French Muslims Resist the Lure of Fear
Many French Muslims anticipate a surge in racial profiling by the police, as well as hate crimes and violence by ordinary citizens.
Many French Muslims anticipate a surge in racial profiling by the police, as well as hate crimes and violence by ordinary citizens.
Facing the worst scandal of his political career, including a criminal investigation, Lula is more defiant than ever, clearly planning his next presidential run.
Last night The Intercept won a National Magazine Award in the Columns and Commentary category for three pieces by Barrett Brown, including this one, on Jonathan Franzen's latest novel.
A provision that would have forced tech companies like Twitter and Facebook to report every inkling of “terrorist activity” on their services to law enforcement was removed from the 2016 Intelligence Authorization Bill on Monday.
Key elements of the proposal include unprecedented new data retention measures and authority to conduct bulk hacking.
The Center for American Progress censored its own writers to placate anger from AIPAC and embraced some shockingly extreme policies of militarism.
Nate Wessler, a staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, said the government “is struggling mightily against the tide.”
Federal law enforcement officials decrying the proliferation of strong encryption said that the only reason they lack actual examples of how often it shields criminals is that they've done a “bad job” of collecting them.
Someone tried to infect famed Argentine prosecutor Alberto Nisman and journalist Jorge Lanata with spyware. But we've linked the attacker's server to a broader campaign of spying.
Clinton's reform plan goes easy on asset managers; Cheryl Mills, a close Clinton adviser, sits on the board of directors of BlackRock, the largest asset management firm in the world.
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