusing users (since deleting photos/videos in Drive would do the same in Photos). Either way, there’s a simple and easy fix, so no harm no foul, right?

05 Aug 05:25

The Stranger Things Playlist

by Eric Ravenscraft

If you haven’t checked out Netflix’s new show Stranger Things, seriously do it. It’s awesome. If you have, you know that the music totally makes the show. Unfortunately, the synth-tastic soundtrack isn’t out, but this playlist of 80s music featured in the show is.

Read more...

29 Jul 03:27

Efficient "ice battery" provides 24/7 cooling for your home

by Cat DiStasio

The eco-friendly and cost-effective “ice battery” method of residential indoor climate control has been around for more than a decade, but one company still believes it is the answer to inefficient air conditioning units. California-based Ice Energy is the company that makes Ice Bears for both residential and commercial installations. The cooling units promise to save home and building owners a ton of money, while providing reliable cool air with a smaller environmental impact than traditional air conditioning. The system is based on a simple concept—ice is cold and can make air cold, too—but the sophisticated system is both smart and flexible to respond to the demands of a modern world.

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The company has lofty claims for its ice-based cooling units, saying the Ice Bear system “reduces peak cooling electricity by 95 percent for up to 6 hours a day” resulting in energy savings up to 40 percent overall. The efficient unit essentially makes ice, a low energy task, and then uses it to cool your home’s air. Ice Bear can reportedly get four hours of cool air from its ice with the compressor shut off, which means it uses a lot less energy than a traditional air conditioner.

Related: BeCool HVAC system generates energy while keeping buildings cool

The Ice Bear, which is installed outside just like traditional central air conditioning units, can integrate with a home’s duct system or use a ductless mini-split system for homes lacking ductwork. It’s a smart system, too, designed with remote monitoring and control capabilities, as well as a host of reporting features that allow homeowners to see graphical representations of their energy usage.

Via Treehugger

Images via Ice Energy

22 Jul 03:33

The Long, Sad, Corrupted Devolution of the GOP, From Eisenhower to Donald Trump

by Zaid Jilani

The Intercept and our partners at AJ+ produced the video above documenting the GOP’s 60-year devolution.

The Republican Party is poised to nominate a presidential candidate who has built his platform on promises to ban a billion people from entering the United States based on their religious faith and to build a gigantic wall south of the border.

But Donald J. Trump is not an accident. The GOP has in the last 40 years relentlessly devolved away from addressing the needs of ordinary people, catering instead to extreme ideologies and the wealthiest donors.

Rather than addressing pressing problems like income inequality and climate change, the modern GOP focuses instead on cutting taxes for the super-wealthy, expanding earth-killing carbon extraction, and endless war.

But it wasn’t always this way. Sixty years ago, the Republican Party was advocating for civil rights and gender equality, a stronger welfare state, and environmental protection. This is the story of the Republican Party that once was.

A More Social Democratic Republican Party — in 1956

In August 1956, the Republican Party gathered in San Francisco to re-nominate President Dwight D. Eisenhower as its candidate in the upcoming presidential election.

The party that year adopted a platform that emphasized that the GOP was “proud of and shall continue our far-reaching and sound advances in matters of basic human needs.”

This included boasting that Eisenhower had overseen a hike in the federal minimum wage that raised incomes for 2 million Americans while expanding Social Security to 10 million more people and increasing benefits for 6.5 million others.

Today’s Republican Party has made weakening labor unions a priority, but the 1956 platform noted that under Eisenhower, “workers have gained and unions have grown in strength and responsibility, and have increased their membership by 2 millions.”

A Labor Day flyer used by the Republican Party in 1956.

It also touted an increase in federal funding for hospital construction and expanded federal aid for health care for the poor and public housing. The platform also pointed out that Eisenhower had asked for “the largest increase in research funds ever sought in one year” to tackle ailments like cancer and heart disease.

Rather than opposing self-governance for Washington, D.C., 1956’s Republicans encouraged it, saying they “favor self-government national suffrage and representation in the Congress of the United States” for those living there. The platform also asked Congress to submit a constitutional amendment establishing “equal rights for men and women.”

The platform boasted proudly of the African-Americans who had been appointed to positions in Eisenhower’s administration, and of ending racial discrimination in federal employment. At no point did the document call for any restrictions on immigration; rather, by contrast, it asked Congress to consider an extension of the 1953 Refugee Act, which brought tens of thousands of war-weary European refugees to American shores.

Dwight D. Eisenhower was the face of the Republican Party in the 1950s. He had served as the supreme commander of the Allied forces as they retook Europe from fascist militaries in the decade before. Experiencing two global wars shaped Eisenhower’s worldview, turning him into an advocate of peace.

Eisenhower cut the military budget by 27 percent following the Korean War, and used his bully pulpit to highlight the trade-offs of military spending. “Every gun that is made, every warship launched, every rocket fired signifies, in the final sense, a theft from those who hunger and are not fed, those who are cold and are not clothed,” he said in a 1953 speech.

In his farewell address on January 17, 1961, he highlighted the rise of what he called a “military-industrial complex” — a war industry that he cautioned could exert “undue influence” on the government.

Four decades later, when President George W. Bush submitted his defense spending request in 2002, he bragged to Congress, “My budget includes the largest increase in defense spending in two decades — because while the price of freedom and security is high, it is never too high. Whatever it costs to defend our country, we will pay.”

Nixon Confronts Hunger, Protects the Environment

Richard Nixon is hardly remembered as a progressive, but he was much more aggressive in tackling issues like hunger and environmental protection than the Republicans in power today.

Nixon, acting under pressure from antipoverty activists, asked Congress to improve and expand the food stamp program, saying that the fact that “hunger and malnutrition should persist in a land such as ours is embarrassing and intolerable.” His administration sponsored the first and only White House conference on hunger. He increased funding for both food stamps and school lunch programs.

The Environmental Protection Agency was a Nixon creation. Nixon used his 1970 State of the Union address to present the country with a choice: “The great question of the ’70s is, ‘Shall we surrender to our surroundings or shall we make our peace with nature and begin to make reparations for the damage we have done to our air, to our land, and to our water.’”

Three decades later, George W. Bush began his presidency by sitting out the landmark Kyoto climate treaty and opening up millions of acres of land and sea to carbon extraction. Faced with opposition over nominating a former mining executive as head of the Mine Safety and Health Administration, he used a recess appointment to get around Senate accountability.

Meanwhile, humiliating America’s hungry has become a sport for the GOP. Lawmakers regularly propose onerous and offensive restrictions on public assistance, such as drug testing recipients, something that has proven to be little more than a waste of money.

Reagan’s Amnesty

When Ronald Reagan signed the 1986 Immigration Reform and Control Act into law, he did something none of the 18 Republican presidential candidates who ran this year endorsed: He granted amnesty to 2.9 million undocumented immigrants.

Speaking at one of the 1984 presidential debates, Reagan explained that he believes “in the idea of amnesty for those who have lived here for some time and put down roots even though sometime back they may have entered illegally”:

Under Trump, demagoguery about immigration has risen to new heights, but it was a path laid out for the real estate mogul by years of politically opportunistic nativism. Whether it was 2012 presidential nominee Mitt Romney’s plan to encourage “self-deportation” or Ben Carson’s comparison between Syrian refugees and rabid dogs, the party has scapegoated vulnerable migrants and refugees for political points.

What Happened to the Republican Party?

None of this is to argue that Republicans of the past were progress peaceniks. Eisenhower overthrew the democratically elected government of Iran; Nixon began the drug war and prosecuted an unnecessary war in Cambodia; Ronald Reagan helped dismantle America’s labor movement and bloodied Central America.

But the Republican Party of the past at least showed itself capable of responding to domestic and global issues, offering and implementing successful policies to deal with pressing problems like poverty, environmental degradation, and a refugee crisis.

So what happened?

There is no easy explanation, but there are a few key catalysts for the party’s slide into extremism.

One is the role that labor organizing and public activism played in pushing the Republican Party of the past to endorse progressive policy.

Eisenhower’s more social democratic Republican Party did not exist in a vacuum. In 1954, 28.3 percent of employed workers were in labor unions, the highest in American history (today the number is just over 11 percent).

The 1950s are often portrayed as an idyllic and stable period in American history, but they were also a time of raucous labor actions. The first year of Eisenhower’s presidency saw 437 work stoppages involving 1,000 or more workers; altogether, 1.6 million workers took part in strikes aimed at increasing wages and reducing inequality. By comparison, 2015 saw a paltry dozen strikes of the same size, involving only 47,000 workers.

Richard Nixon’s establishment of the Environmental Protection Agency was preceded by an explosion of environmental activism. Wisconsin Democratic Sen. Gaylord Nelson went around the country in 1970 urging activists to engage in a massive environmental demonstration that would match the energy of antiwar and civil rights protests during the prior decade. During the nation’s first Earth Day, April 22, 1970, an estimated 20 million Americans took part in protests, teach-ins, and other educational events aimed at building political will to push the government to protect the environment.

The outpouring of support changed public dialogue in the country. “Conservatives were for it. Liberals were for it. Democrats, Republicans and Independents were for it,” the New York Times noted after the protests. “So were the ins, the outs, the executive and legislative branches of the government. It was Earth Day, and, like Mother Nature’s Day, no man in public office could be against it.”

Alongside the decline of these populist forces that in the past helped shape the Republican Party’s agenda, the country has seen an explosion of capital into the nation’s public elections — funds Republican Party officials have chased as they seek higher office.

Writing to his brother in 1954, President Eisenhower said that the factions in the Republican Party who would seek to eliminate Social Security and other New Deal reforms are comprised of “a few other Texas oil millionaires, and an occasional politician or businessman from other areas. Their number is negligible and they are stupid.”

Decades later, Eisenhower’s “negligible” oligarchs emerged in the visage of David and Charles Koch, right-wing oil and gas billionaires. The former actually ran for the Libertarian Party’s vice presidential ticket in 1980 on a platform of completely eliminating the Social Security and Medicare programs.

The election in 2012 was America’s most expensive ever, with $6 billion spent in federal elections. The Kochs spent over $400 million backing GOP candidates, more than the top 10 labor unions combined. Casino magnate Sheldon Adelson spent over $100 million during the year, dragging Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney far to the right.

Just 18 percent of Romney’s funding came from small donors — those giving $200 or less. And that doesn’t count various outside groups making independent expenditures, which exploded that year. A Demos report on the election’s spending found that “just 61 large donors to Super PACs giving an average of $4.7 million each matched the $285.2 million in grassroots contributions from more than 1,425,500 small donors to the major party presidential candidates.”

This system of political financing from a handful of millionaires and billionaires has corrupted both major parties, but its influence is almost total in the Republican Party. Of the 161 co-sponsors of legislation in the House of Representatives to create a public financing system for congressional candidates, only one, North Carolina’s Walter Jones, is a Republican.

This leaves the party out of step with even the more progressive instincts of its own partisans. For example, a majority of self-identified Republicans in America want to see an increase in the minimum wage. No congressional Republicans have signed onto the current bill in Congress to raise the wage to $12 an hour over a period of time.

Eisenhower’s Party of the Future

In his address to delegates at the 1956 Republican National Convention, Eisenhower boasted of a political party that “attracted minority groups, scholars and writers, not to mention reformers of all kinds, Free-Soilers, Independent Democrats, Conscience Whigs, Barnburners, ‘soft Hunkers,’ teetotalers, vegetarians, and transcendentalists!”

He laid out the vision of a political party that “detests the technique of pitting group against group for cheap political advantage,” calling the Republicans the “Party of the Future.”

Today, the GOP may be facing its worst demographic threat in its modern iteration. Among Latino voters, for instance, the party saw a decline from winning 40 percent of that demographic in the 2004 presidential election to 27 percent with Mitt Romney in 2012. A Univision poll released in mid-July estimated that current presidential nominee Donald Trump is netting just 19 percent of the registered Latino vote.

Ultimately, the Republican Party’s drift away from inclusion and the public interest and toward a coterie of extreme donors and ideologies does have an electoral cost, one that could force reformation or perhaps the birth of a new political party — just ask the Whigs.

Top photo: President Dwight Eisenhower and Vice President Richard Nixon in 1952.

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The post The Long, Sad, Corrupted Devolution of the GOP, From Eisenhower to Donald Trump appeared first on The Intercept.

22 Jul 03:27

Hours Before Hillary Clinton’s VP Decision, Likely Pick Tim Kaine Praises the TPP

by Zaid Jilani

Hillary Clinton’s rumored vice presidential pick Sen. Tim Kaine defended his vote for fast-tracking the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) on Thursday.

Kaine, who spoke to The Intercept after an event at a Northern Virginia mosque, praised the agreement as an improvement of the status quo, but maintained that he had not yet decided how to vote on final approval of the agreement. By contrast, Hillary Clinton has qualified her previous encouragement of the agreement, and now says she opposes it.

Kaine’s measured praise of the agreement could signal one of two things. Either he is out of the running for the vice presidential spot, as his position on this major issue stands in opposition to hers. Or, by picking him, Clinton is signaling that her newly declared opposition to the agreement is not sincere. The latter explanation would confirm the theory offered by U.S. Chamber of Commerce head Tom Donohue, among others, who has said that Clinton is campaigning against the TPP for political reasons but would ultimately implement the deal.

With only hours to go before Clinton announced her pick, Kaine was unabashed in defending his vote. “Fast track was to give President Obama the same tools to negotiate a trade deal that every president since Gerald Ford has had, and of course I voted for that,” Kaine said. “Why would I not give to this president the same tools to negotiate a trade deal that other presidents have had?”

Fast track powers allow the president to submit the agreement to Congress for an up or down vote without any changes. Fast track was widely viewed as necessary for assuring final passage of the agreement, and few Democrats supported authorizing those powers for Obama for the TPP. Only 28 House Democrats and 13 Senate Democrats voted in favor of fast track.

Kaine explained that now that the final agreement has been reached in international negotiations, he is weighing whether or not to vote for it.

“I am having discussions with groups around Virginia about the treaty itself. I see much in it to like. I think it’s an upgrade of labor standards. I think it’s an upgrade of environmental standards, I think it’s an upgrade in intellectual property protections,” he explained. “I do see at least right now that there is one element that I do have some very significant concerns about. And that is the dispute resolution mechanism. And I’ve got a lot of concerns about that. So I have no idea about when a vote would be because the majority will make that decision. And I’m not in the majority. But long before there would be a vote on that I’m trying to climb the learning curve on the areas where I have questions. So again, much of it I see I think as a significant improvement over the status quo. The dispute resolution mechanism I still have some significant concerns about.”

The dispute resolution provisions Kaine is referring to would expand the corporate right to sue governments over alleged violations of the TPP. Many fear that it infringes on national sovereignty.

Kaine’s praise of the TPP’s expansion of intellectual property rights stands in opposition to concerns from many that the agreement will expand patent monopolies over life-saving drugs. The medical charity group Doctors Without Borders has warned that TPP provisions would make some pharmaceutical drugs too expensive for the world’s poor.

Top photo: Clinton and Kaine campaigning together in mid-July 2016.

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The post Hours Before Hillary Clinton’s VP Decision, Likely Pick Tim Kaine Praises the TPP appeared first on The Intercept.

12 Jul 20:49

The Miniature Version of Your Favorite Coffee Maker Is Cheaper Than Ever Today

by Shep McAllister on Deals, shared by Shep McAllister to Lifehacker

The Bonavita BV1500 is the 5-cup little brother of your favorite coffee maker , and Amazon’s serving it up for just $80 today. That’s an all-time low, and a solid $11-$12 less than usual.

Read more...

12 Jul 20:41

In Africa, the U.S. Military Sees Enemies Everywhere

by Sharon Weinberger

From east to west across Africa, 1,700 Navy SEALs, Army Green Berets, and other military personnel are carrying out 78 distinct “mission sets” in more than 20 nations, according to documents obtained by The Intercept via the Freedom of Information Act.

“The SOCAFRICA operational environment is volatile, uncertain, complex, and ambiguous,” says Brig. Gen. Donald Bolduc, using the acronym of the secretive organization he presides over, Special Operations Command Africa. “It’s a wickedly complex environment tailor-made for the type of nuanced and professional cooperation SOF [special operations forces] is able to provide.”

Equally complex is figuring out just what America’s most elite troops on the continent are actually doing, and who they are targeting.

In documents from a closed-door presentation delivered by Bolduc late last year and a recent, little-noticed question and answer with a military publication, the SOCAFRICA commander offered new clues about the shadow war currently being waged by American troops all across the continent.

“We operate in the Gray Zone, between traditional war and peace,” he informed a room of U.S., African, and European military personnel at the Special Operations Command Africa Commander’s Conference held in Garmisch, Germany, last November.

According to Bolduc’s 2015 presentation, SOCAFRICA is taking part in seven distinct operations, although he failed to elaborate further. Among the goals of these missions: to “enable friendly networks; disable enemy networks.”

The identities of most of those “enemy networks,” are, however, a well-kept secret.

Last fall, The Intercept revealed that Bolduc had publicly disclosed that there are nearly 50 terrorist organizations and “illicit groups” operating on the African continent. He identified only the Islamic State, al Shabaab, Boko Haram, al Qaeda in the Islamic Magreb, and the Lord’s Resistance Army by name or acronym, while mentioning the existence of another 43 groups. Despite repeated inquiries by The Intercept, however, neither the Department of Defense, U.S. Africa Command, nor SOCAFRICA would provide further information on the identities of any of the other organizations.

militant-islamist-in-africa-April-2016

Map of Africa’s active Islamic militant groups.

Source Africa Center for Strategic Studies

Recently, however, the Defense Department’s Africa Center for Strategic Studies — a research institution dedicated to the analysis of security issues in Africa — published a map listing “Africa’s Active Militant Islamist Groups.” In addition to usual suspects, it named 18 other terror organizations.

The Africa Center says that “group listings are intended for informational purposes only and should not be considered official designations.” It is, however, the most comprehensive list available from an agency or element within the Department of Defense and may shed light on Bolduc’s enemies list.

SOCAFRICA failed to respond to questions about that list or the names of its operations. U.S. Special Operations Command also declined to provide additional information. “We have no idea what BG Bolduc’s remarks were to a group of commanders who are subordinate to him,” spokesperson Ken McGraw told The Intercept.

Senegalese soldiers approach a room to be cleared during training near Thies, Senegal, Feb. 10, 2016.

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The post In Africa, the U.S. Military Sees Enemies Everywhere appeared first on The Intercept.

12 Jul 19:59

With VW running from diesel, Panasonic may get an electric boost

by Danny King
vigilenator

Aw man they shut down another technology. The blue diesel. Now we know why they went after them.

Filed under: Green,Plants/Manufacturing,Tesla,Volkswagen,United States,Electric

Panasonic looks to double automotive battery revenue within three years thanks to demand from Tesla and VW.

Continue reading With VW running from diesel, Panasonic may get an electric boost

With VW running from diesel, Panasonic may get an electric boost originally appeared on Autoblog on Mon, 11 Jul 2016 18:44:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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12 Jul 19:56

America's largest rooftop solar array completed in Las Vegas

by Cat DiStasio

The glitz and glamour of Las Vegas can only be matched by one feature: the size of things. The Nevada city is known for giant hotels, enormous buffet spreads, and—for the lucky few—big winnings. Now, Vegas is also known as the home to the nation’s largest rooftop solar array, which was installed atop the new expansion of the convention center at Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino. The roof holds 26,000 individual solar panels that together produce approximately 25 percent of the energy the convention center uses.

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The convention center installed the first part of its rooftop solar array in 2014, and a $70 million expansion to the venue was just added. The expansion created 350,000 square feet of additional event space, enabling the owner of the convention center, MGM Resorts International, to add eight acres of solar panels for a total of 28 acres in the array. Now that the entire array is complete, it will generate enough electricity to power the equivalent of 1,300 homes. The solar array’s energy production will also reflect the statewide goal of sourcing 25 percent of all energy from renewable sources.

Related: World's largest commercial rooftop solar array is on a shopping mall in the Philippines

Fortune reports that the falling price of solar panels has made projects like this one more attractive because businesses can produce electricity for the same or less cost than buying grid power. Ironically, though, it isn’t likely that Mandalay Bay and the other casinos currently sporting rooftop solar arrays will disconnect from the grid completely, no matter how much energy they can produce on their own. That’s because the state’s regulators would charge the casinos tens of millions of dollars to do so, since the utilities rely so heavily on revenue from the busy tourist spots.

Via Engadget

Images via Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino

12 Jul 19:54

8 billion-dollar climate disasters have hit the US this year alone

by Josh Marks

Climate change is getting expensive. Coming off the hottest June on record, the United States so far in 2016 has experienced eight weather and climate-related disasters that have met or exceeded $1 billion, resulting in 30 deaths and damages totaling $13.1 billion. The analysis by NOAA’s National Centers for Environmental Information (NCEI) doesn't include the late-June flooding in West Virginia which is still being assessed and could add to the number of billion-dollar disaster events. According to the analysis, the first six months of 2016 are well above average for the number of billion-dollar weather and climate events compared to this point in previous years.

global warming, Climate Change, Drought, texas, tornadoes, NOAA, flooding, News, environmental destruction, Weather, severe storms, Climate Change, Weather, Environment, billion-dollar disasters, hail storms, NCEIglobal warming, Climate Change, Drought, texas, tornadoes, NOAA, flooding, News, environmental destruction, Weather, severe storms, Climate Change, Weather, Environment, billion-dollar disasters, hail storms, NCEI

The events included two floods and six severe storms. On April 17 and 18, Houston and surrounding suburbs were inundated with up to 17 inches of rainfall, damaging more than 1,000 homes and businesses and leading to more than 1,800 high water rescues. The other seven events included February tornadoes across the southeastern and eastern states; March flooding in Texas and Louisiana; severe weather in March across Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi, including hail and high winds; a March hail storm in north Texas and an April hail storm in north and central Texas; tornadoes across the south and southeastern states; and tornadoes and severe storms in the Rockies and central states, including Montana, Colorado, Kansas, Missouri and Texas.

Related: Lethal extreme heat and wildfires scorch the American southwest

The costliest event so far this year was the hail damage across north and central Texas, totaling $3.5 billion. The deadliest event was February's 50 confirmed tornadoes across the southeastern and eastern states that killed 10 people. In 2015, the U.S. experienced a total of 10 billion-dollar weather and climate-related disasters that resulted in 155 deaths and cost more than $22 billion in economic damages. The Western drought throughout 2015 cost $4.5 billion while December tornadoes in Texas and flooding in the Midwest resulted in 50 lives lost.

Since 1980, the U.S. has experienced 196 billion-dollar weather and climate disasters with the total cost exceeding $1.1 trillion. While worldwide efforts to mitigate climate change are accelerating in the wake of the Paris climate agreement, a recent study from Stanford and U.C. Berkeley found that global warming could have major economic costs if not addressed, reducing global GDP by more than 20 percent by 2100. With the economic costs of climate change continuing to rise along with the temperature, policymakers could be under increasing pressure to eliminate greenhouse gas emissions and restore ecosystems among other measures to reverse global warming.

+ National Centers for Environmental Information

Via NOAA

Images via Texas National Guard

12 Jul 19:53

Prime Day No-Brainer: Buy a $50 Amazon Card, Get an Extra $10 For Free

by Shep McAllister on Deals, shared by Shep McAllister to Lifehacker

Do you spend money on Amazon? Then this is basically $10 worth of free cash. All you have to do is add a $50 gift card to your cart, enter promo code GCPRIME16, and you’ll see a message confirming that you’ll receive a $10 credit. Just note that it’s only available for Prime members, and likely won’t last long.

Read more...

12 Jul 19:52

Clinton-Led Democrats Are Now “to the Right of George W. Bush” on Palestinian Rights

by Glenn Greenwald
vigilenator

You know it's getting weird when you yearn for the foreign policy of W. Only 2 wars not every war. All secret society factions are in-fighting?

The Guardian, January 10, 2008:

The Guardian, January 9, 2008:

CNN, July 10, 2016:

Haaretz, June 25, 2016:

There are countless ways to see that the rhetorical monuments of magnanimity, humanitarianism, and equality that Democratic Party leaders and their loyal followers love to erect in honor of themselves are nothing more than manipulative, self-glorifying dreck. But few pathologies illustrate that deceit more potently than their utter indifference, and now — in the Hillary Clinton era — outright contempt for the plight of Palestinians and their steadfast subservience to right-wing Israeli nationalism. As Demos’s Sean McElwee put it: “The Democratic platform is now officially to the right of George W. Bush on Palestine.”

Hillary Clinton herself has covertly run one of the most anti-Palestinian, pro-Israeli-aggression presidential campaigns in modern history — from either party. That’s not surprising given her general militarism and the dominance of American-Israeli billionaire Haim “I’m a one-issue guy, and my issue is Israel” Saban in funding her campaign and the Democratic Party generally. Surprising or not, though, the Clinton-led Democratic Party’s hostility toward the most basic precepts of equality and dignity for Palestinians, and its willingness — its eagerness — to support and cheer for the most extremist Israeli acts of oppression, racism, and decadeslong occupation, is nothing short of despicable.

Sign up for The Intercept Newsletter here.

The post Clinton-Led Democrats Are Now “to the Right of George W. Bush” on Palestinian Rights appeared first on The Intercept.

05 Jul 02:34

10 Best Portable Chargers and Battery Packs

by Cory Gunther

10 Best Portable Chargers and Battery Packs is a post by Cory Gunther from Gotta Be Mobile.

These are the best portable battery chargers and packs for your phones, tablets, Nintendo Switch and more. Portable power to keep all your device fully charged or with enough juice to last until the day ends.

Portable battery charges come in several different speeds, sizes, and shapes, so knowing what to look for is important. Certain models will charge your phone twice as fast as a cheap gas station pack, and some can even recharge a Macbook.

Whether you’re looking for a high capacity portable battery, tons of USB ports, USB-C power delivery, or a slim design, we have you covered. Our list has chargers as low as $19 with tons of power. Or huge 27,000 mAh portable chargers that can recharge your iPhone Xs or Galaxy S9 for an entire week.

A portable battery charger is exactly what the name suggests. A big battery pack with multiple USB ports so you can charge your phone on the go without sitting next to a wall outlet. These can charge your phone, tablet, Nintendo Switch, laptop, MacBook, camera, vape pen and more. Any device that takes a USB cable can use these. And some even have a built-in AC wall outlet plug.

When you’re looking to buy a portable charger there are a few things to look for. You want a portable battery with “Quick Charge 3.0” or some sort of fast charging technology. Or, depending on the device you have you might want one with Power Delivery. These are two technologies that allow our devices to charge at an extremely fast rate, or strong enough to top off a MacBook Pro or portable game console.

Anker, RAVPower, Jackery, TYLT, Tronsmart, and Mohpie are among some of our favorite brands, but there are countless excellent options available today worth buying. With that said, our list below suggests huge chargers from 10,000 mAh to nearly 30,000 mAh all with fast charging. Then, our slideshow below has more information about each product and links to buy one today.

Best Portable Battery Chargers

  • Anker PowerCore-2 Charger (20,000)
  • CHOETech 15,600 mAh Quick Charger (Universal)
  • RAVPower 26,800 mAh PD and USB Type-C
  • Jackery Powerbar 20,800 mAh Power Station
  • Anker PowerCore 10,000 mAh Small
  • RAVPower 20,100 mAh Quick Charge & Type-C Charger
  • EasyACC MegaCharge D20
  • Aukey 26,500 USB Type-C
  • Tronsmart 20,000 mAh Type-C
  • Mohpie Power station AC

While we’ve detailed a lot of different portable battery chargers in the past, everything in our slideshow below supports fast charging or quick charging. Which works perfectly with most devices released in the last few years. With that in mind, here’s what we consider the absolute best portable battery chargers you can buy right now.

Anker PowerCore Speed 20,000 mAh with Power Delivery

Anker PowerCore Speed 20,000 mAh with Power Delivery

Our first recommendation is potentially the best portable battery charger for 2018. Anker is the most popular company in chargers and smartphone accessories because they make some of the best products. 

The all-new Anker PowerCore Speed offers a high capacity of 20,000 mAh. Meaning you can recharge your Galaxy S9 or iPhone Xs over 6 times with this thing. Anker supports all the latest charging standards, has overcharging protection, PowerIQ technology, and more. 

Here's what makes the PowerCore Speed 20,000 special. It supports USB Type-C power delivery capable of recharging a Nintendo Switch or MacBook Pro with 30w of output power. Additionally, that same USB Type-C port is what you recharge the battery pack with. So the battery itself recharges fast too, on top or charging all of your gadgets faster than anything else on the market. 

Basically, this big portable battery is extremely fast, has a regular USB port for any cable you own, a dedicated Quick Charge and PD USB Type-C port, and it comes with its own cable and wall charger. It's as good as it gets. 

Buy it Now on Amazon for $79.99

If you're looking for something fast that's more affordable, consider the Xiaomi 10k Slim for $29

10 Best Portable Chargers and Battery Packs is a post by Cory Gunther from Gotta Be Mobile.

05 Jul 02:28

2016 Amazon Prime Day Deals, Details and Dates

by Josh Smith

2016 Amazon Prime Day Deals, Details and Dates is a post by Josh Smith from Gotta Be Mobile.

This is what you need to know about the 2016 Amazon Prime Day deals, dates and other key information about the shopping event that promises huge deals and savings for Amazon Prime members.

The 2016 Amazon Prime Day date is July 12th and we’ve just learned key details about the special day of savings that shoppers need to know.

Following up on last year’s Amazon Prime Day, when users ordered 398 items per second, Amazon is ready with over 100,000 deals for Prime members. New deals will land every five minutes.

You will need to be an Amazon Prime member for access to the deals, which is $99 a year with free two-day shipping and other benefits like Prime Video, Prime Music and more. You can share Amazon Prime benefits with family members.

We’re already seeing Amazon Prime Day 2016 competition from Walmart and Newegg. The retailer likes to jump onto other company sales to match or beat the prices on doorbuster style items.

When is Amazon Prime Day 2016?

Amazon confirmed Amazon Prime Day 2016 for July 12th with countdown deals live today.

What you need to know about the 2016 Amazon Prime Day event.

What you need to know about the 2016 Amazon Prime Day event.

To take part in the 2016 Amazon Prime Day deals you will need to be an Amazon Prime member, with a free trial available. You can start a trial now, so that you can take advantage of the countdown deals.

While the actual Amazon Prime Day is not until the middle of July, the deals start on July 5th. Amazon Prime Day is available in U.S., U.K., Spain,Japan, Italy, Germany, France, Canada, Belgium, and Austria.

What Time Does Amazon Prime Day Start?

You can expect new Amazon Prime Day deals throughout the day, possibly every 10 minutes, but the sales start at midnight Pacific.

Shoppers in the U.S. can start buying the Amazon Prime Day deals at 12:01 AM Pacific, 3:01 AM Eastern.

If you want the biggest deals you may need to plan on a late night or a very early morning.

2016 Amazon Prime Day Deals

We don’t have a full list of the 2016 Amazon Prime Day deals yet, but the retailer plans to offer many Lightning Deals for this shopping event.

Amazon confirms that they plan to stock more than double the amount of TVs for Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined.

Greg Greeley, Vice President Amazon Prime cautions, “Even with this massive selection we know many of the Prime Day offers will sell out, so members should download the Amazon shopping app to receive notifications on their favorite deals.”

The 2016 Amazon Prime Day deals details we know.

The 2016 Amazon Prime Day deals details we know.

You can definitely count on deals on Amazon products like the Echo, Fire Tablets, FireTV and similar Amazon devices that exist to make it easier for you to buy stuff from Amazon. We also know that there is a 40% off Kindle Unlimited deal.

  • Deals are Everywhere – Members can shop deals on all devices, across nearly all categories, in all Prime countries.
  • Lots of TVs – The deal inventory of TVs in the U.S. will be nearly 2x than Black Friday and Cyber Monday combined.
  • Toys All Day – Members in the U.S. will find toy deals nearly all day on Prime Day.
  • Watch-A-Deal – Readily track and shop any deal while at home or on-the-go with the Amazon App. Learn more at amazon.com/watched.
  • Sort by Category – Newly-enhanced deal shopping is designed to help customers swiftly sort deals by category.
  • Alexa Specials – There will be benefits to being an owner of an Amazon Echo, Echo Dot or Amazon Tap on Prime Day.
  • More Sellers – Twice as many small business sellers around the world are participating in Prime Day this year.
  • More to Watch – Members will find unbelievable deals on some of today’s top rated TV series and popular blockbuster films to rent or purchase and instantly stream on Amazon Video.
  • Tips and Tricks – Find helpful advice on how to shop on Prime Day at amazon.com/primeday

Hopefully the deals are better than 2015, when many of the items for sale on Prime Day did not stand out.

Amazon Prime Day Deal Notifications

You can turn on notifications for Amazon Prime Day Deals on your iPhone or Android so that you know when your watched or waitlisted deals are available to buy.

When you are browsing upcoming deals you can tap on Watch to get notified as soon as you can buy. This is an essential tool to get the best deals.

You’ll need the Amazon app and you’ll want to check out the options to turn on notifications for watched and waitlisted deals.

Amazon Prime Day Contests

There are Amazon Prime Day contests that allow you to win money and experiences with Prime Photos and Prime Music.

If you upload a photo to Amazon Prime Photos you get a chance at winning $5,000 on July 12th.

Use Amazon Prime Music to listen to 12 playlists and you can win a chance to go to a concert and meet 12 artists. You can win a chance to see Carrie Underwood, Blink-182, Norah Jones, The Piano Guys, The Strumbellas, Mana, Pentatonix, Casting Crowns, The Lumineers, Cole Swindell, The Head and The Heart and Flo Rida

Watch Out for Bad Amazon Prime Day Deals

Not everything you see listed on Amazon Prime Day Lightning Deals is a good deal. If the product is available, you can add it to your cart then research it before checking out, but you have limited time.

Last year many shoppers joked that it was Amazon Garage Sale Day, due to the poor selection of deals and odd discounts.

You'll see a lot of Amazon Prime day competition.

You’ll see a lot of Amazon Prime day competition.

Walmart and Newegg Take On Amazon Prime Day

Last year Walmart jumped in on Amazon Prime Day deals with lower free shipping limits and rollbacks. Walmart is already planning an Amazon Prime Day deal showdown for 2016.

Newegg offers a FantasTech Sale that starts on July 11th and then more deals go live on July 12th just after midnight.

Walmart already extended a 30 day free trial of the Amazon Prime-like two-day shipping program that it offers and this week the retailer will kick off July with many rollbacks.

We don’t know the exact Walmart deals yet, but there is a very good chance that you will see big deals at Walmart to compete with what Amazon offers up.

20 Best iPhone 6s Cases

Speck CandyShell Clear iPhone 6s Case

1 / 20
Speck CandyShell Clear iPhone 6s Case

The Speck CandyShell Clear is the first clear iPhone 6s case from Speck, and the first clear case from the company overall. This form-fitting, minimalist iPhone 6s case delivers a decent amount of protection with a military drop test 810G rating.

Speck assures us that the clear case will not yellow with use like many cheap clear case options. The clear finish is perfect for showing off your iPhone 6s color choice while protecting it.

Buttons move perfectly and are easy to find by touch and there is a raised front bezel to keep the iPhone 6s display off hard surfaces.

$34.95 at Speck

1 / 20

2016 Amazon Prime Day Deals, Details and Dates is a post by Josh Smith from Gotta Be Mobile.

04 Jul 03:45

Hacked Emails Reveal NATO General Plotting Against Obama on Russia Policy

by Lee Fang

Retired U.S. Air Force Gen. Philip Breedlove, until recently the supreme commander of NATO forces in Europe, plotted in private to overcome President Barack Obama’s reluctance to escalate military tensions with Russia over the war in Ukraine in 2014, according to apparently hacked emails from Breedlove’s Gmail account that were posted on a new website called DC Leaks.

Obama defied political pressure from hawks in Congress and the military to provide lethal assistance to the Ukrainian government, fearing that doing so would increase the bloodshed and provide Russian President Vladimir Putin with the justification for deeper incursions into the country.

Breedlove, during briefings to Congress, notably contradicted the Obama administration regarding the situation in Ukraine, leading to news stories about conflict between the general and Obama.

But the leaked emails provide an even more dramatic picture of the intense back-channel lobbying for the Obama administration to begin a proxy war with Russia in Ukraine.

In a series of messages in 2014, Breedlove sought meetings with former Secretary of State Colin Powell, asking for advice on how to pressure the Obama administration to take a more aggressive posture toward Russia.

“I may be wrong, … but I do not see this WH really ‘engaged’ by working with Europe/NATO. Frankly I think we are a ‘worry,’ … ie a threat to get the nation drug into a conflict,” Breedlove wrote in an email to Powell, who responded by accepting an invitation to meet and discuss the dilemma. “I seek your counsel on two fronts,” Breedlove continued, “how to frame this opportunity in a time where all eyes are on ISIL all the time, … and two, … how to work this personally with the POTUS.”

 

Breedlove attempted to influence the administration through several channels, emailing academics and retired military officials, including former NATO supreme commander Wesley Clark, for assistance in building his case for supplying military assistance to Ukrainian forces battling Russian-backed separatists.

“I think POTUS sees us as a threat that must be minimized, … ie do not get me into a war????” Breedlove wrote in an email to Harlan Ullman, senior adviser to the Atlantic Council, describing his ongoing attempt to get Powell to help him influence Obama.

“Given Obama’s instruction to you not to start a war, this may be a tough sell,” Ullman replied a few months later, in another string of emails about Breedlove’s effort to “leverage, cajole, convince or coerce the U.S. to react” to Russia.

Breedlove did not respond to a request for comment. He stepped down from his NATO leadership position in May and retired from service on Friday, July 1. Breedlove was a four-star Air Force general and served as the 17th Supreme Allied Commander of NATO forces in Europe starting on May 10, 2013.

Phillip Karber, an academic who corresponded regularly with Breedlove — providing him with advice and intelligence on the Ukrainian crisis —  verified the authenticity of several of the emails in the leaked cache. He also told The Intercept that Breedlove confirmed to him that the general’s Gmail account was hacked and that the incident had been reported to the government.

“The last conversation I had about it with General Breedlove, he said, ‘Yeah, I’ve been hacked several times,’” said Karber. He added that he noticed at least one of his personal emails appearing online from the leak before we had contacted him. “I turned this over to the U.S. government and asked them to investigate. No one has given me any answer.”

“I have no idea whose account was leaked or hacked,” said Powell, when reached for comment about the emails. Powell said he had no comment about the discussions regarding Obama’s response to the conflict in Ukraine.

In the European press, Breedlove has been portrayed as a hawkish figure known for leaning on allied nations to ditch diplomacy and to adopt a more confrontational role again Russian-backed separatists in Ukraine. Breedlove, testifying before Congress earlier in February of this year, called Russia “a long-term existential threat to the United States and to our European allies.”

Der Spiegel reported that Breedlove “stunned” German leaders with a surprise announcement in 2015 claiming that pro-Russian separatists had “upped the ante” in eastern Ukraine with “well over a thousand combat vehicles, Russian combat forces, some of the most sophisticated air defense, battalions of artillery” sent to Donbass, a center of the conflict.

Breedlove’s numbers were “significantly higher” than the figures known to NATO intelligence agencies and seemed exaggerated to German officials. The announcement appeared to be a provocation designed to disrupt mediation efforts led by Chancellor Angela Merkel.

In previous instances, German officials believed Breedlove overestimated Russian forces along the border with Ukraine by as many as 20,000 troops and found that the general had falsely claimed that several Russian military assets near the Ukrainian border were part of a special build-up in preparation for a large-scale invasion of the country. In fact, much of the Russian military equipment identified by Breedlove, the Germans said, had been stored there well before the revolution in Ukraine.

The emails, however, depict a desperate search by Breedlove to build his case for escalating the conflict, contacting colleagues and friends for intelligence to illustrate the Russian threat. Karber, who visited Ukrainian politicians and officials in Kiev on several occasions, sent frequent messages to Breedlove — “per your request,” he noted — regarding information he had received about separatist military forces and Russian troop movements. In several updates, Breedlove received military data sourced from Twitter and social media.

Karber, the president of the Potomac Foundation, became the center of a related scandal last year when it was discovered that he had facilitated a meeting during which images of purported Russian forces in Ukraine were distributed to the office of Sen. James Inhofe, R-Okla., and were published by a neoconservative blog. The pictures turned out to be a deception; one supposed picture of Russian tanks in Ukraine was, in fact, an old photograph of Russian tanks in Ossetia during the war with Georgia.

Breedlove stayed in close contact with Karber and other officials who shared his views on the Ukrainian conflict.

“Phil, can’t we get a statement to counteract the Russians on use of force? what can I do to help? If the Ukrainians lose control of the narrative, the Russians will see it as an open door,” wrote retired Gen. Wesley Clark, who forwarded on his messages with Victoria Nuland, the assistant secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs. He also passed along concerns from the Bulgarian president that Bulgaria might be Russia’s next target.

In other messages, Clark relayed specific requests for the types of military aid desired by Ukrainian officials. In addition to radar systems and other forms of military equipment, Clark recommended that Breedlove “encourage Ukraine to hire some first rate pr firms and crisis communications firms in U.S. and Europe.” He added, “They need the right tools to engage in information warfare.”

Ukraine did hire several D.C. lobbying and communication firms to influence policymakers. In June 2015, the government signed a deal with APCO Worldwide, an influential firm with ties to senior Democratic and Republican officials.

In an email in February 2015, Karber told Breedlove that “Pakistan has, under the table, offered Ukraine 500 TOW-II launchers (man-portable version) and 8,000 TOW-II missiles,” adding that deliveries of the anti-tank weapons could begin by the end of the month. “However,” Karber wrote, “Pakistan will not make these deliveries without U.S. approval; moreover they will not even request that approval unless they have informal assurance that it would be approved.”

Karber told The Intercept that the Pakistani arms deal never materialized.

Breedlove was most recently in the news explaining that he now thinks we need to talk to the Russian government to resolve the conflict in Ukraine. “I think we need to begin to have meaningful dialogue,” he said last week, while reiterating his views on the need for a strong NATO to militarily match Russia. “Russia does understand power, and strength, and unity,” he said.

The emails were released by D.C. Leaks, a database run by self-described “hacktivists” who are collecting the communications of elite stakeholders such as political parties, major politicians, political campaigns, and the military. The website currently has documents revealing some internal communications of the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign and George Soros’s Open Society Foundation, among others.

Top photo: Gen. Philip Breedlove.

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The post Hacked Emails Reveal NATO General Plotting Against Obama on Russia Policy appeared first on The Intercept.

09 May 04:02

The Best Dishes for Luxurious Make-Ahead Breakfasts

by Heather Yamada-Hosley

Prepping breakfast ahead of time means fewer rushed mornings and more time relaxing before a long day, or spent with your family. These meal suggestions from The Kitchn are delicious, simple to make the night before, and can even feed a group of people.

Read more...

10 Apr 00:26

Class-Action Suit Targets System That Added a Baby to Terrorist Watchlist

by Ryan Devereaux

BABY DOE WAS 7 months old when his troubles with the U.S. government began. His mother was taking him on a flight when security officials stopped them at an airport. He was patted down and subjected to “chemical testing.” His mother’s bag was searched. His diapers were examined. Unbeknownst to the family from California, four letters on the infant’s boarding pass —  “SSSS” — had singled him out as a particularly dangerous class of individual: a “known or suspected terrorist.”

Four years later, Baby Doe, as he’s identified in court documents, is part of a class-action lawsuit taking aim at the federal government’s sweeping terrorist watchlisting system. His ordeal is one of 18 included in the suit, filed Tuesday in Alexandria, Virginia, by the Michigan branch of the Council of American-Islamic Relations, or CAIR. The rights group claims its plaintiffs’ collective experiences are the consequence of “an injustice of historic proportions.”

“Through extra-judicial and secret means,” the suit alleges, “the federal government is ensnaring individuals into an invisible web of consequences that are imposed indefinitely and without recourse as a result of the shockingly large federal watchlists that now include hundreds of thousands of individuals.”

Before September 11, 2001, the U.S. government had a list of 16 people prohibited from boarding flights due to suspected terrorism links. By 2013, that number had swelled to 47,000. Today, the watchlisting apparatus includes both the no-fly list and the selectee list — which triggers the enhanced airport screening Baby Doe’s family allegedly experienced — as well as other lesser-known, though much larger, secret government watchlists.

The watchlisting system has come under fire from attorneys across the country, who have blasted the procedures for secretly labeling individuals as known or suspected terrorists — “KSTs” in government parlance — as discriminatory against Muslims, arbitrary in execution, and devoid of acceptable means for legal challenge and redress. For years, the government would refuse even to acknowledge whether an individual was included on the no-fly list. Following recent rounds of litigation, the Department of Homeland Security last year instituted a policy of providing confirmation to people who believe they have been wrongly watchlisted so long as the disclosure does not endanger “national security and law enforcement interests.”

In addition to compensation for those wrongly watchlisted, the CAIR lawsuit aims to break down obstacles faced by those seeking to challenge their placement on the government’s controversial lists. The government has three weeks to respond to the suit. The FBI said it could not comment on pending litigation.

CAIR’s class action suit takes particular issue with the Terrorist Screening Database, or TSDB, the U.S. government’s central terrorism watchlist. Overseen by the FBI’s Terrorist Screening Center, the TSDB both draws from and informs a number of other government lists. In 2014, The Intercept published a set of government documents that lays out how the watchlisting process works as well as its massive scope. Among the materials was the Obama administration’s 2013 “Watchlisting Guidance,” which revealed that U.S. officials require neither “concrete facts” nor “irrefutable evidence” to secretly label an individual a known or suspected terrorist. Another document showed that nearly half the 680,000 people listed on the TSDB were described as having “no recognized terrorist group affiliation.”

The documents also revealed that more than 1 million people were included in the government’s Terrorist Identities Datamart Environment system, an expansive database drawn from intelligence community sources that feeds into the TSDB and other associated lists. Aside from legal and ethical concerns, the sheer size of the government’s multiple overlapping lists has led critics to argue that such an overwhelming amount of data makes it more difficult for law enforcement and national security officials to pinpoint risks and protect the public.

In Tuesday’s court filing, CAIR cited the documents disclosed by The Intercept as evidence of a watchlisting system gone haywire, noting that the consequences of an individual being wrongly labeled a potential threat to national security include “the unimaginable indignity and real-life danger of having their own government communicate to hundreds of thousands of federal agents, private contractors, businesses, state and local police, the captains of sea-faring vessels, and foreign governments all across the world that they are a violent menace.”

CAIR also observed that inclusion on one of the government’s terrorist watchlists can expose individuals to pressure from federal authorities to become informants in risky counterterrorism investigations. “Defendants have utilized the watchlist, not as a tool to enhance aviation and border security, but as a bludgeon to coerce American Muslims into becoming informants or forgoing the exercise of their rights, such as the right to have an attorney present during law enforcement questioning.”

The documents published by The Intercept in 2014 listed the five U.S. cities with the highest concentrations of watchlisted residents. Four of those locations — New York, Houston, San Diego, and Chicago — are cities with millions of residents. The city with the second highest concentration of watchlisted individuals, however, was Dearborn, Michigan, population 96,000, home of the largest percentage of Arab-Americans in the United States. More than half of the plaintiffs in CAIR’s lawsuit, all of whom are Muslim, reside in Michigan.

Although the lawsuit comes at time of heightened anxiety for many Muslim Americans, Dawud Walid, executive director of CAIR’s Michigan chapter, was quick to point out that pressure on Muslim communities from law enforcement and intelligence agencies has been going on for years, under both Republican and Democratic presidents.

“This type of profiling, which includes the watchlist that started under President Bush, mushroomed under a Democratic president, Mr. Obama,” Walid told The Intercept, before offering a list of grievances that spanned both presidents and ranged from the New York City Police Department’s haphazard mapping of Muslim communities, to the FBI’s use of confidential informants in American mosques, to the NSA’s surveillance of prominent Muslim Americans. “In terms of the policing of Muslim communities, it’s happened already.”

“We’re concerned about the hyperbolic rhetoric that’s coming out of the right in particular, in terms of banning immigration or banning Syrian refugees,” Walid said, “But in terms of the state of the surveillance apparatus that’s taking place right now, it’s already horrendous under President Obama.”

Related:

 

The post Class-Action Suit Targets System That Added a Baby to Terrorist Watchlist appeared first on The Intercept.

08 Apr 04:04

T-Mobile announces ‘Enhanced Voice Services’ for even clearer voice calls, arrives first on Galaxy S7/S7 Edge and LG G5

by Chris Chavez
While other carriers are still talking about VoLTE, T-Mobile is already moving past it. Today, the Un-carrier is announcing "Enhanced Voice Services" on their network, something that looks to improve voice calls reliability as well as higher-quality calls than their previous HD Voice effort.
25 Mar 05:17

How to Change the Galaxy S7 Lockscreen & Wallpaper

by Cory Gunther

How to Change the Galaxy S7 Lockscreen & Wallpaper is a post by Cory Gunther from Gotta Be Mobile.

This guide will explain how to change the Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 Edge lockscreen image and wallpaper. Now that Samsung’s new smartphones have been available for a few weeks we’re getting a lot of questions. And one that comes up often is something as simple as changing the wallpaper.

On March 11th Samsung’s two impressive new phones became available, and the bigger Galaxy S7 Edge is extremely popular. Here we’ll show owners how to change both the background wallpaper and the lockscreen wallpaper, for those that are new to Android. It’s a basic feature many don’t ever do simply because they don’t look through settings, but it’s actually extremely easy.

Read: How to Change the Galaxy S7 Text Message App

The Galaxy S7 and S7 Edge both have beautiful 2560 x 1440 Quad-HD displays, one being 5.1-inches and the Edge coming in at 5.5-inches. The first thing you see when it’s turn it on is the lockscreen. This can be customized with any picture users would like, and the same goes for the background wallpaper. Let’s get started.

Galaxy-S7-button

These phones are very advanced and loaded full of features, so it can be easy for users to get overwhelmed. For one, here’s 10 top settings all owners should change, and now lets customize that wallpaper.

Beginners or first-time smartphone (or Samsung) owners looking to change the wallpaper to a picture of their pets, kids or a pretty landscape photo or monument will be able to do so in a matter of minutes, or less. It’s something many people do often, but at the same time some leave the default image for months and months.

Part of the excitement of getting a new phone is setting it up the way you’d like, even if that can be a bit daunting for beginners. As a result, the easy to understand steps below will have owners changing the wallpaper on the Galaxy S6 and Galaxy S6 Edge in no time.

Instructions

Changing the wallpaper or background image on the lockscreen can be done a few different ways, and to make things even better the lockscreen image can differ from the homescreen wallpaper. We’ll start with the easiest method first.

Tap and hold anywhere on your screen where there isn’t an app icon or clock/whether, and the screen will zoom out to a customize mode. From here you can rearrange icons, change what screen is the main screen when you hit the home button, as well as customize the wallpaper.

More Help: How to Reset a Frozen Galaxy S7

So push and hold on the main screen and select “Wallpapers” on the bottom left. Now owners can choose from a list of pre-installed background wallpapers, or select “View Gallery” to find a photo or downloaded image off the device. Simply find or select the photo you’d like to use, and hit “Set Wallpaper”. As shown below, and we’re all done.

S7-wallpaper

Pick something nice or find wallpapers downloaded from the internet or popular apps like Zedge, or simply scroll through the camera gallery until there is a photo or background worth using, and select it.

Lockscreen Wallpaper

Thankfully Samsung makes changing the lockscreen wallpaper just as easy, and gives owners a choice to change the homescreen, lockscreen, or both. Meaning each can be different as I have it, or they can be the same and changed at the same time with just a few taps of the screen.

Just as above, push and hold down on a blank area of the screen, then select “Wallpapers”. Once we’ve done this, the top left of the screen will say “home screen”. Select here and a menu will popup with options for home, lock, or both. Simply choose which you’d like to change (so select lockscreen) and follow the same instructions above to select a pre-installed image, or search for a photo from the Galaxy S7 or Galaxy S7 Edge. Once you’ve found the image you’d like to use, hit “Set Wallpaper” again, and we’re all done.

S7-lock

There are a lot of different apps available from the Google Play Store users can download for custom wallpapers, or even live wallpapers that move with the display. Zedge is one of the most popular apps for lots of different customization as well.

Premium Wallpapers HD is another excellent choice, which works great and has HD wallpapers to better suite the 2560 x 1440 Quad-HD resolution on the new Galaxy S7. Good luck, and enjoy.

How to Change the Galaxy S7 Lockscreen & Wallpaper is a post by Cory Gunther from Gotta Be Mobile.

08 Mar 04:11

In 1974 Call to Abolish CIA, Sanders Followed in Footsteps of JFK, Truman

by Jon Schwarz

According to an article in Politico, Bernie Sanders, during his 1974 campaign for the Senate on Vermont’s Liberty Union Party ticket, called the Central Intelligence Agency “a dangerous institution that has got to go.” Sanders complained that the CIA was only accountable to “right-wing lunatics who use it to prop up fascist dictatorships.”

Jeremy Bash, a former CIA chief of staff who is now an adviser to Hillary Clinton’s campaign, told reporter Michael Crowley that Sanders’ comment “reinforces the conclusion that he’s not qualified to be commander in chief.” Bash explained: “Abolishing the CIA in the 1970s would have unilaterally disarmed America during the height of the Cold War and at a time when terrorist networks across the Middle East were gaining strength.” Bash was chief of staff for Leon Panetta at both the CIA and Defense Department, and now runs a consulting firm called Beacon Global Strategies.

But Sanders’ position is not that radical: Many prominent politicians, including two previous Democratic commanders in chief, have called for the CIA to be dismantled or severely constrained.

John F. Kennedy famously described his desire to “splinter the CIA into a thousand pieces and scatter it into the winds” after the disastrous Bay of Pigs invasion of Cuba. Peter Kornbluh points out in his book Bay of Pigs Declassified that the State Department at that same time proposed the CIA be stripped of its covert action capacity and renamed. However, the CIA escaped any serious repercussions — partly because, as Kornbluh explains, the CIA’s then-director, John McCone, made sure that most of the copies of a damning report on the Bay of Pigs by the agency’s own inspector general were literally burned.

Then in 1963, after Kennedy’s assassination, Harry Truman wrote a newspaper column explaining that “I never had any thought that when I set up the CIA that it would be injected into peacetime cloak and dagger operations. … I, therefore, would like to see the CIA be restored to its original assignment as the intelligence arm of the president … and that its operational duties be terminated or properly used elsewhere.”

Beyond the two presidents, Truman’s Secretary of State Dean Acheson wrote in his 1969 memoirs that upon the CIA’s creation he “had the gravest forebodings about this organization and warned the president that as set up neither he, the National Security Council, nor anyone else would be in a position to know what it was doing or to control it.”

In 1975 — that is, after Sanders’ statement — a congressional investigation of the CIA by senators including Walter Mondale and Gary Hart declared that “policy and procedural barriers are presently inadequate to insure that any covert operation is absolutely essential to the national security. These barriers must be tightened and raised or covert action should be abandoned as an instrument of foreign policy.” (My italics. The Politico article does mention and quote the investigation’s findings.)

In both 1991 and 1995, then-Sen. Daniel Moynihan, D-N.Y., called for the CIA to be abolished. Hillary Clinton would later be elected to Moynihan’s senate seat, and on his death she stated, “We have lost a great American, an extraordinary senator, an intellectual and a man of passion and understanding about what really makes this country great.”

So is it starting to sound to you a bit less like a scandal, and a bit more like effective oppo research?

It’s unclear how Crowley, Politico’s senior foreign affairs correspondent, obtained Sanders’ 1974 remarks. In a phone conversation, I asked him several times whether he had received them from anyone connected with Hillary Clinton’s campaign. Crowley responded: “I had primary sources for everything I wrote about in that story. … I’ve written several stories about Bernie’s foreign policy and national security views. This is something I’ve been digging into independently for almost a month now. … I would just refer you to the stories I’ve been writing the last several weeks, I’m not going to talk about how I report my articles.”

If in fact the Clinton campaign is distributing Sanders’ remarks from many years ago, there’s obviously nothing wrong with that — just as there would be nothing wrong with the Sanders campaign distributing hers. Moreover, it’s standard operating procedure for campaigns to disseminate information they believe will make their opponents look bad while trying to keep their fingerprints off it. But that doesn’t mean reporters should collude with them to make it possible.

Top photo: Bernie Sanders takes the oath of office to become mayor of Burlington in 1981. Sanders formerly headed Vermont’s only major third party, the socialistic Liberty Union.

The post In 1974 Call to Abolish CIA, Sanders Followed in Footsteps of JFK, Truman appeared first on The Intercept.

08 Mar 03:46

FBI Admits — It was a 'Mistake' to Reset Terrorist's iCloud Password

by noreply@blogger.com (Swati Khandelwal)
Yes, FBI Director James Comey admitted that the investigators made a "mistake" with the San Bernardino investigation during a congressional hearing held by the House Judiciary Committee. Apple is facing a court order to help the FBI unlock an iPhone belonged to San Bernardino Shooter by developing a backdoored version of iOS that can disable the security feature on the locked iPhone.
08 Mar 03:46

8 Best Samsung Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 Edge Features

by Quentyn Kennemer
With the Samsung Galaxy S7 and Samsung Galaxy S7 Edge landing in folks' laps this week and many more slated to get it in the days to come, we're sure many of you are wondering what these things do best. That's why we're presenting our list of the 8 best features on the Samsung Galaxy S7 and Galaxy S7 Edge!
08 Mar 03:44

50+ Samsung Galaxy S7 Tips & Tricks

by Rob Jackson
The Samsung Galaxy S7 is an incredible smartphone with a treasure trove of features. Many people overlook the most powerful features of their smartphone: don’t let that happen to you! Get the most out of Samsung’s flagship by embracing the Best Galaxy S7 features and diving into our collection of top Galaxy S7 Tips & Tricks below. ...
18 Feb 05:04

NSA’s Top-Secret SKYNET May Be Killing Thousands of Innocent Civilians

by noreply@blogger.com (Swati Khandelwal)
So what do you expect from an Artificially intelligent program run by the government intelligence agency? Possibly killing innocent people. The real-life SKYNET, the fictional malevolent artificial intelligence in the Terminator movies, run by the US National Security Agency (NSA) is a surveillance program that uses cell phone metadata to track the GPS location and call activities of
29 Jan 05:20

Paul Krugman Unironically Anoints Himself Arbiter of “Seriousness”: Only Clinton Supporters Eligible

by Glenn Greenwald

For years, New York Times columnist Paul Krugman has repeatedly complained about the D.C. orthodoxy-enforcing tactic of labeling only those who subscribe to Washington pieties as “Very Serious People,” or “VSPs.” It’s a term Krugman borrowed (with credit) from the liberal blogger Atrios, who first coined it to illustrate how Iraq War opponents were instantly marginalized in establishment discourse and only war advocates were deemed to be Serious. Krugman mockingly uses it so often that the New York Times created a special tag for the term. The primary purpose of the “VSP” tactic is to malign anyone who dissents from D.C. establishment pieties as non-Serious or un-Serious, thus demeaning the person as someone who can (and should) be ignored as residing on the fringe, unworthy of engagement or a real platform regardless of the merits of their position.

Yesterday, one of the purest and most noxious examples of this tactic was invoked — by Paul Krugman. The longtime Clinton defender announced that all Serious policy experts “lean Hillary”; he even used the term “serious” unironically to advance his claim:

Meanwhile, the Sanders skepticism of the wonks continues: Paul Starr lays out the case. As far as I can tell, every serious progressive policy expert on either health care or financial reform who has weighed in on the primary seems to lean Hillary.

Let’s repeat that: “Every serious progressive policy expert on either health care or financial reform who has weighed in on the primary seems to lean Hillary.”

The economist Dean Baker — previously cited as a financial reform and economic policy expert by Krugman, but who now most assuredly does not “lean Hillary” — quickly reacted to his formal exclusion by Krugman from the Club of Seriousness:

Paul Krugman Revokes Credentials of Those Who Don’t Support Clinton. …

Oh well, so much for those of us backing or leaning towards Sanders. I guess we just have to turn to that old Washington saying, “better right than expert.” In other words, it’s better to rely on people who have a track record of being right than the people who have the best credentials.

As so often happens, those who fancy themselves dissident gate-crashers (which apparently can include someone who is a Nobel Prize-winning tenured economics professor, at Princeton until somewhat recently; an advisory board member of the nation’s largest corporations; and effectively, a life-tenured New York Times columnist) quickly assume the role of vigilantly guarding the gate once they realize they were admitted all along. So congratulations to Paul Krugman on his power of decreeing who is a Serious Expert and announcing that the label applies only to those who want Hillary Clinton be the next president, but not Bernie Sanders.

To any of you Sanders supporters who previously believed that you possessed serious policy expertise, such as Dean Baker; or former Clinton Labor Secretary and Professor of Economic Policy Robert Reich (who yesterday wrote that “Bernie Sanders is the most qualified candidate to create the political system we should have”); or the 170 policy experts who signed a letter endorsing Sanders’ financial reform plan over Clinton’s: sorry, but you must now know that you are not Serious at all. The Very Serious Columnist has spoken. He has a Seriousness Club, and you’re not in it. If you want to be eligible, you need to support the presidential candidate of the Serious establishment, led by Paul Krugman.

OFFICIALLY EXPELLED BY PAUL KRUGMAN FROM THE CLUB OF THE SERIOUS PEOPLE:


The post Paul Krugman Unironically Anoints Himself Arbiter of “Seriousness”: Only Clinton Supporters Eligible appeared first on The Intercept.

29 Jan 05:17

Canada Cuts Off Some Intelligence Sharing With U.S. Out of Fear for Canadians’ Privacy

by Jenna McLaughlin

Canada’s CBC network reported Thursday that the country is slamming on the brakes when it comes to sharing some communications intelligence with key allies — including the U.S. — out of fear that Canadian personal information is not properly protected.

“Defense Minister Harjit Sajjan says the sharing won’t resume until he is satisfied that the proper protections are in place,” CBC reported.

Earlier on Thursday, the watchdog tasked with keeping tabs on the Ottawa-based Communications Security Establishment (CSE), Jean-Pierre Plouffe, called out the electronic spying agency for risking Canadian privacy in his annual report.

Plouffe wrote that the surveillance agency broke privacy laws when it shared Canadian data with its allies without properly protecting it first. Consequently, he concluded, it should precisely explain how Canadian citizens’ metadata — information about who a communication is to and from, the subject line of an email, and so on — can and can’t be used.

“Minimization is the process by which Canadian identity information contained in metadata is rendered unidentifiable prior to being shared,” Plouffe wrote in his report. “The fact that CSE did not properly minimize Canadian identity information contained in certain metadata prior to being shared was contrary to the ministerial directive, and to CSE’s operational policy.”

Defense Minister Sajjan said in a statement that the data sharing in question was the result of “unintentional” errors and didn’t allow for specific Canadian individuals to be identified.

The concern for Canadian metadata began shortly after disclosures made by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden in 2013.

Plouffe’s predecessor told then-Defense Minister Rob Nicholson that the other countries in a secretive surveillance pact called the Five Eyes Alliance — the U.S., the U.K., New Zealand, and Australia — might not be sheltering Canadians’ telephone data the way they should.

The CSE has admitted since the Snowden revelations that it sometimes sweeps up domestic data when keeping track of foreign intelligence communications. When any of that information is shared abroad, “these activities may directly affect the security of a Canadian person,” the previous watchdog, Robert Decary, wrote at the time.

Canada’s decision to temporarily stop sharing information comes at a time when the U.S. is scrambling to come up with a new data-sharing arrangement with the European Union before a January 31 deadline. Europe’s top court decided in October that European privacy isn’t sufficiently respected by the American government or its spying agencies.

Top photo: Parliament Hill in Ottawa, Canada.

The post Canada Cuts Off Some Intelligence Sharing With U.S. Out of Fear for Canadians’ Privacy appeared first on The Intercept.

29 Jan 05:10

Practice Mindfulness By Savoring Chocolate

by Melanie Pinola

Here’s the most delicious way to practice mindfulness : Immerse yourself in the chocolate-eating experience.

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