Opinion
By Jeff Childers
06-14-24
Good morning, C&C, itβs Friday! Itβs the last holiday day for the Childers clan, as we hit a couple top Civil War sites and head for the airport hotel later this afternoon. Todayβs quick traveling roundup includes: House Committee finds that Fauciβs agency is a chronic liar; Stanfordβs authoritarian internet monitoring academics throw in the towel of censorship, for now; top ChatBot developer marries top deep state spook; conservative talk show host Alex Jones signals personal bankruptcy in light of vast judgments; and an extreme weather update on Floridaβs latest flash floods.
ππ¬ WORLD NEWS AND COMMENTARY π¬π
πͺ³πͺ³ The UK Daily Mail ran a painful story yesterday headlined, βDr. Anthony Fauci’s department hid plans to create mutant monkeypox virus that ‘could’ve started pandemic,’ bombshell Congress report finds.β What else should they have done with their Bond-villain-style plans to create a mutant monkeypox virus?
In 2015, the NIH schemed to engineer a highly infectious, highly fatal version of the difficult disease that, back while it was only paddling around remote African villages, was long called βmonkeypox.β But the worst part of 2022βs worldwide epidemic of horrid sores afflicting delicate body parts, which terrified the worldβs leather festival community, was the bugβs triggering, intolerant name. So alert public health authorities narrowly avoided disaster by promptly re-defining the disease as the nonsense word βmpox.β
Whew! That was a close one.
This week, following a painful 1.5-year probe, the House Energy and Commerce Committee released its aching results: the HHS, NIAID and the NIH repeatedly βobstructed and misled the committeeβ about whether the risky experiments were approved and actually carried out, describing the agencyβs deceptive lack of cooperation with the probe as βunacceptable and potentially criminal.β
Keep things in perspective. Itβs not like a brand-new, never-before-seen version of the virus popped up simultaneously in ten different cities worldwide seven years after the NIH experiments started or anything. Oh, wait. Nevermind.
During the investigation, the HHS and the NIH repeatedly promised the Committee that the dangerous mpox experiments had never ever been formally proposed, planned, approved, or conducted, and were never even under serious consideration. But the House report concluded those βrepeated assertions were false.β
So now, suddenly and unexpectedly, the NIH has been infected with a lack of trust.
According to the Committee report, amidst a long list of woeful but unsurprising findings, a list more painful to read than a nether-region mpox sore, it revealed that the human cockroach Fauciβs agency, the NIAID, is a law unto itself:
Itβs unclear exactly who needs to hear this, but a βculture of secrecy and obfuscationβ is just what you donβt want in a public health agency. And, note that an organizationβs culture is downstream from management. Just saying.
Slow progress. As Iβve said many times, we need to stop these scientists before they kill us all. But itβs progress.
π₯ Yesterday, Platformer ran a terrific but widely-ignored story headlined, βThe Stanford Internet Observatory is being dismantled.β And good riddance! They wonβt stop trying, of course, but at least one six-legged, insectile group of crypto-fascists has been squashed.
During the 2020 election cycle, Stanford set up the bizarrely named βObservatoryβ as a public-private partnership, to root out social media misinformers and snitch on them to the government. In turn, the FBI would report any βelection interferersβ and βscience deniersβ to the platforms, for βvoluntaryβ censorship or worse.
Academic snitches get legal stitches. After the Twitter files exposed the SIOβs role in censoring Americans, at least three groups of plaintiffs have sued Stanford, alleging its researchers illegally colluded with the federal government to censor speech. And the House Committee on Weaponization of the Federal Government is currently investigating the Orwellian research group.
But there is less and less to investigate. Apparently, too much transparency has been forced onto the high-minded enterprise. Internal sources told reporters the βlabβ will not be researching the 2024 election, or any future election, for that matter.
In other words, if we insist on watching them while they work, then fine, they just wonβt do it.
The Stanford Internet Observatory (SIO) is apparently βwinding down.β Founding director Alex Stamos left his post in November. Last week, research director Renee DiResta left after her contract was not renewed. Another key staff member’s contract expired this month, and other staff have been advised to apply for employment elsewhere.
Apparently also tracking a culture of secrecy and obfuscation, plus lying, Stanford hotly disputes that the SIO is being dismantled. “The important work of SIO continues under new leadership, including its critical work on child safety and other online harms, its publication of the Journal of Online Trust and Safety, the Trust and Safety Research Conference, and the Trust and Safety Teaching Consortium,” a spokesperson wrote.
The university complained, βStanford remains deeply concerned about efforts, including lawsuits and congressional investigations, that chill freedom of inquiry and undermine legitimate and much needed academic research β both at Stanford and across academia.”
We also remain deeply concerned, about Stanford. And we wish they would stop helping create a police state and get back to teaching kids productive business skills. Is that too much to ask?
π₯π₯ Here we go again! Yesterday, TechCrunch ran a spooky story headlined, βFormer NSA head joins OpenAI board and safety committee.β Because ChatBots need the very best deep state security expertise. Iβm reassured. Are you reassured?
After decades of leading domestic spying operations (including those exposed by whistleblower Edward Snowden), General Paul M. Nakasone, 60, just retired from his job commanding U.S. Cyber Command and directing the NSA in February. Apparently unsatisfied with the slow pace of his retirement, a few weeks later, the nationβs top spook is now joining A.I. giant OpenAI, on its board of directors, and also to supervise its βtrust and safetyβ operations.
Because of course.
This isnβt the first time TechCrunch reported on General Nakasoneβs various public-facing operations. In January β right before the general βretiredβ β the tech magazine ran a story exposing Nakasoneβs secretive, quasi-illegal interface with big data:
One month after that story broke, Nakasone retired and went to OpenAI. Heβs obviously the perfect man for the job, depending on what you think his new job will be.
Corporate media has fussily ignored this story. Media will never ever push OpenAI to explain why the head of the NSA was a good fit for an βopenβ organization β itβs right in the name! β allegedly committed to trust and transparency. OpenAI has been touting the spy chiefβs expertise in security and privacy.
Itβs a nifty excuse. But the Generalβs job running the NSA was never to protect consumer data. It was to hide stuff and spy on citizens.
In other words, the NSAβs entire raison dβetre is mass surveillance, signals intelligence, and shielding its activities from public scrutiny. Nakasoneβs core competencies were spying on people, finding ways to circumvent or creatively interpret privacy laws, and keeping potentially controversial practices hiddenβnot exactly qualifications you’d normally look for in an advocate for transparency and ethics.
But looking at the glass half full, it was a good move to help protect the AI developer from unprofitable government regulation. If itβs in business with the security agencies, Congress will avoid OpenAI like a vampire fleeing a hall of mirrors. They have six ways from Sunday at getting back at you.
It was probably inevitable. Itβs happened again and again, in countless other authoritarian examples throughout history β from the KGB in the Soviet Union to the Stasi in East Germany to the SAVAK in Iran under the Shah β to the point itβs become axiomatic: A nationβs ungovernable secret police must have a stake in everything. Anything they canβt control is a potential threat.
Not that I have any choice or say in the matter, but theyβre welcome to my chat logs. I hope they enjoy reading up on how to repair a toilet that wonβt stop running, or how to stop wrens from nesting in your sneakers.
π₯ π₯ Before they unleashed the hellscape of lawfare on President Trump, they law-bombed bombastic conservative talk-show host Alex Jones into oblivion. The AP ran a story yesterday headlined, βAlex Jones could lose his Infowars platform to pay for Sandy Hook conspiracy lawsuit.β
In 2022, Alex filed for bankruptcy protection after being successfully sued by several relatives of victims of the 2012 Newtown, Connecticut Sandy Hook school shooting that killed 20 first graders and six teachers.
The trouble started when, right after the shooting, InfoWars initially expressed skepticism and aired contradictions and inconsistencies in the media reporting about the shooting. Some of Jonesβ criticisms unfortunately turned out to be unfounded hot takes, even though some details remain unexplained. The relatives testified they were traumatized by Jonesβ theories, and their feelings were hurt by peoplesβ online speculations that the shooting was a false flag operation.
If not entirely novel, the legal theories used to sue Jones in multiple lawsuits were at minimum very creative. The infernal strategy of filing multiple cases in multiple jurisdictions multiplies the chance of getting a friendly judge and jury, multiplies the defendantβs costs, wrecks his ability to afford a good defense, and multiplies the collective caseβs complexity, making it infinitely harder to defend, all while undermining the defendantβs right to a fair venue.
In 2022, juries awarded the plaintiffs a majestic $1.4 billion judgment in Connecticut and a littler $49 million judgment in Texas. The judgments are against both InfoWars and Jones personally. These jury verdicts instantly made history, although youβll be forgiven for not knowing that fact.
No one in history has ever been awarded so much for harmful speech.
Jones filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and tried to propose a plan for reorganization that would have paid the plaintiffs off over time. But the plaintiffs successfully objected to that plan, and now, according to AP, Jones wants to switch to Chapter 7 liquidation, and just give them InfoWars to try to run without him. Meanwhile, the plaintiffs have sued him again in separate, new cases, arguing heβs shifted or hidden money.
Itβs tempting to conclude the lawsuits against Jones are more about shutting him up for political reasons than actually compensating the victimsβ relatives for their damaged feelings over Jones repeating some widely spread conspiracy theories.
Like President Trump, Jones is a fighter. Itβs not over yet.
π₯ As the Russian navy bobs around Floridaβs storm-tossed southern oceans, the heavens continue pouring down unprecedented flash floods on the Sunshine State, creating countless near-apocalyptic scenes and images. CNN ran a story this morning headlined, βStorm-battered Florida braces for a fourth day of floods after downpours transformed roads into canals and stranded drivers.β One clip shows a stunned driver refusing to leave his stalled-out car as it slowly filled with water.
CLIP: Ten minutes of remarkable flooding footage from South Florida (10:15).
Hundreds or thousands of homes are underwater. House trailers are floating away. Schools are closed. Floridaβs Department of Transportation is pumping water and rescuing stranded citizens. And West Florida has also started flooding, though not to quite the extent of what South Florida is going through.
I would (and do) ask for prayers for South Floridians, but it has been a year of nonstop flash floods, and in some very unusual times and places. In January, New Orleans unseasonally turned into jambalaya soup. In February, it was Californiaβs turn, as San Diego sank under flash floods. In May, flash flooding even killed 500 people in dusty Afganistan. In April, record floods swamped the desert city of Dubai. This week, while South Floridians were swimming to work, over on the other side of the Atlantic, freak floods also plagued Spain.
The extreme weather is creating fertile ground for theories about the cause, since nobodyβs offering a coherent explanation. Of course, they keep barking βclimate,β but they arenβt even trying anymore to attach logic to the claim. I found the best example yet of what passes for science these days in one of the articles I reviewed:
See? No evidence, no problem! That is, so long as your theory is an approved narrative. So just remember to use the probable explanation exception the next time somebody tells you there was βno evidenceβ of widescale cheating in the 2020 elections.
Have a fantastic Friday! Weβre almost done with vacation week, after which things should settle back to normal here at C&C. Tomorrow morning, Iβll wrestle together some kind of Weekend Edition roundup for you, as Team Childers navigates a hopefully boring and unexciting travel day.
We canβt do it without you. Consider joining with C&C to help move the nationβs needle and change minds. I could use your help getting the truth out and spreading optimism and hope, if you can: β Learn How to Get Involved π¦
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Β© 2022, Jeff Childers, all rights reserved
The views expressed in this commentary are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official position of Citizens Journal Florida