Tuesday, January 26, 2021

Conspiracy Theorists, Free Speech and Australian Politicians

Aaron Would Have Been 34 Years Old | Aaron Swartz Day and International Hackathon


19th c. Reviews and Reflections: The beautiful cigar girl and the desperate writer,


ADT technician admits hacking home security cameras to spy on naked women and couples having sex Daily Mail


Kathy Hacker, longtime journalist and Inquirer editor, dies at 71.

Kathy was everything the article says and much more besides. I feel chilly and grown old.

Kathy Hacker was a master of her craft and one of the most talented editors I have ever seen,” said Inquirer editor Gabriel Escobar. “For her, every significant story was an uncut gem, and every facet she carved merited attention and polish.”



   Scientists Are Figuring Out Why Some People Can ‘Hear’ The Voices of The Dead.


Replay: Laurence Olivier in Uncle Vanya | About Last Night



Making Film That’s Both Political And Personal

Fernanda Valadez and Astrid Rondero, who directed and wrote the new film Identifying Features, “don’t believe Mexican storytellers have the luxury of creating apolitically. Not at a moment in history when thousands disappear or are murdered as a consequence of drug-related violence and the widespread state complicity that enables it. Neither of them set out to make movies with a social justice angle, but coming of age as artists in this environment urged them to confront the appalling national trauma.” – Los Angeles Times


Conspiracy Theorists, Free Speech and Australian Politicians

No need to be a wowser to insist that respect for truth cements civil society and that personal relationships, conduct in organizations and the implementation of governments’ policies depend on claims based on proven facts. Continue reading 


Joe Biden’s Catholicism

With the exception of Jimmy Carter and George W. Bush, religion has not been a big deal for recent US presidents who were, at best, nominal Christians. For Joe Biden faith is central to who he is. Continue reading 


Western governments will have blood on their hands unless they stop persecuting Julian Assange

The case of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is complex, containing elements of law, freedom of speech and of the media, journalism, politics, international relations and health. In the recent hearing to determine whether Assange should be extradited to the US, health became the dominant discourse. He may die if several Western governments do not stop persecuting him. Continue reading 


The Cat Laughs Dublin Review of Books