Wednesday, March 11, 2026

UN Human Rights Commission issues new report on kidnappings at SE Asia scam compounds

  

LLMs are getting pretty good at unmasking pseudonymous users — their success rate is “far greater” than humans alone can manage

New Interpol-coordinated operation in Africa against fraud leads to 651 arrests, many gangs taken down; 15 countries take part
 
FBI works with India to take down three call centers that called the US impersonating Social Security; group took in $50 million
 
National Consumers League releases data on top ten frauds from 2025; phishing/gov’t and banking impersonation; undelivered or counterfeit merchandise sold on line, and fake prizes/sweepstakes

In major public/private effort Europol, six countries, take down phishing as a service operation that was world’s largest
 

Fraud Studies: Here are links to the studies I’ve written for the Better Business Bureau: puppy fraudromance fraud; BEC fraudsweepstakes/lottery fraud,  tech support fraudromance fraud money mulescrooked movers, government impostersonline vehicle sale scamsrental fraud, gift cards,  free trial offer frauds,  job scams,  online shopping fraud,  fake check fraud and crypto scams
 
Fraud News Around the worldHumorFTC and CFPBArtificial Intelligence and deep fake fraudBenefit TheftScam CompoundsIRS and tax fraudBitcoin and Crypto FraudRansomware and data breachesATM Skimming                                                       Jamaica and Lottery FraudRomance Fraud and Sextortion 

The Corporate Bullshit Receptivity Scale: Development, validation, and associations with workplace outcomes

Clive Lewis MP is admittedly not a standard Labour MP, having shown himself to be willing on numerous occasions to criticise the party's leadership and direction of travel, and he has been particularly vocal in this regard of late.

This morning, he has written an article for the Guardian. It is well worth reading because of the sympathy it shows for many of the causes discussed here and that seem relevant to the leadership of this blog.

I should acknowledge that Clive and I were, for a number of years, both members of the now-defunct Green New Deal Group, because of those interests that we had in common.




Ruling for the Rich: Evidence of a Pro-Wealthy Bias on the US Supreme Court

Quelle surprise! The Supreme Court hearts the rich


Jeffrey Epstein liked to run in powerful circles.

The trove of emails and documents released by the Justice Department in January show Epstein maintained connections to a wide swath of famous people — from Elon Musk and Bill Gates to Bill Clinton and Donald Trump.

But Epstein’s own inner circle — unlike his social and professional ones — was kept small and relatively anonymous, while they facilitated his day-to-day operations as a mysteriously wealthy financier.

Inside Jeffrey Epstein’s inner circle — the aides, lawyers and confidantes who ran his world


Two Middle East F1 races in serious doubt, Australia could get another Grand PrixNews.com.au 


The Corporate Bullshit Receptivity Scale: Development, validation, and associations with workplace outcomes Research Gate 


‘That’s Not Winning’: Record Numbers of US Workers Are Raiding Their 401(k)s in Trump Economy Common Dreams


Anonymous Polymarket Accounts Won $1.2 Million on Trump’s Iran Strikes in Suspicious BetsFuturism


 Russia’s government is scheduled to meet to discuss halting gas exports to Europe, following President Vladimir Putin’s warning that supplies could be cut “right now” amid a spike in energy prices Independent


Stalling German economy prompts graduate ‘poverty’ fears Times Higher Education

 

Ukrainian Heroes of Zionazi Germany Moss Robeson

 

How German political spies mistook a random Berlin woman for a white nationalist troll, surveilled her for two years and got her fired for no reason eugyppius

 

Shia congregations mourning the Ayatollah – the minister’s criticism Expressen via machine translation. Micael T: “If you want to feel real intolerance, just hang around liberals. They really can‘t understand the religious authority the Supreme Leader of Iran has. They believe its authority is political only.”


Britain bears brunt of bond market sell-off triggered by war in the Middle East This is Money

 

UK firms pull fixed energy deals as Iran war pushes up prices BBC

 

County’s GP unemployment rises, councillors told BBC 


The white-collar jobs wipeout is getting worse

Quartz – The topline number — 63,000 private-sector payroll jobs added in February, for the best showing since July 2025 — “appears, at first, to be good news. But glancing even just a few lines down the report changes the story and brings something alarming into view, with the ADP table showing that professional and business services shed 30,000 jobs last month

This is the category encompassing lawyers, consultants, accountants, marketers, and administrative positions — a broad swathe of the white-collar knowledge economy, at least within this type of reporting. The headline number appears positive only because education and health services added 58,000 positions, a category driven by health care hiring that is only distantly related to trends in more elastic sectors and that, in large part, reflects growing health care demand caused by an aging population. 

Construction also added 19,000 jobs, helping obscure losses in other areas; experts say the growth of data centers is driving the mini-boom in the sector even as AI buildout spending may be a negative indicator for white-collar demand. What’s more, the same report reveals that January’s already-weak job numbers have been revised from 22,000 down to 11,000. This means ADP’s job numbers are worse than initial reporting has portrayed in recent times, and it roughly follows trends of downward revision in government statistics over the past year. 

ADP’s own chief economist pointed out the worrying details emerging just below the headline numbers. “We’ve seen an increase in hiring and pay gains remain solid, especially for job-stayers,” said Dr. Nela Richardson, in the release. “But with hiring concentrated in only a few sectors, our data shows no widespread pay benefit from changing jobs. In fact, the pay premium for switching employers hit a record low in February.”…

Geek Wire: “Amazon is laying off an undisclosed number of employees from its robotics division. Business Insider first reported the news, and the company confirmed the cuts in a statement to GeekWire.


 “We regularly review our organizations to make sure teams are best set up to innovate and deliver for our customers,” a company spokesperson said. “Following a recent review, we’ve made the difficult decision to eliminate a relatively small number of robotics roles. We don’t make these decisions lightly, and we’re committed to supporting employees whose roles are affected with severance pay, health insurance benefits, and job placement support.” 


The layoffs are separate from Amazon’s broader cuts announced in January that impacted more than 16,000 corporate workers — the second phase in a restructuring that totals 30,000 positions, the largest workforce reduction in the company’s history. In a memo to employees in January, Beth Galetti, Amazon’s senior vice president of people experience and technology, said the company did not plan to make regular rounds of massive cuts. “Some of you might ask if this is the beginning of a new rhythm — where we announce broad reductions every few months,” she wrote. “That’s not our plan.” 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

This Joke Explains Iran Today

 Trump’s White House Posts Fascist Memes As It Wrecks the Economy Zeteo


Strait of Hormuz – War and Water

“Fluid Dynamics – The situation in Iran and the region is fluid. Two fluids in particular might drive the course and duration of the war. You can probably guess the first one. Wall Street Journal Gift Article: Strait of Hormuz: The Oil Bottleneck Threatening the Global Economy. But there’s another fluid that could also be at risk. Javier Blas in Bloomberg (Gift Article): The Iran War’s Most Precious Commodity Isn’t Oil

“The CIA calls it the ‘strategic commodity’ of the Middle East. But it’s not referring to oil or natural gas. What the American spy agency has in mind is far more prosaic: drinking water. Don’t underestimate it, though, because if military hostilities continue to escalate, water could become the geopolitical commodity that decides the war between the US and Iran.”

See also Le Monde – With the Strait of Hormuz blocked, regional trade disruptions could ripple across the globeFollowing the US-Israeli strikes on Iran, maritime traffic in the Persian Gulf has ground to a halt. These disruptions risk causing congestion in Asian ports.


Will Russia and Iran Be Forced to ‘Restore Order’ in the Caucasus? 

Moscow and Tehran hold economic upper hand in the region, but current ruling groups in both Armenia and Azerbaijan are no longer responding to rational and mutual national interests.


See also Le Monde – With the Strait of Hormuz blocked, regional trade disruptions could ripple across the globeFollowing the US-Israeli strikes on Iran, maritime traffic in the Persian Gulf has ground to a halt. These disruptions risk causing congestion in Asian ports.


Will Russia (and Iran) Be Forced to 'Restore Order' in the Caucasus? Part 2

Will Russia and Iran Be Forced to ‘Restore Order’ in the Caucasus? 

Moscow and Tehran hold economic upper hand in the region, but current ruling groups in both Armenia and Azerbaijan are no longer responding to rational and mutual national interests.


Will Russia (and Iran) Be Forced to 'Restore Order' in the Caucasus? Partart 2



Dark humor is sometimes the most reliable weapon.

Photo of a surveillance camera overlooking a banner featuring a portrait of Ali Khamenei overlaid on green, white, and red stripes resembling the Iranian flag.
Babak / Middle East Images / AFP / Getty

The agent asks an Iranian: “Are you willing to work for Israel and the United States to overthrow the Khamenei theocratic regime?”

The Iranian replies: “I am willing!”

The agent says: “That’s awesome! A hundred thousand dollars!”

The Iranian looks troubled, hesitates for a moment, grits his teeth and says: “A hundred thousand it is! But I can’t come up with that much all at once—can I pay in installments?”

That joke, which I happened to come across today, sheds light on what’s happening in Iran.

On Saturday—the first day of the present air war against Iran—the United States and Israel reportedly killed 48 regime leaders, including the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. Today an Israeli strike flattened the site in Qom where the regime’s most senior clerics gathered to elect a new supreme leader—though it’s unclear just how many were in the building at the time.

This targeting success surely owes much to advanced electronic surveillance and deep cyber penetration of Iran’s weapons systems and infrastructure. But in this war, as in the 12-day war last year, Israel and the United States are obviously benefiting from intelligence from some Iranians themselves, who are willing to risk their lives to help bring down the Islamic Republic.

The Iranian regime has oppressed, humiliated, and murdered its people. In anger and pain, those people make a joke out of their readiness to accept rescue from any source—and to aid and welcome that rescuer in any way they can.

Rescue does not always arrive as yearned for. But one weapon that’s always available to the oppressed is the subversive joke. Dark humor expresses an inner refusal to acquiesce in one’s own oppression. When other forms of truth are suppressed, the joke must serve instead.

This joke comes from Fascist Italy:

A mother heads to the market to buy food for her children. It’s harvest season, yet there is nothing to buy. She cannot restrain herself from speaking aloud: “He has ruined everything! He has destroyed this country!” 

She feels a tap on her shoulder. She wheels around to see a policeman. He asks in a menacing voice, “Of whom are you speaking, signora?” 

Thinking quickly, the mother replies: “Of my husband! I was speaking of my husband.” 

The policeman snaps to respectful attention. “I beg your pardon, Signora Mussolini!”

A good joke could exact a heavy price from those who told it.

A Soviet judge exits his courtroom, laughing enthusiastically. A fellow judge approaches him. 

“What’s so funny?”

“It’s a joke, but I can’t tell you,” answers the laughing judge. “I just sentenced the man who told it to me to five years in a labor battalion!” 

Laughter is one way to sustain hope until the day of liberation. Or as a Nazi-era German joke puts it:

Every day, a shabbily dressed man pauses at the same newsstand to scan the front pages. He then moves on without buying anything. At last the news seller confronts him. 

“I know times are tough, but you must be able to afford at least one single newspaper.”

“I don’t need to buy the whole paper. I only care about the obituaries.”

“You do need to buy the paper, because the obituaries are in the back pages.”

“Not the one I’m looking for. That one will be right up front.”

It appears that Iranian citizens are not merely telling grim jokes or waiting for the obituaries they hope to read. They’re doing their part to speed those obituaries into reality. Until then, one more Soviet-era joke expresses the nightmare the tyrannical Islamic regime has made of Iranian lives:

A man is walking down a Moscow street, weeping uncontrollably. A policeman stops him.

“Why are you crying?”

“I’m not allowed to say.”

The policeman grabs him: “Tell me or I’ll arrest you.”

The man wipes his eyes and says: “Fine. I’m crying because it’s the only thing they haven’t banned yet.”