• NSA recruitment drive goes horribly wrong | World news | guardian.co.uk
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/shortcuts/2013/jul/05/national-security-agency-recruitment-drive

    On Tuesday, the National Security Agency called at the University of Wisconsin on a recruitment drive.

    Attending the session was Madiha R Tahir, a journalist studying a language course at the university. She asked the squirming recruiters a few uncomfortable questions about the activities of NSA: which countries the agency considers to be “adversaries”, and if being a good liar is a qualification for getting a job at the NSA.

    She has posted a recording of the session on Soundcloud, which you can hear above, and posted a rough transcript on her blog, The Mob and the Multitude. Here are some highlights.

    The session begins ...

    Tahir: “Do you consider Germany and the countries that the NSA has been spying upon to be adversaries, or are you, right now, not speaking the truth?”

    Recruiter 1: “You can define adversary as ’enemy’ and, clearly, Germany is not our enemy. But would we have foreign national interests from an intelligence perspective on what’s going on across the globe? Yeah, we do.”

    Tahir: “So by ’adversaries’, you actually mean anybody and everybody. There is nobody, then, by your definition that is not an adversary. Is that correct?”

    Recruiter 1: “That is not correct.”

    Recruiter 2: “… for us, our business is apolitical, OK? We do not generate the intelligence requirements. They are levied on us ... We might use the word ’target’.”

    Tahir: “I’m just surprised that for language analysts, you’re incredibly imprecise with your language. And it just doesn’t seem to be clear.”

    Later ...

    Tahir: “... this is a recruiting session and you are telling us things that aren’t true. And we also know that the NSA took down brochures and factsheets after the Snowden revelations because those factsheets also had severe inaccuracies and untruths in them, right? So how are we supposed to believe what you’re saying?”

    Even later ...

    Tahir: “I think the question here is do you actually think about the ramifications of the work that you do, which is deeply problematic, or do you just dress up in costumes and get drunk?” [A reference to an earlier comment the recruiter made about NSA employees working hard and going to the bar to do karaoke.]

    Recruiter 2: “... reporting the info in the right context is so important because the consequences of bad political decisions by our policymakers is something we all suffer from.”

    Unnamed female student: “And people suffer from the misinformation that you pass along so you should take responsibility as well.”

    Later still ...

    Male student: “General Alexander [head of the NSA] also lied in front of Congress.”

    Recruiter 1: “I don’t believe that he did.”

    Male student: “Probably because access to the Guardian is restricted on the Department of Defence’s computers. I am sure they don’t encourage people like you to actually think about these things. Thank God for a man like Edward Snowden who your organisation is now part of a manhunt trying to track down, trying to put him in a little hole somewhere for the rest of his life. Thank God they exist.”

    And finally ...

    Recruiter 2: “This job isn’t for everybody, you know ...”

    Tahir: “So is this job for liars? Is this what you’re saying? Because, clearly, you’re not able to give us forthright answers. I mean, given the way the NSA has behaved, given the fact that we’ve been lied to as Americans, given the fact that factsheets have been pulled down because they clearly had untruths in them, given the fact that Clapper and Alexander lied to Congress – is that a qualification for being in the NSA? Do you have to be a good liar?”

    Recruiter 1: I don’t believe the NSA is telling complete lies. And I do believe that you know, I mean people can, you can read a lot of different things that are, um, portrayed as fact and that doesn’t make them fact just because they’re in newspapers."

    Unnamed female student: “Or intelligence reports.”

    Recruiter 1: “That’s not really our purpose here today and I think if you’re not interested in that ... there are people here who are probably interested in a language career.”

  • Last words of prisoners on death row
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/shortcuts/2013/jul/02/last-words-prisoners-death-row

    Since reinstating ’ultimate justice’ in 1982, the state of Texas has kept a record of the final statements of condemned prisoners. Here are some of the most memorable

    Où je découvre l’existence de cette page :
    http://www.tdcj.state.tx.us/stat/dr_executed_offenders.html
    (déjà mentionné ici : http://seenthis.net/messages/151376 )

  • Was the pope’s first tweet worth the wait? | World news | The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/shortcuts/2012/dec/12/popes-first-tweet-worth-wait

    At 10.30am GMT, the pope put his sacred hands to the Vatican’s holy iPad for the very first time, and wrote: “Dear friends, I am pleased to get in touch with you through Twitter. Thank you for your generous response. I bless all of you from my heart.” Now, there’s no easy way of putting this to his holiness but, as first tweets go, isn’t that a little bit rubbish?

    #religion

  • #Dronestagram – the website exposing the US’s secret #drone war | World news | The Guardian
    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/shortcuts/2012/nov/12/dronestagram-website-us-drone-war

    Information about UAVs is being dragged out of Washington little by little, which is where James Bridle comes in. Using what little information there is, Bridle, creator of the New Aesthetic micro-blog, has set up Dronestagram. By marrying images from Google and target details from the BIJ, he has started to show the places that have been hit in UAV attacks. Bridle says he wants to make them “a little bit more visible, a little closer. A little more real”.

    On his blog, booktwo.org, Bridle argues that “drone strikes are the consequence of invisible, distancing technologies, and a technologically disengaged media and society... the technology that was supposed to bring us closer together is also used to obscure and obfuscate.” The images on Dronestagram may be just “foreign landscapes”, but he hopes their immediacy and intimacy will add to the growing demand for transparency. Earlier this year, Apple rejected an App that did much the same thing, apparently on the grounds that many people would find the content objectionable.

    http://dronestagram.tumblr.com

    7th November: a strike at night in a village 40km from Sana’a. Alleged al Qaeda leader Adnam al Qathi and his bodyguards Rablee Lahib and Radwan al Hashidi were killed. A child and two others are also reported injured. Drones had been seen over the area for three days.