Free Rice

I’m in two minds about Freerice.com.

My problem is this. I’m all for giving rice to hungry folks. However, I’m not at all fond of people who take advantage of other peoples compassion to make a buck.

Every time you get a question right, 10 grains of rice are given to the World Food Programme. Huzzah! If you get the question wrong, no rice is given, even though you still see the same number of advertising banners. The crux of the matter is, how much is 10 grains of rice worth?

According to this there are 36,590 grains of rice to the kilo. So you have to get 3659 questions correct to provide 1 kilo of rice.

Now it gets harder. Finding out the wholesale price of rice is proving a little tricky. Especially as I suspect the UN sends low quality rice, as lets face it, hungry people don’t complain about it being a bit rusky, and buying the cheap stuff means you can send a whole lot more.

Now, according to this, in 2005, low quality rice was $275 per metric tonne. Thus the price for a kilo was 27.5 cents.

So, we’re at a minimum of 3659 page views for 27.5 cents worth of rice, and that is assuming you get every question right. Now things get even hazier, as I have no way of knowing how much all those big corporations are paying for ad space. I suspect they’re paying fairly well, given the excellent PR they get for being involved, but theres no way to know for sure.

Free Rice is rather evasive in the information it is willing to share about itself. It should be noted that it is owned by John Breen, the gentleman who set up The Hunger Site, which was also a for-profit enterprise, and later sold it for rather a lot of money.

I think what I’m trying to say, is that if you really want to help hungry people eat, give a dollar directly to the world food programme. Your carpal tunnels will thank you, and you won’t have inadvertently made an extremely adept social engineer even richer than he already is.

What do you think? Is it alright for someone to get rich off a site like Freerice, so long as some of the money gets sent to the WFP, or do you, like me, feel uneasy at that?

The Shape Of Things To Come

The DCDC Global Strategic Trends Programme, 2007-2036 has dozens of rather disturbing moments. I strongly urge everyone to read it in full. Its view of what awaits us in the near future is truly dystopian.

We have brain-chip mind control:

By 2035, an implantable information chip could be developed and wired directly to the user’s brain. Information and entertainment choices would be accessible through cognition and might include synthetic sensory perception beamed direct to the user’s senses. Wider related ICT developments might include the invention of synthetic telepathy, including mind-to mind or telepathic dialogue. This type of development would have obvious military and security, as well as control, legal and ethical, implications.

We have genetically modified Übermenschen. Khhhaaaaaaaaaaaannnnnnn!!!!!!!

The application of advanced genetics could challenge current assumptions about human nature and existence. Initially employed for medical purposes, breakthroughs in these areas could be put to ethically questionable uses, such as the super enhancement of human attributes, including physical strength and sensory perception. Extreme variation in attributes could arise between individuals, or where enhancement becomes a matter of fashion, between societies, creating additional reasons for conflict.

Lou Dobbs turns out to have been right all along:

A growing Hispanic population in the US might lead to increasing social tensions, possibly resulting in an aggressive separatist movement. Unlike the Black Power militants of the 1960s, this movement might focus on geographically-based self-determination as its aim, threatening secession by Hispanic-majority states. Confronted by this threat, the US might become increasingly introspective, withdrawing from all non-essential overseas commitments. In the wider world, other states and non-state actors could take advantage of the US withdrawal or break-up, using violence to pursue objectives that, otherwise, might have provoked a US military response.

Security cameras with the voices of children are just the beginning:

Technology will enable pervasive surveillance in response to terrorism, rising transnational crime and the growing capability of disparate groups or individuals to inflict catastrophic damage or disruption. Coupled with intrusive, highly responsive and accessible data-bases, the emergence of a so-called ‘surveillance society’ will increasingly challenge assumptions about privacy, with corresponding impacts on civil liberties and human rights. These capabilities will be deployed by the private as well as the public sector.

Thats all just the tip of a very scary iceberg. I might grab a few more choice cuts later.

Michael McConnell speaks, but to who?

From the BBC.

The new US director of national intelligence, Michael McConnell, has made an appearance in public at a convention – a relatively rare thing for someone in that job to do, reports the BBC’s Security Correspondent Frank Gardner.

Every morning, six days a week, he goes to the White House to brief the president. So what keeps him awake at night?

“If someone were to have a sophisticated attack on our financial services system, let’s just say cyber network broadly, at the same time that they mailed, through the US mail, FedEx and UPI, the equivalent of letters sprinkled with anthrax, it would have a devastating impact,” Mr McConnell says.

“If they chose the right place, right time, right season, it would have an even more overwhelming devastating impact.”

This has been another edition of “Mike’s Top Terrorism Tips.”.

Bush being Bush.

I don’t often read The Ladies Home Journal. Home of fine recipes, beauty tips, and stomach-churning interviews with the leader of the free world.

President Bush: But the day ended on a relatively humorous note. The agents said, “You’ll be sleeping downstairs. Washington’s still a dangerous place.” And I said no, I can’t sleep down there, the bed didn’t look comfortable. I was really tired, Laura was tired, we like our own bed. We like our own routine. You know, kind of a nester. Like the way things are. I knew I had to deal with the issue the next day and provide strength and comfort to the country, and so I needed rest in order to be mentally prepared. So I told the agent we’re going upstairs, and he reluctantly said okay. Laura wears contacts, and she was sound asleep. Barney was there. And the agent comes running up and says, “We’re under attack. We need you downstairs,” and so there we go. I’m in my running shorts and my T-shirt, and I’m barefooted. Got the dog in one hand, Laura had a cat, I’m holding Laura —

Mrs. Bush: I don’t have my contacts in, and I’m in my fuzzy house slippers —

President Bush: And this guy’s out of breath, and we’re heading straight down to the basement because there’s an incoming unidentified airplane, which is coming toward the White House. Then the guy says it’s a friendly airplane. And we hustle all the way back upstairs and go to bed.

Mrs. Bush: [laughs] And we just lay there thinking about the way we must have looked.

Noonan: So the day starts in tragedy and ends in Marx Brothers.

President Bush: That’s right — we got a laugh out of it.

I remember that night I stayed up watching the news. I couldn’t have slept if I’d wanted to.

More Orwellian Fun

Whoever controls the past controls the future; whoever controls the present, controls the past – George Orwell

From the NY Times

In a seven-year-old secret program at the National Archives, intelligence agencies have been removing from public access thousands of historical documents that were available for years, including some already published by the State Department and others photocopied years ago by private historians.Reclassified The restoration of classified status to more than 55,000 previously declassified pages began in 1999, when the Central Intelligence Agency and five other agencies objected to what they saw as a hasty release of sensitive information after a 1995 declassification order signed by President Bill Clinton. It accelerated after the Bush administration took office and especially after the 2001 terrorist attacks, according to archives records.

But because the reclassification program is itself shrouded in secrecy � governed by a still-classified memorandum that prohibits the National Archives even from saying which agencies are involved � it continued virtually without outside notice until December. That was when an intelligence historian, Matthew M. Aid, noticed that dozens of documents he had copied years ago had been withdrawn from the archives’ open shelves.

Mr. Aid was struck by what seemed to him the innocuous contents of the documents � mostly decades-old State Department reports from the Korean War and the early cold war. He found that eight reclassified documents had been previously published in the State Department’s history series, “Foreign Relations of the United States.”

“The stuff they pulled should never have been removed,” he said. “Some of it is mundane, and some of it is outright ridiculous.”

After Mr. Aid and other historians complained, the archives’ Information Security Oversight Office, which oversees government classification, began an audit of the reclassification program, said J. William Leonard, director of the office.

Mr. Leonard said he ordered the audit after reviewing 16 withdrawn documents and concluding that none should be secret.

“If those sample records were removed because somebody thought they were classified, I’m shocked and disappointed,” Mr. Leonard said in an interview. “It just boggles the mind.”

If Mr. Leonard finds that documents are being wrongly reclassified, his office could not unilaterally release them. But as the chief adviser to the White House on classification, he could urge a reversal or a revision of the reclassification program.

A group of historians, including representatives of the National Coalition for History and the Society of Historians of American Foreign Relations, wrote to Mr. Leonard on Friday to express concern about the reclassification program, which they believe has blocked access to some material at the presidential libraries as well as at the archives.

Among the 50 withdrawn documents that Mr. Aid found in his own files is a 1948 memorandum on a C.I.A. scheme to float balloons over countries behind the Iron Curtain and drop propaganda leaflets. It was reclassified in 2001 even though it had been published by the State Department in 1996.

Another historian, William Burr, found a dozen documents he had copied years ago whose reclassification he considers “silly,” including a 1962 telegram from George F. Kennan, then ambassador to Yugoslavia, containing an English translation of a Belgrade newspaper article on China’s nuclear weapons program.

Under existing guidelines, government documents are supposed to be declassified after 25 years unless there is particular reason to keep them secret. While some of the choices made by the security reviewers at the archives are baffling, others seem guided by an old bureaucratic reflex: to cover up embarrassments, even if they occurred a half-century ago.

One reclassified document in Mr. Aid’s files, for instance, gives the C.I.A.’s assessment on Oct. 12, 1950, that Chinese intervention in the Korean War was “not probable in 1950.” Just two weeks later, on Oct. 27, some 300,000 Chinese troops crossed into Korea.

Mr. Aid said he believed that because of the reclassification program, some of the contents of his 22 file cabinets might technically place him in violation of the Espionage Act, a circumstance that could be shared by scores of other historians. But no effort has been made to retrieve copies of reclassified documents, and it is not clear how they all could even be located.

“It doesn’t make sense to create a category of documents that are classified but that everyone already has,” said Meredith Fuchs, general counsel of the National Security Archive, a research group at George Washington University. “These documents were on open shelves for years.”

The group plans to post Mr. Aid’s reclassified documents and his account of the secret program on its Web site, www.gwu.edu/~nsarchiv, on Tuesday.

The program’s critics do not question the notion that wrongly declassified material should be withdrawn. Mr. Aid said he had been dismayed to see “scary” documents in open files at the National Archives, including detailed instructions on the use of high explosives.

But the historians say the program is removing material that can do no conceivable harm to national security. They say it is part of a marked trend toward greater secrecy under the Bush administration, which has increased the pace of classifying documents, slowed declassification and discouraged the release of some material under the Freedom of Information Act.

Experts on government secrecy believe the C.I.A. and other spy agencies, not the White House, are the driving force behind the reclassification program.

“I think it’s driven by the individual agencies, which have bureaucratic sensitivities to protect,” said Steven Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists, editor of the online weekly Secrecy News. “But it was clearly encouraged by the administration’s overall embrace of secrecy.”

National Archives officials said the program had revoked access to 9,500 documents, more than 8,000 of them since President Bush took office. About 30 reviewers � employees and contractors of the intelligence and defense agencies � are at work each weekday at the archives complex in College Park, Md., the officials said.

Archives officials could not provide a cost for the program but said it was certainly in the millions of dollars, including more than $1 million to build and equip a secure room where the reviewers work.

Michael J. Kurtz, assistant archivist for record services, said the National Archives sought to expand public access to documents whenever possible but had no power over the reclassifications. “The decisions agencies make are those agencies’ decisions,” Mr. Kurtz said.

Though the National Archives are not allowed to reveal which agencies are involved in the reclassification, one archivist said on condition of anonymity that the C.I.A. and the Defense Intelligence Agency were major participants.

A spokesman for the C.I.A., Paul Gimigliano, said that the agency had released 26 million pages of documents to the National Archives since 1998 and that it was “committed to the highest quality process” for deciding what should be secret.

“Though the process typically works well, there will always be the anomaly, given the tremendous amount of material and multiple players involved,” Mr. Gimigliano said.

A spokesman for the Defense Intelligence Agency said he was unable to comment on whether his agency was involved in the program.

Anna K. Nelson, a foreign policy historian at American University, said she and other researchers had been puzzled in recent years by the number of documents pulled from the archives with little explanation.

“I think this is a travesty,” said Dr. Nelson, who said she believed that some reclassified material was in her files. “I think the public is being deprived of what history is really about: facts.”

The document removals have not been reported to the Information Security Oversight Office, as the law has required for formal reclassifications since 2003.

The explanation, said Mr. Leonard, the head of the office, is a bureaucratic quirk. The intelligence agencies take the position that the reclassified documents were never properly declassified, even though they were reviewed, stamped “declassified,” freely given to researchers and even published, he said.

Thus, the agencies argue, the documents remain classified � and pulling them from public access is not really reclassification.

Mr. Leonard said he believed that while that logic might seem strained, the agencies were technically correct. But he said the complaints about the secret program, which prompted his decision to conduct an audit, showed that the government’s system for deciding what should be secret is deeply flawed.

“This is not a very efficient way of doing business,” Mr. Leonard said. “There’s got to be a better way.”

One set of the reclassified files are available here, but probably not for terribly long. I’ve downloaded them for posterity, which suppose makes me a spy. Wheeee!

Churchill speaks

The power of the Executive to cast a man into prison without formulating any charge known to the law, and particularly to deny him the judgment of his peers, is in the highest degree odious and is the foundation of all totalitarian government whether Nazi or Communism.
Winston Churchill, November 21, 1943

Happy Day of the Sun!

This just in from Korean Central News agency of DPRK:

Pyongyang, April 13 (KCNA) — Preparatory committees were inaugurated in many countries to commemorate the Day of the Sun, the birth anniversary of President Kim Il Sung. Since the Ugandan National Preparatory Committee for Commemorating April 15 and Celebrating February 16 was formed in Kampala on December 23 last year for the first time, preparatory committees have been organized in 40 odd countries under various names such as “preparatory committee for commemorating the birthday of Generalissimo Kim Il Sung who is the great leader of the Korean people, the Day of the Sun” and “preparatory committee for commemoration of the Day of the Sun and a ‘meeting praising the great persons of Mt. Paektu'”. Among those countries are Russia, Romania, Ecuador, Poland, Nepal, Mexico, Cambodia and South Africa.
High-ranking officials of governments, political parties and organizations and chiefs of friendship and solidarity groups were elected honorary chairmen and chairmen of the preparatory committees. Among them were Kong Sam Ol, deputy prime minister for Royal Palace of Cambodia, Miroslav Stepan, general secretary of the C.C., the Czechoslovak Communist Party, Rashed Khan Menon, chairman of the C.C., the Workers’ Party of Bangladesh, Christopher Coleman, spokesman (leader) of the C.C., the Revolutionary Communist Party of Britain (Marxist-Leninist), Muhammed Inuwa Rabaran, national organizational secretary of the People’s Democratic Party of Nigeria, Muhammad al Husseini al Akad, vice-minister of Agriculture of Egypt, the president of the Social Development Coordinating Centre of Thailand, Ramon Jimenez Lopez, president of the Mexican Committee for the Study of Kimilsungism, and P. Shiv Shankar, chairman of the All India Indo-Korean Friendship Association.
The preparatory committees decided to organize on a wide scale such colorful functions as national seminar, meeting, film show, photo exhibition, lecture and round-table talks and widely introduce the revolutionary life of Kim Il Sung, who performed undying feats for the human cause of independence through media so as to significantly commemorate the Day of the Sun.

It’s a world celebration! He may have been dead for a decade, but he’s still the life of the party. Look for a Day of the Sun celebration near you.

The KCNA website is quite fascinating. Though many national news services suffer from sharing a somewhat inaccurate worldview with their government, KCNA is a window into the mass-hallucination that is North Korean culture.