Friday, January 10, 2025

A Spy in Your Pocket?

 35

Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.
~ Napoleon Bonaparte

Why doesn’t the news media talk about the real issues in life?

The world of politics remains in apparent lockdown. The UK news media has almost nothing to say for itself, based on the morning’s newsletters from
Read the full article…


If you can accept your mortality, you will feel more alive, Arthur C. Brooks writes.



Japanese crime leader pleads guilty in U.S. to trafficking nuclear materials from Myanmar

Takeshi Ebisawa pleaded guilty to conspiring to traffic nuclear materials, including uranium and weapons-grade plutonium, from Myanmar to other countries, U.S. officials said.

Starmer attacks spread of ‘lies’ on grooming gangs as he hits back at Musk BBC. Lead story in UK edition. Nowhere on the landing page, even when you scroll down, on the bbc.com edition.

 

Elon Musk turns on Nigel Farage and calls for new leader of Reform Guardian. I expect Musk’s interventions to backfire somewhat to bigly. Voters do not like rich foreigners telling them who to support. 



A Spy in Your Pocket?

DemocracyNow – Ronan Farrow Exposes Secrets of High-Tech Spyware in New Film “Surveilled” –  “Is that a spy in your pocket? In a holiday special we speak to Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Ronan Farrow and filmmaker Matthew O’Neill about Surveilled, their new HBO documentary looking at how high-tech surveillance spyware is threatening democracy across the globe. As part of the reporting for the documentary, Farrow traveled to Israel for a rare interview with a former employee of NSO Group, the Israeli software company that makes Pegasus. He warns that it’s not just “repressive governments” that abuse Pegasus and other surveillance technology, but also a growing number of democratic states like Greece, Poland and Spain. 


U.S. law enforcement and intelligence agencies under both the Biden and Trump administrations have also considered such spyware, although the extent to which these tools have been used is not fully known. “Surveillance technology has historically always been abused. Now the technology is more advanced and more frightening than ever, and more available than ever, so abuse is more possible,” says Farrow.”


Manmohan Singh: India’s Finest Talent Scout

Singh was excellent at identifying young talent, most famously Montek Singh Ahluwalia. Before Montek and Isher Judge would go on to marry, they met Manmohan Singh in Delhi in 1970. At the time, Singh was a professor at the Delhi School of Economics, known for his work on India’s exports. He seemed too soft-spoken and erudite for the couple to imagine him joining the Ministry of Foreign Trade as an economic advisor just a year later. Over the years, Singh offered suggestions to Isher Judge for her macro-econometric model of the Indian economy, which formed the basis of her doctoral thesis at MIT under Stanley Fischer.

During his tenure as chief economic advisor (CEA) to the Government of India, Singh’s relationship with Ahluwalia deepened. Their conversations in Washington D.C., where Ahluwalia worked at the World Bank, became more frequent. When the position of economic advisor at the Finance Ministry opened, Singh saw an opportunity. He guided Ahluwalia into the bureaucracy, marking their transition from mentor and mentee to colleagues.

A worthy protégé, Ahluwalia drafted the famous blueprint for the first stage of reforms in 1991—dubbed the M-Document. Like Singh, he went on to become finance secretary and, later, deputy chairman of the Planning Commission. Ahluwalia was just one among dozens of economists that Singh mentored. But this cycle of mentorship, that Singh set in motion, would repeat well beyond his years in office. Ahluwalia recruited the next generation of talent, most notably Raghuram Rajan.

Here is much more from Shruti RajagopalanShreyas Narla, and Kadambari Shah. Basically you should take the biggest countries in this world and try to know them reasonably well.  And here is a very good sentence, relevant for social change virtually everywhere:

“Singh understood that lasting change comes not from solitary genius, but from creating ecosystems of excellence that outlast any individual.”

And here Tanner Greer visits