12/20 DLIGU: Fawstin vs Brook on Naming the Enemy’s Ideology

In the tradition of friendly debates among Objectivists, the second hour of tomorrow’s show will be a discussion between our own Bosch Fawstin and Yaron Brook about the terminology we should use to refer to the enemy’s ideology. Those of you who have heard my appearances as a guest host for Tammy Bruce may recall that I interviewed Leonard Peikoff about this topic in June. I’ve isolated that segment of the interview, which you can listen to here, in advance of tomorrow’s show. You may also want to read Bosch’s piece, “Non-Muslim Muslims and the Jihad Against the West,” in which Bosch lays out his case.

The first hour of tomorrow’s show will be the usual discussion of some of the week’s events. I’ll post program notes here tomorrow, an hour or two before the start of the show. Given the outrage on social media today about the suspension of the star of Duck Dynasty by A & E, and the accompanying misuse of the word “censorship,” we are likely to discuss that topic during the first hour.

The show can be accessed here.

To access the show’s page at BlogTalk Radio, which will allow you to check out a past episode or to subscribe via iTunes and other services, use this link.

To access the iTunes store page for “Don’t Let It Go…Unheard,” where you can find past episodes, subscribe, and leave ratings and reviews (pretty please!), use this link.

Finally, if you would like to support the podcast financially, please donate using your Pay Pal account or Credit Card here.

Program Notes

New at PJ Media: “10 Truths Mainstream Comic Books Evade To Promote ‘Muslim Superheroes’”

Reminder: “Don’t Tread on My Metadata”

GQ Interview with “Duck Dynasty” Star Phil Robertson

“Duck Dynasty” star Phil Robertson suspended by A & E

The Robertson Family Official Statement

Ted Cruz Facebook status on A & E’s decision to suspend Phil Robertson (from my FB page)

A Lightbulb Ban News Sandwich

Iran Nuke Deal Quietly Collapses

Cruz Statement on The Nuclear Weapon Free Iran Act of 2013

W.H. to give new option for people who had health plans canceled

Christie planning private signing of tuition bill

8 Comments

Filed under Don't Let It Go...Unheard

Today: Tammy Bruce Show from 10-12 PT, then DLIGU from 1-2

Today I’ll be guest hosting the Tammy Bruce show again, along with cartoonist Bosch Fawstin, from 10-12, PT. And then, because I don’t think I can manage four consecutive hours of hosting, I’ll be taking an hour off before hosting a shorter “Don’t Let It Go…Unheard” from 1-2, PT. And in the second half-hour of DLIGU, I’ll be welcoming Brooke Goldstein, director of The Lawfare Project and frequent commentator on Fox News. Read more about Brooke here.

Catch the live Tammy Bruce show here. For Tammy’s show, live chat and recorded podcasts are available only to Tammy Army Members. But you may also get a recording of my Tammy Bruce guest hosting appearances by becoming a contributor to this show here. I’ll be sending out a recording to contributors shortly after my own show ends this afternoon.

Here’s the link for my own show and live chat. The same link will take you to the recorded podcast after the show is over.

“See” you all later!

2 Comments

Filed under Don't Let It Go...Unheard

Don’t Tread on My Metadata!

A much shorter version of my academic piece on the third-party doctrine has just been published on PJ Media. Here are the first three paragraphs. If you have time, please go read the rest, leave comments, share, etc. Any help you can give in getting the word out is greatly appreciated!

“Do you classify Edward Snowden — the former National Security Agency contractor contractor charged with espionage, and runner-up for Time‘s ‘Person of the Year’ — as a hero or a traitor? Your answer likely depends on your opinion of the NSA programs he helped publicize via his leaking of highly classified documents. In this week’s revelations, we learn that the NSA deploys agents to infiltrate online gaming communities, and that it uses the Google tracking cookies we thought were responsible only for that eerie and annoying targeted advertising. We also learned recently that the NSA collects ‘nearly 5 billion records a day on the whereabouts of cellphones around the world.’ Earlier this year, we learned that the NSA has been continuously collecting phone record ‘metadata’ of all Verizon customers for the last seven years. The NSA also accessed email and other forms of Internet communication — including Skype voice and video communications — via a secret program called Prism. Director of National Intelligence James Clapper described these programs as ‘acquiring’ information only about foreigners, and yet ’49-plus percent of the communications [intercepted and stored under the Prism program] might be purely among Americans….’

“Whatever you think of Snowden, his actions have drawn significantly more attention to the NSA’s intrusive programs. Now the question is: will anything be done about them?

“Proponents of the programs have noted that, although data collection is performed without probable cause or particularized suspicion, only transactional metadata, not the content of communications, is collected. Moreover, their proponents continue, these programs make it easier for the government to identify and track suspected terrorists, and therefore strike the right “balance” between privacy and security. In addition, some argue, the programs are perfectly legal: according to the ‘third-party doctrine,’ there is no ‘reasonable expectation of privacy’ in metadata we share with our phone companies, Internet service providers, etc., and the collection of metadata is authorized by the Patriot Act or the FISA Amendments Act.

“The applicability or purported constitutionality of these statutes is, I think, beside the point. The third-party doctrine itself is flawed and should be eliminated.

“In this article, I’ll first discuss the third-party doctrine, including its history and the types of cases to which is has been applied. Then I will propose a better way of dealing with cases typically thought to fall under this doctrine. Finally, I will use the common law of contract to answer the charge that eliminating the third-party doctrine will prevent government from using secret agents in law enforcement.”

Read the rest here.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized