Happy New Year!
How Donald Trump is restoring the S-curve.
What it’s like to be a New York Times reporter during the war on terror:
Success as a reporter on the CIA beat inevitably meant finding out government secrets, and that meant plunging headlong into the classified side of Washington, which had its own strange dynamics.
I discovered that there was, in effect, a marketplace of secrets in Washington, in which White House officials and other current and former bureaucrats, contractors, members of Congress, their staffers, and journalists all traded information. This informal black market helped keep the national security apparatus running smoothly, limiting nasty surprises for all involved. The revelation that this secretive subculture existed, and that it allowed a reporter to glimpse the government’s dark side, was jarring. It felt a bit like being in the Matrix.
It’s a long and informative piece, even if you don’t accept all of reporter James Risen’s analysis. And it really does show how badly our national security agencies leak…
The recently discovered vulnerability in Intel chips is really, really bad. And fixing it requires about a 5-30% performance hit on every OS that runs atop Intel processors. (Here’s a nice layman description).
More on the same topic from Borepatch.
“Crazy” like a fox: “The tougher the sanctions and rhetoric from the United States, the more flexible North Korea is becoming.”
40 companies offer Trump Tax Cut bonuses. (Hat tip: Director Blue.)
Germany outsources censorship. Evidently you’re not allowed to say anything critical of Muslims or “Muslim refugees,” ever. “How the Germans can’t see that such a law, in the hands of the wrong party, could be devastating is a mystery. I can only conclude such occurrences have no precedent in their country from which they could draw obvious lessons.” (Hat tip: Stephen Green at Instapundit.)
Scott Adams enumerates all the things President Donald Trump broke that needed breaking.
DACA isn’t what Democrats say it is.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions rescinds Obama-era memorandums on state-level legalized marijuana. Popehat thinks this is, at present, mostly cosmetic due to the Rohrabacher-Farr Amendment. I oppose federal marijuana prohibition on constitutional grounds: Regulating marijuana is not an enumerated power of the federal government, regulation is neither necessary nor proper (thus no 9th Amendment justification), and thus a matter entirely for the states absent any interstate commerce under the 10th Amendment.
“Mayor Sylvester Turner’s press secretary was suspended for two weeks without pay after she failed to turn over thousands of documents required to be released under Texas law. Darian Ward was asked to turn over emails relating to her work on non-city related projects, including a private side business called ‘Joy in Motion Productions.'” She must have gone to the Hillary Clinton School of Email FOIA compliance…
Dave Chappelle has a point. As gross, disgusting and socially unacceptable as having Louis C.K. masturbate on the phone with you is, if you let that dissuade you from pursuing a career in a field as hotly competitive as standup comedy, that’s on you. (Hat tip: Ann Althouse.)
“Genetic Study Supports Carbohydrate-Insulin Model of Obesity.”
Perfect season.
Dibs.
Tags: Atkins, Border Controls, Borepatch, business, censorship, Crime, Darian Ward, data security, Dave Chappelle, Democrats, Donald Trump, Germany, Houston, Intel, James Risen, Jeff Sessions, LinkSwarm, Louis C.K., marijuana, North Korea, Scott Adams, Sylvester Turner, Tax Reform, technology
This entry was posted on Friday, January 5th, 2018 at 8:56 AM and is filed under Border Control, Crime, Democrats, Texas, unions. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed.
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Started reading the carb article and choked when the writer used the third-person, singular feminine pronoun as the generic, third-person pronoun. That kind of PC twaddle tells me that the writer can’t be trusted on anything.
Pity, as I suspect the carb-insulin hypothesis is correct, but anyone who puts his political biases above proper grammar is not someone to be taken seriously.
Thanks for posting the carb/insulin article. It does confirm what my wife and I have long suspected. She is a Type 1 diabetic, on an insulin pump. The more insulin she took with her meals the more crabs she craved, the more she snacked and the more weight she gained. Once she learned to reverse the process she started dropping weight.
The information was more important than the PC grammar.