Post Election Reflection

Posted May 3, 2011 under Government, Little Brother, Pirate Party

Running in election 41 ( #ELXN41 ) has taught me a lot about running in a campaign, doing debates, and screwing with (unfortunately now elected) @HedyFry and the Conservative candidate Jen Clarke, who both work together to represent everything I hate about politics. I have no regrets for any of the election process but here are a few things that I want to fix for next election:

 

I will not neglect my core voters. I felt that I would have the pro-internet crowed in the bag, so I didn’t really do any advertising on Facebook/Adsense/forums etc. This failed for me, because there are a lot less internet-savvy folks who know of the Pirate Party than I thought.

 

Focus on myself more, and promoting me rather than promoting minority voting. While inspiring, the call for a minor party voting should be something I do outside of elections. I spent too much time at green party rallies and events for other parties trying to network and encourage people to vote for minor parties that I neglected myself and my own party.

 

Organize volunteers better. Even on my party for election night I wound up only having one other supporter there with me. We need a better system which should actually be built by the party itself to make getting members connected with candidates. Also organize team activities to make sure everyone knows about me.

 

I will also do more effort in actual on-the-street canvassing and talking to people, maybe make some signs so when I approach them they are not thinking I am a sales person or any other type of canvasser.

 

I am ready to move forward, luckily my networking has provided me great opportunities to find a job within some organization which will allow me to protect the environment or protect democracy. I will also be putting in my request to volunteer for SSCS soon too! So I can spend my mornings working with them protecting the seas.

 

Sad days are ahead with a Conservative majority, which was not the will of the people but only the will of 40% of the voters. We must stand strong and stand up for our rights and protect ourselves at home and protect our internet. Keep on rocking Canada, O Canada, we stand on guard for thee.


Personal Privacy

Posted September 27, 2010 under Government, Little Brother, The Revolution
Privacy is a funny issue for a lot of people, they are so willing to yield so much of their privacy to people who tell them its for ‚Äútheir safety‚Äù, yet will squawk like a chicken if they find out that their public posts to twitter are being indexed by a company (or a government entity). I have found (and I think many already know this) that the general public is highly susceptible to  fear mongers, and when they are told that something is bad or out to get them, they listen intently and then throw their arms up in the air not knowing exactly what is wrong, but that it is wrong and that they are against it. The government says that homeland security has to do full body scans of people as they try to board an airplane because it will protect bad people from getting on an aircraft and blowing it up, what they don’t tell you is that now every time you want to board an aircraft, someone gets to look at you naked.
I, myself, could be viewed as someone who treats his privacy with little regard online. You can do a quick google search of ‚ÄúTravis McCrea‚Äù and find my phone number, full name, background, and if you search hard enough some of my previous addresses. I also have a gmail account which is operated by the ‚Äúevil‚Äù Google inc., hell I even have a Facebook page that lets almost anyone view my information. I do this because it was already out there, if I give my phone number to even a couple people online ‚Äì I have pretty much committed it to the public domain. Since I already know that at that point someone who wants to harm me by obtaining my phone number, can already get it… I might as well make it easier for the good people who want to call me as well.
Here is the difference between Travis McCrea, and Joe Blow off the street when it comes to digital privacy: I know that everything I post online is viewable by the world. If I don’t want the world to see it, rarely do I ever even say it online (not even in private). However, I do still maintain the tools necessary to facilitate a private conversation if I must… and I do use them. When I use tools that I expect to be anonymous, I will use TOR (which isn’t exactly privacy guarding either). As much random stuff I search, I have never found a need to use haystacking or anything like that… I use https://www.google.com and that makes me feel good enough.
Most people will point out as well that I trust Google a lot, and I am a self-labeled Google Fanboy and I am okay with that. I can see the argument of ‚Äúsure you can trust Google now, but can you trust them in 30 years‚Äù, but I also am sure that Google understands that putting the interests of its customers over the interests of Governments or other corporations is a better business model. Yes, they have made calls in the past that I have disapproved of… but again its an understanding: I accept that Google gives me cool free stuff, if I am willing to give them anonymous pieces of information about myself. Google honestly does not even have the man-power to read .001% of the emails that are sent a day if it wanted to. It may  turn data over to the police if subpoenaed, but they do the best job at reporting legal notices and government requests than any other major service provider I have seen.  Even searches alone, who else are you going to trust with your data? Microsoft?
The biggest fear of corporations is that they sell your information to other corporations, or losing your information to hackers in a worst-case-senario, the biggest fear of government is that they come to your house, take you away, erase all your evidence of being born, tell people you are a terrorist, and never give you a fair trial. I am not saying give full confidence to corporations either. Corporations have very little restrictions as to how they must handle private information of its customers. They don’t HAVE to MD5 sum your passwords, or encrypt your personal data in their database ‚Äì some do, just to protect their consumers. Others don’t care. Some companies do thing to try and help their users with simpler interfaces, and actually enable their customers to easily give up their privacy. I think this is what happened to Facebook: They had no intentions on being evil by making people’s information show up to everyone by default, they were simply making it easier for their members to find each other… however, their default settings put anyone who created an account at risk of potential employers and ex-girl/boyfriends stalking them.
The main point, is that its very important for people to understand exactly what is happening with their information. Read through the privacy agreement, and if its in leaglese I encourage you to email the website, company, etc. and ask them to explain your rights, and what steps you can do to protect your privacy, and what steps they take to protect it. Twitter does a very good job of explaining each line of legalese in plain English if you read their privacy policy.
Remind your friends how important it is to protect their privacy, and when you hear people spouting off about “national security”, ask them if they mind if you go look through their underwear drawer due, to “national security”. Its your patriotic duty to stand up against a government who treats its citizens as the enemy, and say that you will not accept it anymore.
Fight the fight, be a patriot of our digital revolution.

Privacy is a funny issue for a lot of people, they are so willing to yield so much of their privacy to people who tell them its for ‚Äútheir safety‚Äù, yet will squawk like a chicken if they find out that their public posts to twitter are being indexed by a company (or a government entity). I have found (and I think many already know this) that the general public is highly susceptible to  fear mongers, and when they are told that something is bad or out to get them, they listen intently and then throw their arms up in the air not knowing exactly what is wrong, but that it is wrong and that they are against it. The government says that homeland security has to do full body scans of people as they try to board an airplane because it will protect bad people from getting on an aircraft and blowing it up, what they don’t tell you is that now every time you want to board an aircraft, someone gets to look at you naked.
I, myself, could be viewed as someone who treats his privacy with little regard online. You can do a quick google search of ‚ÄúTravis McCrea‚Äù and find my phone number, full name, background, and if you search hard enough some of my previous addresses. I also have a gmail account which is operated by the ‚Äúevil‚Äù Google inc., hell I even have a Facebook page that lets almost anyone view my information. I do this because it was already out there, if I give my phone number to even a couple people online ‚Äì I have pretty much committed it to the public domain. Since I already know that at that point someone who wants to harm me by obtaining my phone number, can already get it… I might as well make it easier for the good people who want to call me as well.
Here is the difference between Travis McCrea, and Joe Blow off the street when it comes to digital privacy: I know that everything I post online is viewable by the world. If I don’t want the world to see it, rarely do I ever even say it online (not even in private). However, I do still maintain the tools necessary to facilitate a private conversation if I must… and I do use them. When I use tools that I expect to be anonymous, I will use TOR (which isn’t exactly privacy guarding either). As much random stuff I search, I have never found a need to use haystacking or anything like that… I use https://www.google.com and that makes me feel good enough.  Most people will point out as well that I trust Google a lot, and I am a self-labeled Google Fanboy and I am okay with that. I can see the argument of ‚Äúsure you can trust Google now, but can you trust them in 30 years‚Äù, but I also am sure that Google understands that putting the interests of its customers over the interests of Governments or other corporations is a better business model. Yes, they have made calls in the past that I have disapproved of… but again its an understanding: I accept that Google gives me cool free stuff, if I am willing to give them anonymous pieces of information about myself. Google honestly does not even have the man-power to read .001% of the emails that are sent a day if it wanted to. It may  turn data over to the police if subpoenaed, but they do the best job at reporting legal notices and government requests than any other major service provider I have seen.  Even searches alone, who else are you going to trust with your data? Microsoft?
The biggest fear of corporations is that they sell your information to other corporations, or losing your information to hackers in a worst-case-senario, the biggest fear of government is that they come to your house, take you away, erase all your evidence of being born, tell people you are a terrorist, and never give you a fair trial. I am not saying give full confidence to corporations either. Corporations have very little restrictions as to how they must handle private information of its customers. They don’t HAVE to MD5 sum your passwords, or encrypt your personal data in their database ‚Äì some do, just to protect their consumers. Others don’t care. Some companies do thing to try and help their users with simpler interfaces, and actually enable their customers to easily give up their privacy. I think this is what happened to Facebook: They had no intentions on being evil by making people’s information show up to everyone by default, they were simply making it easier for their members to find each other… however, their default settings put anyone who created an account at risk of potential employers and ex-girl/boyfriends stalking them.
The main point, is that its very important for people to understand exactly what is happening with their information. Read through the privacy agreement, and if its in leaglese I encourage you to email the website, company, etc. and ask them to explain your rights, and what steps you can do to protect your privacy, and what steps they take to protect it. Twitter does a very good job of explaining each line of legalese in plain English if you read their privacy policy.
Remind your friends how important it is to protect their privacy, and when you hear people spouting off about “national security”, ask them if they mind if you go look through their underwear drawer due, to “national security”. Its your patriotic duty to stand up against a government who treats its citizens as the enemy, and say that you will not accept it anymore.
Fight the fight, be a patriot of our digital revolution.


9 Years Ago Today, The Terrorists Won

Posted September 11, 2010 under Government, Little Brother, Rant, The Revolution
9 Years Ago Today The Terrorists Won
On September 11th, 2001, four planes which were taken over by a group of radical extremists, successfully accomplished their mission of destroying freedom, peace, and joy. The United States Federal Government took it upon itself to use the terrorist attack as a excuse to crack down on security, and a reason to trample the rights of Americans. Whats worse, is that they ran a successful fear campaign that has brainwashed individuals into thinking that by dissenting, you are siding with terrorists. To quote Cory Doctorow “A world where any measure, including torture, could be justified just by waving your hands and shouting ‘Terrorism! 9/11! Terrorism!’ until all dissent fell silent.”
It has become hard to distinguish the terrorists from our government, due to the “terrorists” we have invaded multiple nations, degraded our freedoms, and have locked up innocent people as “terrorists”.
We entered Afghanistan, which was viewed as acceptable by most people (including myself), because we were going after the terrorists, however, 7 years later we are still there. Then we entered Iraq, which we had no business going into, we are pulling out now, but we still have 50,000 troops there. Then we support the elections in Iran of a leader who silences the voices of the people, kills innocent people, and in general tries to take away the inalienable rights that all humans should have.
First after 9/11 government told us to report suspicious conversations to authorities, then we passed the Patriot Act, and the trampling of rights has not ended in 9 years. We have added RFID chips in passports, and now do fully body scanning from vans that roam around unannounced to citizens. Not to mention the wiretaps, and various methods of communication interception.
Both Americans and people from other countries have been sent to the military prison “Guantanamo Bay” (which is in the country of Cuba, another nation that is not a territory of the United States, they don’t even like us), and deprived of their rights including that of a right to fair trial. They are talking about shutting the base down, but there is still no word on where these people will be shipped and they are still sitting in the jail. Gitmo is nothing compared to the practice of Torture Outsourcing which we have been doing under the mask of “National Security”.
If you have not yet read “Little Brother” by Cory Doctorow, start reading it today. I am editing it to create a Patriots of the Digital Revolution Edition, which will have additional tips and tricks, plus some commentary, and a forward by myself. Little Brother is a book that is labeled “Science Fiction” but should be considered “early non-fiction”, because this is what we are destined to become.
The government is not trampling the rights of citizens because it thinks it is hurting the citizens, they really think they are helping… and until they are told by a substantial voice that they are doing wrong, they will think that the American people WANT this. As Americans keep allowing these abuses to happen, they will increase with danger to our rights. By not standing up against the government, you are supporting terrorism.


Thomas Jefferson Is A Terrorist

Posted July 17, 2010 under Government, Little Brother

Speaking out against the government today, pretty much gets you labeled “anti-American”, people forget that descent is what this country was founded on. Thomas Jefferson further said that its our rights and duties to overthrow any government which is corrupt that it can no longer be fixed.

God forbid we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion. The people cannot be all, and always, well informed. The part which is wrong will be discontented, in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive. If they remain quiet under such misconceptions,it is lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty. …And what country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not warned from time to time, that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right asto the facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed fromtime to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.

Has it got so bad that its time to overthrow the government, and setup a new regime? Probably not. However, lets create a checklist for “Thomas Jefferson’s Criteria for Revolution”:

  • Been at least 20 years since last revolution.
  • Citizens can no longer keep track of the governments actions.
  • Citizens warn government by holding protests.

Check, Check, and Check. Well its a good thing this isn’t 234 years ago, otherwise I feel that Americans would have taken to the streets to fight back for our freedoms. The citizens who founded this country would not have settled for the “Patriot Act”, if they were aware of its implications, they surely would be against “ACTA”, and of course the DMCA which likes to trample on their rights as well.

The United States Federal Government has failed the people, and it has now become to corrupt for repair. The time for a revolution is coming, because its our right, and our duty to take over control of our government and give the powers of state back to the people. We shall have a more parliamentary style of congress, and there shall be NO time when the president can step on our rights for “national security”, or “general welfare”. Its our rights to have and no one can take them away from us.

Thomas Jefferson would be considered a terrorist today, but he was a patriot. Revolutionaries, activists, and outspoken groups are not “terrorists”, they are Americans, who are mad that their country has been corrupt and they want to take it back. They are patriots.


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