Avatar

sorry I'm sleeping

@bibliopocalypse

Avatar

A journalist determined to shed light on an FBI operation that saw US Muslim families spied on for two decades is using artificial intelligence to fill in the blanks in a heavily redacted trove of 33,000 documents she forced the bureau to release.

Algerian-American filmmaker Assia Boundaoui ​had been investigating the bureau’s covert surveillance of her Illinois Arab community for two decades before 911.

In 2017, the 33-year-old won a lawsuit to force the release of 33,120 pages of information collected on Muslim communities, including her own, across the US in an operation codenamed Vulgar Betrayal.

As a result, the FBI was compelled to send Ms Boundaoui records in bundles of 3,000 pages each month.

“I received the last batch a couple of months ago,“ she told The Independent. “The entire stack is more than 70 per cent redacted, which is extraordinarily frustrating after we went to war to get transparency and won, and after the government was compelled to be transparent.”

Ms Boundaoui said the information contained in the documents, which did not lead to any convictions of Muslim community members, was apparently redacted for “national security purposes”.

Developed in conjunction with MIT, the program will analyse hundreds of thousands of documents collated by the bureau on people of colour over the past 100 years, and will reveal historic patterns on tactics it used during operations such as COINTELPRO, which it launched to carry out surveillance on the civil rights and black power movements led by Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. It will also be based on historic surveillance of Arab, Latino, Asian and indigenous communities in America.

“The idea is to understand patterns the FBI uses, tactics they’ve used on communities of colour, how they ran these operations and why,” Ms Boundaoui said.

“On a general level, I want to understand how the FBI operated for the past 100 years in communities of colour and why they’ve chosen to ‘otherise’ these communities. On the other hand, it’s really basic, I want answers to my questions, including: why did the FBI focus on my community

“So it’s not just transparency as an abstract civic value, but I think when you’ve been hurt by something, the truth is really important to you. It’s actually imperative to your healing to understand the truth and what happened so you can move past that.”

Ms Boundaoui said people worried about national security should be concerned about the FBI’s ethnic and religious profiling tactics because the bureau was “not actually finding or stopping terrorism in our communities, they’re just traumatising people”.

“I feel a responsibility to document what they’ve done and I feel like I’m empowered because I’m watching back, I can return this gaze,“ she said. “I think the violence in surveillance is in the one-way gaze: that they can see you, but you can’t see them.”

She said she was less interested in using evidence of racial profiling to get politicians to change policy, and more in speaking with Muslim communities in the US and globally about how they had been affected by surveillance, their collective trauma and how to evolve beyond it.

Decades of internalising the shame of being investigated by the government meant people were helping the FBI keep its “dirty secret” because the American people “had no idea that the war on terror was playing out at home in the way that it was”.

“So it’s been very powerful, not just for people who have experienced this in the Muslim community, but for general audiences to share what happened, and to not keep this dirty secret any more.”

They’ve been surveilling Black Muslims decades before 9/11.

I thought everyone knew this. The US government has never trusted American Muslims, especially black ones.

Avatar

Wow. Paul Krugman is working overtime on revisionist history, whitewashing history and rehabilitating George W. Bush’s image.

A+ revisionist propaganda.

9/11 is coming up - and with it, a sharp spike of anxiety that always accompanies the anniversary. each year our community deals with attacks, threats, even deaths. each anniversary i don’t leave my house. i don’t go to the masjid.

i remember the time someone shot up the side of our mosque when we were inside

i remember the time someone chased two young hijabis with a taser

i remember the time someone intentionally swerved towards me when i was crossing the street and i stood frozen in fear

i remember the time someone slipped a knife threat into my mailbox

or the times my friends and i have been verbally assaulted in crowded public spaces and nobody said a word

call out racism and islamophobia when you see it. check in on your muslim neighbors and friends. refuse to tolerate the bigotry and hate that takes lives and spreads fear - both in public and online. stand united with us against hate.

‏ثُم أشار لقلبه وقال: ‏
لا مسافة قادرة على أن تهدم ما بُني لكِ هنا . .

Sonra kalbine işaret etti ve dedi ki:

Burada sizin için inşa edilen şeyi hiçbir mesafe yıkamaz ..

It’s so healing to wake up in a silent house and silently make your own coffee or tea and enjoy the beautifully intricate fullness of the morning silence while remaining calm and collected and unbothered by all outer and inner noise and it’s so low-key elevating and pacifying to rejoice in the silent atmosphere of your own house and just silently block the rest of the world…it’s a slice of heaven

“Ask medieval historian Michael McCormick what year was the worst to be alive, and he’s got an answer: “536.” Not 1349, when the Black Death wiped out half of Europe. Not 1918, when the flu killed 50 million to 100 million people, mostly young adults. But 536. In Europe, “It was the beginning of one of the worst periods to be alive, if not the worst year,” says McCormick, a historian and archaeologist who chairs the Harvard University Initiative for the Science of the Human Past. A mysterious fog plunged Europe, the Middle East, and parts of Asia into darkness, day and night—for 18 months. “For the sun gave forth its light without brightness, like the moon, during the whole year,” wrote Byzantine historian Procopius. Temperatures in the summer of 536 fell 1.5°C to 2.5°C, initiating the coldest decade in the past 2300 years. Snow fell that summer in China; crops failed; people starved. The Irish chronicles record “a failure of bread from the years 536–539.” Then, in 541, bubonic plague struck the Roman port of Pelusium, in Egypt. What came to be called the Plague of Justinian spread rapidly, wiping out one-third to one-half of the population of the eastern Roman Empire and hastening its collapse, McCormick says. Historians have long known that the middle of the sixth century was a dark hour in what used to be called the Dark Ages, but the source of the mysterious clouds has long been a puzzle. Now, an ultraprecise analysis of ice from a Swiss glacier by a team led by McCormick and glaciologist Paul Mayewski at the Climate Change Institute of The University of Maine (UM) in Orono has fingered a culprit. At a workshop at Harvard this week, the team reported that a cataclysmic volcanic eruption in Iceland spewed ash across the Northern Hemisphere early in 536. Two other massive eruptions followed, in 540 and 547. The repeated blows, followed by plague, plunged Europe into economic stagnation that lasted until 640, when another signal in the ice—a spike in airborne lead—marks a resurgence of silver mining, as the team reports in Antiquity this week.”

— “Why 536 was the worst year to be alive” from Science magazine (via principleofplenitude)

…so we’re all clear: that volcano ALSO caused the food shortages that led to the French Revolution. People as far away as Istanbul were all “I feel like it’s darker, do you feel like it’s darker?” in their writings. The volcano was expected to re-erupt within 10 years, 12 years ago.

Iceland is REMARKABLY calm about it. They’re super prepared. It’s fascinating to listen to them talk about it. There’s nothing they can do to stop it, so they just…did what they could to get ready.

Also caused an enormous delay in ratifying the peace between the US and Great Britain. Ben Franklin wrote a treatise wondering if there was a link between volcanic activity and climate. No one bought the idea, but he was the first to write it down.

Avatar

Curious whether: 1) This will make as much impact in an era of widespread artificial light b) impact of another eruption on global climate

Avatar

i have some issues with my past self but she was young and i forgive her my real beef is with present me what is she doing im embarrassed to even look

“When you start to know someone, all their physical characteristics start to disappear. You begin to dwell in their energy, recognize the scent of their skin. You see only the essence of the person, not the shell. That’s why you can’t fall in love with beauty. You can lust after it, be infatuated by it, want to own it. You can love it with your eyes and your body but not your heart. And that’s why, when you really connect with a person’s inner self, any physical imperfections disappear, become irrelevant.”

— Lisa Unger

big things we shouldn’t take for granted:

• waking up in the morning

• getting to and from places safely

• having a decent/good relationship with your parents

• your loved ones being alive and safe

• your pets being healthy and alive

• having decent/good mental health

• having good friends who check up on you

• living in a safe neighborhood

• being able to buy the things you want

• having a stable job

• being in good health

• being in a loving relationship