Author: Brett L

  • Monday Morning Links

    Happy not exactly bad news Monday.

    • The Russkies are doing something Nucular in the Arctic, but as this measured article states it does not appear to be a nuclear test or Trump’s fault.
    • Even the NY Times is forced to admit that there may be an American Deep State, and that might not be great. Except Trump.
    • Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is cleaning out the top floor of Foggy Bottom. His previous oversight of the Exxon-Mobil merger (company name pronounced “Exxon”) probably helped.
    • Nerdcore Monday: One only wonders how many hours were wasted photoshopping. I guess freeing people up to do their actual work instead of playing is a productivity hack right? By the end of the week, I’ll be testing autocommenting on Glibertarians!
    • Milo Yiannopoulos must have been surprisingly effective on Bill Maher because Right-thinking people hated it.
    Hated It!
    Hated It!

    (Happy, Gilmore?!)

  • Protect Us from Our Gadgets!

    I happen to be a gadget guy who likes tinkering with electronics. I’ve built computers, 3D printers, a primative blindspot warning device, and a sous vide cooker that worked. I’ve done plenty of wiring and harness changes, too. So this Right to Repair legislation is close to my heart. If I can’t tinker with it, I don’t own it. I understand that I am voiding the warranty and assuming risk. Thank you.

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  • Welcome to the Party, Pal

    I expect this will be a recurring segment. It will cover things that people of a libertarian bent get outraged about every day that finally bubble up into the public consciousness. Suddenly, much outrage is spouted because a particular person, possessing some special trait, attractive to media outlets and their audiences, has been treated badly by the government.

    The first in this series is NASA engineer Sidd Bikkannaver, US born citizen who was ordered to unlock his phone at Bush Intercontinental Airport in Houston.

    It was January 31. Bikkannavar had just arrived at Houston’s George Bush Intercontinental Airport after a nine-hour flight from Santiago, Chile, where he’d competed in a two-week race from the southern tip of the country to its capital in a solar-powered car. In a few hours, he would board a connecting flight back home to California, where he’s worked at the NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena for over a decade.

    Be still, my beating heart. So smart, so hip. And his phone was property of the JPL! How dare the agent not believe the “it’s not even mine” story! Who does this agent think our hero is? Some scruffy-looking dope mule? This is an outrage!

    Actually, the outrage is that ICE agents can hold people indefinitely, or at least long enough to cause them signifcant loss of money and time, to get around 4th Amendment protections that apply to everyone on US soil, citizen, resident, visitor, or illegal. The broad police powers, rather than how or to whom such powers are applied, are the outrage. This example is, sadly, a result of a well-designed program in that it occasionally assigns a random check (probably, I don’t have special knowledge) to even people who ICE has good evidence are solid citizens. Bikkannaver “[is] a part of the Customs and Border Protection Global Entry program, whose members are waved through the line after just scanning their passport and fingerprints. That would lead me to believe that this is not the result of some Border Patrol agent from flyover country picking the guy with the funny name.

    So welcome to the party, pal! You’ve done everything right and felt the State’s boot.