My primary objective in launching this website is to help the cause of those who are fighting to force open the doorways to the Marketplace of Ideas. After observing the reckless degradation and manipulation of the Marketplace by a shrinking pool of powerful corporations who continue to consolidate their ownership of the media, I have decided to commit my efforts to restoring the people's access to the public forum so that they may once again participate equally in the exchange of information and in the formation of public policy. For too long, the flow of information has been in one direction: corporate radio, television and cable networks have entranced the public with sensationalist gossip and homogenized entertainment. The Internet offers us an opportunity to bypass this corporate sanitization process and to learn the truth about what those in power have been doing with the resources that we have struggled to provide.

What does the Vice President do again?

The nomination of a candidate as vastly under-qualified as Sarah Palin as McCain's Vice Presidential candidate is a blatant attempt by the Republican party to manipulate the sensationalistic mass media and an insult to the Women's Rights movement. Moreover, this places Palin in an interesting dilemma. Her original platform as governor was, in addition to reform promises, a commitment to advance Alaskan interests before national interests, but as the Vice Presidential candidate, she'll need to switch her priorities.1 Can she do this without failing to keep her commitment to her home state?

Footnotes

1. Philip Gourevitch offers an interesting perspective on Palin's transition from Alaskan Governor to Vice Presidential candidate in his recent letter for the New Yorker, The State of Sarah Palin.

The Propoganda Model at Work

The decision by the executives at MSNBC to remove Keith Olbermann and Chris Matthews from the anchor position for the coverage of the 2008 U.S. presidential elections, and the New York Times' coverage of the decision1, offers a contemporary example of how accurately Herman and Chomsky's Propaganda Model2 reflects the state of mass media in the United States.

Footnotes

1. MSNBC Takes Incendiary Hosts From Anchor Seat. Brian Stelter. 7 September 2008. New York Times.

2. For a detailed description of the propaganda model, consult Manufacturing Consent, by Herman and Chomsky (2002), or, for a briefer analysis, Media Control, by Chomsky.

"Cultivating Happiness" by the Fourteenth Dalai Lama of Tibet

On 26 October 2007, I enjoyed the rare privilege of listening to the Dalai Lama in person in the Eliot Hall of Music on Purdue University's campus. In spite of the many security precautions, I unwittingly smuggled a recording device into the auditorium (I had forgotten that my Sansa has a built-in microphone and WAV recorder). Once I realized this, I decided to record the lecture for the sake of my friends who could not attend. The recording quality is extremely low-fidelity, and his holiness was not the easiest speaker to understand, even in person. The auditorium was full, so I was forced to hold the recorder in my hand for the duration of the lecture, resulting in many bumps and clicks.

Independent Media

In an effort to fight the corporate domination of the communication media in the United States, we are compiling a collection of links to independent news sources. If you are unfamiliar with the independent media, then be prepared to marvel at how much more information these groups can provide with fewer resources. We have attempted to offer a brief description of each source's perspective while avoiding subjective evaluations of its quality. In keeping with their independent (and often grassroots) origin, most of these news sites would be considered left-of-center by the mainstream political community. This is not particularly telling, however, as most U.S. citizens would also be classified as leftists by the mainstream politic, which has drifted so far right that it's now running around in circles.

International Human Rights

This is a rather brief and superficial collection of resources related to global human rights. The majority of the accepted standards are based on the United Nations' Universal Declaration of Human Rights and other similar documents. As my knowledge of this area is still somewhat immature, the best I am able to offer presently is links to some of the more obvious resources. As my knowledge expands, I will supplement these links with synthesis and discussion.

International tourism increasing globally, decreasing in the U.S.

An interesting article in The Christian Science Monitor reports that, in spite of the continued decline of the U.S. dollar, foreign tourism has dropped by two-million visitors in the U.S. while simultaneously rising globally by thirty-five million since 20001.

Footnotes

1. Howard LaFranchi (2008). Tourism rises globally, but not in U.S. The Christian Science Monitor. http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0729/p01s04-ussc.html

Protect your email with GnuPG

The fourth amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects the people from unreasonable search and seizure, but the U.S. government has concluded that its protections do not apply to several digital media, such as email messages and telephone conversations.1. Consequently, any reliable privacy protections must be implemented by the individual users. Many of the people who use digital media to communicate, however, have only a vague understanding of digital encryption, and even fewer believe that their communication actually requires 'privacy'. This article only briefly addresses the privacy issue, and is designed primarily to offer a general introduction to digital privacy protection, and to describe how to use GnuPG with Mozilla Thunderbird, Microsoft® Outlook ExpressTM, or Microsoft® OutlookTM to begin producing secure email messages painlessly and efficiently. Of the three configurations, Thunderbird is the easiest and most well-integrated configuration (in my opinion, anyway), and I strongly recommend that anyone who is serious about their online security use Thunderbird (actually, several very good email clients exist, some better than Thunderbird, but Thunderbird is arguably the most user-friendly). Mozilla Thunderbird and GnuPG both operate on WindowsTM and Macintosh systems, so you don't need to run Linux to use them. In spite of the advantages, I recognize that many people are still hesitant to venture beyond the realm of proprietary software systems, so I will do my best to provide instructions that work with Microsoft® email systems2.

Footnotes

1. At least, the people's messages are readily accessible to the government. If, on the other hand, you decide to investigate your local Senator's communications, be prepared to spend some time in prison. Evidently that whole concept of no-one being above the law was also just a suggestion.

2. Note that, while the Thunderbird configurations have been empirically verified, the Microsoft® configurations are somewhat hypothetical.

Join an Amnesty International Delegation to Shut Down Guantanamo

Amnesty International is encouraging concerned citizens throughout the Untied States to meet with their Congresspeople to discuss steps to shut down the illegal detention centres in Guantánamo Bay and elsewhere around the world. The plan they're proposing involves an immediate transfer of prisoners to proper facilities in the United States, prompt trials for the prisoners accused of crimes, release of the prisoners who will not be charged and legislation to prevent further abuses and incidents of torture. Go to the Signup Page to find a local delegation and join it. Even if no delegation is available in your area, you can still meet with your Representative and/or Senators to discuss the issue and share your concerns with them.

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