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Politics : Foreign Affairs Discussion Group -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: JohnM who wrote (55216)10/28/2002 2:53:25 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 281500
 
Hey, John, will the "Left" or the "Right" be the first ones to call for this to be required?

"Verichip, the Mark of the Beast"

wired.com

02:00 AM Oct. 25, 2002 PST

The maker of an implantable human ID chip has launched a national campaign to promote the device, offering $50 discounts to the first 100,000 people who register to get embedded with the microchip.

Applied Digital Solutions has coined the tagline "Get Chipped" to market its product, VeriChip.

The rice-size device costs $200. Those implanted must also pay for the doctor's injection fee and a monthly $10 database maintenance charge, said ADS spokesman Matthew Cossolotto.

The VeriChip emits a 125-kilohertz radio frequency signal that transmits its unique ID number to a scanner. The number then accesses a computer database containing the client's file. Customers fill out a form detailing the information they want linked to their chip when they undergo the procedure, Cossolotto said.

Earlier this week, ADS announced that the FDA had ruled that the VeriChip was not a regulated device when used for "security, financial and personal identification/safety applications."

The agency's sudden approval of the microchip came despite an FDA investigator's concern about the potential health effects of the device in humans. (Microchips have been used to track animals for years.)

The company is marketing the device for a variety of security applications, including:

* Controlling access to physical structures, such as government or private sector offices or nuclear power plants. Instead of swiping a smart card, employees could swipe the arm containing the chip.

* Reducing financial fraud. In this scenario, people could use their chip to withdraw money from ATMs; their accounts could not be accessed unless they were physically present.

* Decreasing identity theft. People could use the chip as a password to access their computer at home, for example.

Cossolotto said ADS has gotten "hundreds" of inquiries from people interested in being implanted.

Meanwhile, privacy advocates are wondering about the specter of forced chippings.

"(ID chips) are a form of electronic leashes, a form of digital control," said Marc Rotenberg, executive director of the Electronic Privacy Information Center . "What happens if an employer makes it a condition of employment for a person to be implanted with the chip? It could easily become a condition of release for parolees or a requirement for welfare."

Rotenberg said EPIC has filed a Freedom of Information Request to learn more details about the FDA's sudden approval of VeriChip.

The chip has also alarmed some Christians, who fear it is the biblical "Mark of the Beast"; dozens of websites allude to the Satanic implications of the technology.

The company has consistently tried to allay such fears since the chip debuted in December 2001.

"It's a voluntary device that we think has enormous utility," Cossolotto said. "This is intended for good purposes."

ADS said seven health-care facilities, located in Arizona, Texas, Florida and Virginia, have signed up to distribute the chip, in addition to mobilizing a large bus the company has outfitted as a mobile "chipping station." Would-be customers can also register online.

The company plans to develop a prototype for an implantable GPS ID chip by the end of the year.



To: JohnM who wrote (55216)10/28/2002 2:58:43 PM
From: LindyBill  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 281500
 
Look's like it is time to update the "Godwin" Hitler Constant that Win is so fond of. From Reason. And balanced, as usual.

October 28, 2002

Campus Comedy
A bogus controversy over McCarthyism continues
By Tim Cavanaugh

It's axiomatic that when somebody says he wants a level playing field or, worse, a balanced and honest discussion, he really means he wants to see his opponents forcibly silenced, executed if possible. A tragic-comic-absurdist-farcical demonstration of this principle has been the recent campaign by a league of academics against Daniel Pipes' Campus Watch.

If you are unacquainted with academic politics, indifferent to the philosophical debate on the Middle East, or in any other way a productive member of society, the fight over Campus Watch may have passed you by. Late last month, Pipes, the feisty Middle East commentator and head of Philadelphia-based think-tank Middle East Forum, launched the site as a corrective to what he calls "the intellectual failure of Middle East studies, the tendency toward political extremism, the intolerance of alternative viewpoints, the apologetics, and the abuse of power toward students." The site included a compilation of "dossiers" on eight offending professors, and a page inviting students to fink on teachers who cross the line.

If the site's Cold War terminology was clearly provocative, the response from academics was equally intemperate. "This is a campaign of terror and intimidation," Hamid Dabashi, a Columbia professor of Middle East and Asian Languages and Cultures and one of the original eight academics targeted by Pipes' dossiers, told the Columbia Daily Spectator on Monday. "First maliciously misrepresenting the totality of our views and thus identifying us as anti-Americans and then sending their lunatics allies our way to harass us are Gestapo tactics once used against German Jewish intellectuals. I am honored to have joined their rank."

"The well-tried and tested 'bin Laden Option' of 'suicide attacks' on academic institutions is being adopted," Abdelwahab El-Affendi, a senior research fellow at the University of Westminster, wrote recently in the Beirut Daily Star. "Those engaged in these attacks will commit academic suicide, for they will forever lose their credibility and no academic will ever want to work with them. However, in time, they may create enough mayhem and intimidate enough people sufficiently to destroy and disorient key academic institutions and hamper their input on the debate on the Middle East."

El-Affendi picks up a common theme in the reaction?dinging Pipes for being outside the university system. Many of the attacks on Pipes described him as a "failed academic," and in the controversy's most memorable insult, Dabashi, in a joint appearance on MSNBC's Donahue, Dabashi called him a "charlatan" and stated, "You have not written one sentence worth reading twice."

The most frequent, and least surprising, set of charges has referenced a certain hard-drinking, red-baiting, tail-gunning Senator from Wisconsin. Nearly every critique of Campus Watch has tagged its lists as McCarthyite, its philosophy as a new McCarthyism, and its tactics as worthy of McCarthy. The goal of the site, opponents say, is not to challenge or improve the targeted academics but to silence them. Pipes replies in kind. "The charge of McCarthyism is really an attempt to shut us down," he told the Columbia paper.

Last week, the posturing over Campus Watch came full circle. A group of 100 academics had for the past month been expressing sympathy with Pipes' subjects by requesting their names be added to the list of un-American professors. Pipes has now obliged them, so that a comprehensive list of apologists for terrorism?or at least of campus self-promoters?is now available.

With few exceptions, commentators have taken the claims of one side or the other at face value. Martin Kramer, a Pipes associate whose book Ivory Towers In the Sand began the debate over Middle East studies last year, sums up the controversy with the apostrophe "Thank you, Campus Watch." Stanley Kurtz, in a fevered but rambling essay for National Review Online, claims, "An important new organization that promises to focus public concern on "blame America first" bias in the academy is in danger of being discredited," before ending with a defiant "Long live Campus Watch." On the other side, Middle East correspondent Robert Fisk, the war on terror's Mr. Bill, says the Pipes effort is "grotesquely" named and calls its dossiers a "contemptible McCarthyite list."

Sensible people enter this sort of controversy cautiously or not at all. But it's worth assessing the competing charges. The academics' case against Pipes is thin at best. If Dabashi's insult is correct, Pipes is guilty of writing prose that's easy to read. To criticize Pipes' lack of academic credentials is a poor argument, since one of Campus Watch's explicit criticisms is that a professor with unacceptable political views would not be allowed to build up the necessary résumé. It's also misleading; Pipes is or was a more valuable scholar of the Middle East than the epithet "polemicist" implies. His early book Greater Syria is to my knowledge the only widely available study of the Syrian Social Nationalist Party, an important force in Levantine politics and a major player in the Lebanese civil war, but a group almost entirely unknown to the happy millions who have little familiarity with Orthodox Christianity in the Middle East. He seems to be the only person in America who waited for arrests to be made before pontificating about the Beltway sniper. It may be true that Pipes has in recent years traded in his research work to craft an overly simplified television personality with a repetitive set of talking points?a figure not unlike the Crypt Keeper or Starhustler Jack Horkheimer?but is that not a familiar career track for scholars whose work clicks with a wider audience?

Pipes' accusations of widespread campus radicalism also warrant some skepticism. At a mid-level state college in the early 1990s, I took a class called "Arab-Israeli Conflict," taught by a rabbi who, while conscientious in his presentation of opposing ideas, was hardly a font of anti-American or anti-Israeli rhetoric. (Our teacher repeatedly promised to bring in a Palestinian as a one-day guest lecturer, but somehow that plan kept falling through.) I may not be the best person to judge whether there's a pan-Islamic conspiracy afoot in academia; my experience may have been unique, or campus politics may have changed drastically in the past decade.

In any event, if Middle East scholarship is as extreme, hermetic and intolerant as Pipes claims, that may only prove how insignificant it is in the wider theater of ideas. Bernard Lewis' books are bestsellers; Kramer has ready access to the Wall Street Journal opinion pages; Pipes is a fixture in print and electronic media. The Middle East professors, by contrast, are in the same position as postwar academic composers of serial music, who responded to popular indifference by making a virtue of their own marginalization. None of Pipes' original gang of eight would have gotten public attention at all if Campus Watch hadn't pointed them out. That doesn't mean they're immune to criticism?another of Pipes' and Kramer's points is that not enough attention is being paid to academic extremism?but it hardly makes them a threat.

Which brings us back to Joe McCarthy and the promiscuous invocation of his legacy. Does either side in this discussion have grounds to claim McCarthyism? If we define McCarthyism as a smear campaign with the capacity to block or destroy the careers of its targets, the answer is a resounding No. Both sides would clearly like to be able to wipe out the opposition. In the most famous case of professorial extremism, Berkeley graduate student Snehal Shingavi warned: "conservative thinkers" to stay away from his course on the nonexistent topic of "Poetics of Palestinian Resistance." Pipes is no stranger to silencing himself, having written a column urging media, think tanks and politicians to "close their doors" to American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee spokesman Hussein Ibish? a tactic the New York Press called "pathetic, undignified and all-too-obvious," since it came soon after a TV debate in which Pipes ended up shouting "Shut up! Shut up!" at Ibish. Each side would like to silence the other; what matters is that neither can.

Like most debates, this one demonstrates the healthy futility of debate. If you were a Pipes partisan before, you're now convinced that Islamo-fascists and pro-Palestinian maniacs are running rampant among America's intellectual class. If you were a Pipes hater before, you're even more persuaded that he's a demagogue now. Fans of political cockfighting will also find enjoyment in the exchange.

More broadly, what has been discredited in this discussion is the practice of shouting McCarthyism whenever somebody criticizes you. It's tempting to rehearse the age-old drama of, on the one hand, anti-American tenured radicals corrupting the nation's youth, and on the other, know-nothing demagogues making a hash of complex philosophy and stamping out honest inquiry. Nothing of the sort is going on here. We may in fact need an update of Mike Godwin's Hitler constant, with a corollary that the first person to use the word "McCarthy" in a debate automatically forfeits the point. Barring such a rule, it's hard to see how this debate will end anytime soon. Thank you, Campus Watch, for engaging a struggle of ideas so intense and nail-biting it deserves its own commemorative chess set.

Tim Cavanaugh is Reason's Web editor.



To: JohnM who wrote (55216)10/28/2002 3:57:40 PM
From: carranza2  Respond to of 281500
 
Unless I'm missing something, the whole Powell/Belafonte issue is a tempest in a tea pot not worthy of anyone's time.

Considering artists like Belafonte or Streisand as politically sophisticated or even knowledgeable in any field other than their specialty is crazy.

They simply create a stir with their inane pronouncements because they have ready forums.

My one and only post on this tired subject.

C2@noguaranteeofbrains.com



To: JohnM who wrote (55216)10/28/2002 4:03:48 PM
From: Hawkmoon  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 281500
 
Good heavens, you have now debased the term "racism" to such a degree that you not only call the comment racist but Harry Belafonte a racist.

I guess implying Bush or his white house staff are "white master" isn't racist??

And alleging that Powell was like a slave who would be accepted into the white house so long as he does the "massas" will, isn't racist??

God.. I remember when Ev Mecham, the former Governor of Arizona was haranged for defending the use of the word "pickaninny", a term, I myself, have heard black mothers use with regard to their children....

The result was that the state was boycotted by almost every convention planner, Arizona lost the chance to host a Superbowl, Arizona was declared a racist state... and Mecham was investigated inside and out in order to find a way to impeach him out of office.

Now.. Ev Mecham was a moron... no doubt about that... But it seems to me that what Harry Belafonte said was FAR WORSE than Ev Mecham referring to blacks as pickaninnies...

And if it's not racism, then what Belafonte is guilty of is intellectual terorism... an attempt to make blacks afraid of voicing opposing viewpoints to his own...

He'll "terrorize" and slander blacks, and non-blacks alike, to coerce them into adopting his views, lest they be labeled house slaves or cracka's, respectively.

So maybe you need to just settle back and think about what this means to every black person who aspires to have an independent thought and be judged according to their ability, not their color. To be judged based upon merit without facing the fear of being called an "uncle tom" or "house slave"..

Even a "free-thinking" academic like yourself should understand how important it is for people to have the freedom to think and act according to their desires without being slandered as "slaves" or racists..

Hawk@figureyou'llnevergetitandI'mtiredoftrying.com