Cannabis, computers, conspiracies: latest MSM recipe for disaster

The takeaway, from this week's Pentagon shooting: Pot will make you crazy. Photo: nimbin mardi grass 2009/Flickr CC

The Washington Post today describes John Patrick Bedell as “a troubled 36-year-old Californian who loved marijuana, computers, and conspiracy theories.”

If those interests form some kind of explosive mix, as the WaPo story indicates, then we’re in a hell of a lot of trouble.

Suspicions that 9/11 was an inside job are widespread, as are pot use and technophilia — the latter two, at least, are directly supported by the government.

Bedell pulled a gun at an entrance to the Pentagon this week not because of his interests, or his character, but — as Bedell’s parents rightly put it — his mental illness.

I’d be interested, then, to know which psychiatric and psychological treatments Bedell did get, if any. That will go further to answering the “why” of this story, than a list of hobbies.

Here’s a bit of the sensational stuff, though, from WaPo:

Bedell left an electronic trail thick with written, video, and audio manifestos. In an audio address posted on the Internet, he suggested that after the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy the United States had been infiltrated by a cabal of gangsters he called the “coup regime.’’ Bedell believed that the group has continued manipulating the country “up to the present day’’ and was probably responsible for the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks and the Iraq war.

via Gunman troubled, friends say – The Boston Globe.

Pentagon shooter aimed to create synthetic life

Photo: Zoe/Flickr CC

Mad scientist proposed creating self-assembling nanobots and “smart dust” with DNA.

This week’s anti-government, lone gunman, John Patrick Bedell, is another perfect poster boy for the government’s crackdown on the pro-pot and 9/11 truth movements.

Bedell, who was killed at a subway entrance to the Pentagon, was bent on according to the LA Times,

“revealing the truth behind the 9/11 “demolitions.”

Bedell also bore a grudge against the authorities, who busted him with weed at his California home some time ago.

But the mad scientist’s greatest passion may have been bringing about the Singularity — that future point in human evolution, predicted by Ray Kurzweil and others, when genetics, nanotechnology and robotics become a single science, reality and virtual reality become indistinguishable, and people become immortal.

Bedell, in 2006, proposed blending DNA with standard, integrated circuits, to create self-propagating “smart dust,” tiny, self-propagating — indeed, living — sensors and robots that could provide governments will blanket surveillance capabilities.

And in this way, Bedell shares something with another gun-wielding nerd in the news: UAH shooter, Amy Bishop, designer of a cyborg mechanism, the Neuristor.

Here’s Bedell’s proposal for the DNA-integrated circuit hybrids:

via Pentagon shooter apparently doubted 9/11 facts in Web posting – latimes.com.

Click here for a primer on synthetic biology.

Interested in tech from the Hub? Check out this week’s User Friendly

Homeland Security loses track of its guns

While one was recovered — with a gang’s logo etched on the barrel — an internal report (below), finds that the US Department of Homeland Security lost a bunch of guns last year.

From the report:

The Department of Homeland Security, through its components, did not adequately safeguard and control its firearms. Components reported 289 firearms as lost during FYs 2006 through 2008.

OIG_10-41_Jan10

Tricorders for cops: NIJ wants 'em

Photo: Mike Seyfang/Flickr CC

Think Sipowicz with a hi-tech scanner.

The National Institute of Justice is seeking proposals for a device that can immediately scan crime scenes — bodies, suspects, CCTV camera data recordings, blood traces, you name it — and prisoners, for evidence in investigations.

The device should meet the following requirements:

1. Detection of the “broad spectrum” of contraband, including metallic and nonmetallic weapons, at any controlled access point. The preferred solution would be a product that, once commercialized, would be commercially available for under $25,000. To prevent contraband from entering correctional facilities, the preferred technology will be a portal that can also detect contraband concealed within body cavities. 2. Noninvasive, continuous monitoring of a subject’s use of both illegal and prescription substances. 3. Detection of trace blood at crime scenes from a distance of 5 feet or greater. 4. Accurate detection of gunshot residue in the field in real time. 5. Ability to extract full streams of digital multimedia evidence (DME) from incompatible systems, while maintaining the integrity of the metadata.

via Grants.gov – Find Grant Opportunities – Opportunity Synopsis.

New passports: wirelessly skimmed at distances up to ∞

Photo: Ken Mayer. Flickr/CC

Photo: Ken Mayer. Flickr/CC

E-passports will go down as a big win for the companies mad to chip human populations, despite objections such as this:

“the U.S. government (is) promoting itself a technology that has known privacy and security issues when there appear to be equally if not better, more effective alternatives.”

via FOXNews.com – U.S. Allies Begin Issuing High-Tech Passports for Travelers – Politics | Republican Party | Democratic Party | Political Spectrum.

The concerns of the Electronic Frontier Foundation (above) reflect those that I reported for Wired back in 2005.

Boston co. has a mail microbe crusher

Photo: Eden, Janine and Jim. Flickr/CC

Photo: Eden, Janine and Jim. Flickr/CC

They never did catch that anthrax guy.

But Boston-based BioDefense Corp. has a $90,000 front-loading scrubber for suspicious mail, which pelts postage with a mix of microwaves and broad-spectrum light beams.

ATF and FBI are BioDefense customers. So is the United Nations in New York, where five UN missions on Monday received white powder letters.

Currently, the MailDefender is designed to neutralize any bio-agents inside any of the envelopes placed in the basket, but the device does not contain any detection or alert system that would notify the operator that a bio-agent had, in fact, been discovered. BioDefense says it hopes to add such a detection and alerting feature in the near future.

via BioDefense safeguards the nation’s mail streams.

One of many, but a great one

Some of my friends are remembering this great man, who died on 9/11 (I attended Syracuse University with Michael):

The Michael J. Armstrong Memorial Foundation was established in loving memory of Michael J. Armstrong, who made the ultimate sacrifice as a victim of the World Trade Center tragedy on September 11, 2001.

The family, fiancée and friends of Michael have created this Foundation in his name to preserve his memory and the core values that Michael exemplified – love, generosity and loyalty. The Foundation’s goal is to perpetuate the principles by which Michael lived every day and through which he made a profound impact on many lives.

via MJA: Home.

Blackwater mercenaries out to whack civilians

For those of you who asked, “why do ‘they’ hate us?” Dubya was right: “They” hate us for our values–at least those we’ve been putting on display in Iraq.

The US government’s allegations back-up the explosive testimony of two former Blackwater employees. Gov’t says Blackwater shot Iraqis as “payback for 9/11”

Report: Even vaccine makers decline H1N1 jabs

RT is short for “Russia Today,” (Yeah, I had to look it up, too.) A US-based reporter for the English language Russian network (below) cites unnamed sources–”the developers of smallpox vaccine”–who are advising everyone they know to skip the two swine flu jabs that millions others will get in October.

Now, we’ve had a smallpox vaccine for hundreds of years, so I presume the reporter, Wayne Madsen, is talking about a source other than Edward Jenner.

more about “Report: Even vaccine makers decline H…“, posted with vodpod

Facebook meets RFID in marketers' dreams

Technologists and marketers are getting excited at the prospect of tying individuals to retail items, through social networking and RFID tags.

This tech blogger (excerpt and link, below) says, “applying collective intelligence to sensor data will be a rich vein of opportunity in the coming years.”

The opportunities he’s talking about, I suspect, are for corporations and governments.

Let’s face it, a ‘smart’ RFID chip on a bottle of wine – one that knows its production and travel history, its temperature, its price relative to similar bottles of wine, etc – will beat human hacking anytime. But, as the report rightly notes, don’t expect that level of automation via RFID any time soon. Our recent post examining the current state of RFID clearly showed that it’s years away.

via Web Squared: When Web 2.0 Meets Internet of Things.