It's disturbingly easy to forget that China is operating a genocidal program of ethnic cleansing against Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims in Xinjiang province. The secrecy of the concentration camps and the chaos of the world makes it all rather abstract.
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But periodically, a leak or a first-hand account will bring the issue back to the fore, and each time that happens, it's a chance to galvanize action. We've missed a lot of these chances.
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In 2017, the Chinese state announced that it would collect the DNA of every person in the province.
When @hrw reverse-engineered the app, they revealed just how far-reaching and sinister it was - a system for algorithmic surveillance, suspicion and accusation:
But as chilling as these dry technological accounts were, they were still technical, not personal. It was only when they were augmented by leaks about the plans for ethnic cleansing and survivor accounts from the camps that the true horror set in.
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The pic of hundreds of prisoners kneeling in ranks on a train platform, shaven heads bowed:
And the hundreds of pages of leaked state docs revealing that the cruelty was part of the plan, the "no mercy" plan inspired by America's decades-long domestic "war on terror."
Gradually, the connection between the camps, the apps, and everyday life came into focus. The camps were everting, thanks to the apps, turning Xinjiang's cities into "smart cities" that operated as satellites of the camps:
And every month, fresh reminders that Xinjiang is part of the "supply chain": that our electronics, covid supplies, and gewgaws are being made by terrorized slaves as part of a wider plan to erase a people:
We've squandered so many opportunities to treat the situation in Xinjiang with the alarm it deserves, and yet they keep coming, bought with the blood of Uyghurs and other Turkic Muslims.
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Today, the @intercepted podcast reports on another set of leaks, these describing the terror of everyday life outside of the camps - cities overshadowed by surveillance and the looming threat of being taken away.
Parents separated from their children, families forced to install cameras inside their homes, forced sterilizations and abortions, desecration of cemeteries, torture and sexual violence.
It's haunting, deeply disturbing reportage, but we can't afford to look away.
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If you'd like a surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free version of this as a blog post, here's a link to it on my site, Pluralistic: pluralistic.net/2021/02/03/nev…
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Next Tuesday, I'm helping Ed Snowden launch the young readers' version of his spectacular memoir "Permanent Record." Join us for a livestream event with Copperfield Books on Feb 9 at 19h Pacific.
Amazon's Chicago DCH1 warehouse workers are pioneers of Amazon labor organizing. They met brutal treatment with walkouts, petitions and protests that wrung real concessions from Amazon, a company that pioneered worker brutality.
But now DCH1 is being made to suffer. The company has demanded that these workers knuckle under to a new scheduling system called "Megacycles," which is corporatespeak for a ten-hour shift that runs from 1:20AM to 11:50AM.
Workers that refuse the new schedule - because there is no transit option to get them to their job at that hour, because they are caring for elderly relatives, because they have kids in distance ed - will lose their jobs.
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Aaron Epstein is a 90 year old who lives a couple miles from me in North Hollywood. He's been an AT&T customer since 1960 and holy shit, is he ever DONE WITH THEIR SHIT.
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Epstein gets 3mbps (nominal)/1.5 mbps (actual) from AT&T, in the heart of the entertainment industry's company town, where the studios are serviced by a 100gb fiber loop built at public expense (it passes under my house's foundation slab).
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Like all of us in this part of LA, Epstein is not able to access this publicly funded fiber, because his city has given monopoly franchises to AT&T and Charter, two of the most despicable monopoly companies in America.
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One of the quiet, grotesque, longrunning scandals of the US legal system is PACER, the paywall that separates the people of America from their court records. It's a hard drive of non-searchable PDFs, and it costs Americans $150m+/year to run.
After decades of fights - including the stunt that put @aaronsw in the FBI's crosshairs - Congress is finally moving on the Open Courts Act, which makes substantial reforms to the PACER system.
But as @carlmalamud - who has been a leader in the fight to free PACER - writes in an open letter to the bill's Congressional and Senate advocates, the Act doesn't go nearly far enough.
I've got an op-ed in today's @washingtonpost, about the legal threats that ES&S - the litigious, private-equity-backed voting machine monopolist - sent to SMART Elections, a citizen group that criticized ES&S products to NY election officials.
I blogged the story in Jan, after reading Princeton's Andrew Appel's defense of SMART; Appel has done important, careful, peer-reviewed research on defects in ES&S's Expressvote XL, and he defended the claims that ES&S was threatening to sue over.
The point that Appel made, that really struck home with me, was that the timing and character of ES&S's claims echoed the claims of Dominion Voting Systems against trumpland's most unhinged conspiratorialists, like Rudy Giuliani.