Mar 31, 2010

Mozilla’s Q1 2010 Analyst Report – State of the Internet

My Firefox UIImage by BobChao via Flickr

Mozilla’s Q1 2010 Analyst Report – State of the Internet
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Less Than One Third Of Tweets Come From The United States, Study Says

Home tweet home!Image by Mrs. Bones via Flickr

Less Than One Third Of Tweets Come From The United States, Study Says

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The Twitter List Directory - Mashable

Listorious: Socialmedia Twitter List by See-mi...Image by See-ming Lee 李思明 SML via Flickr

The Twitter List Directory - Mashable

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In Asia - World Water Day: Laos Hardest Hit by Mekong’s Falling Water Levels

Crossing the Mekong by ferry, near Champasak, LaosImage via Wikipedia

In Asia - World Water Day: Laos Hardest Hit by Mekong’s Falling Water Levels

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Behind the Lines for Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Seal of the United States Department of Homela...Image via Wikipedia

By David C. Morrison, Special to Congressional Quarterly
Dept. of reasonable questions: "How much sense does it make to have the Department of Homeland Security in a city that is a prime target for attack?" . . . Just in case you were wondering: Osama bin Laden "is alive, well, and personally 'giving the orders,' " FBI info shows . . . Boring from within: Police association urges federal air marshal's chief as next candidate for rudderless TSA. These and other stories lead today's homeland security coverage.
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“How much sense does it make to have the Department of Homeland Security in a city that is a prime target for attack?” Dan Walsh asks in a Washington Post plea that “a plan be developed” to shift federal agencies out of the D.C. area. “Every time something scary happens anywhere in the world New York City security officials ‘ramp up security’ here at home,” Jonny Diamond gripes in The L Magazine, concluding, “This is kind of silly.” The Infrastrucurist’s Melissa Lafsky ponders of the post-Moscow transit security surge, “Were all these increased security measures necessary? Or were they a waste of time and money? The answer is neither.”

Feds: “A new FBI terrorism case provides a rare nugget of intelligence about Osama bin Laden: the al Qaeda leader is alive, well, and personally ‘giving the orders,’” Newsweek’s Michael Isikoff learns. The FBI has been training thousands of law enforcers nationwide to identify, disrupt and dismantle IEDs, including bombs made out of ordinary household products, The Associated PressGreg Bluestein spotlights. Completely exonerated by the CIA, but convicted as a Hezbollah spy in print, Nada Nadim Prouty is a “counterterrorism heroine,” Post blogger Jeff Stein essays. A former Iranian Revolution Guards officer who spied for the CIA in Iran for nearly decade is telling his story in a new book coming next week, Ken Timmerman alerts for Gather.

Homies: A police association yesterday urged the White House to tap DHS’s federal air marshal director to head the rudderless TSA, CNN notes. DHS’s Janet Napolitano this week “reiterated her resolve to fight terrorism and urged the science and technology community to develop innovative initiatives to help protect the nation from threats,” All Headline NewsTejinder Singh relates. At ICE detention centers, mental incompetence is routinely ignored by immigration judges and deportation officers, who are under pressure to handle rising caseloads and meet DHS quotas, The New York TimesNina Bernstein cites from a new report — and see The Texas Tribune’s Julian Aguilar on the same.

State and local: According to a newly released report there are 27 militia-type groups in Indiana, all against the federal government but “not necessarily racist or hate-oriented,” The Merrillville (Ind.) Post-Tribune reports — and see The Toledo Blade.The National Park Service will award a contract this spring for an $8.5 million two-lane access highway to Pennsylvania’s Flight 93 Memorial, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports. The National Federation of Independent Business is urging Tennessee employers to get prepared for ICE inspections of their hiring records, The Knoxville News Sentinel says. The Frederick County (Md.) Sheriff’s Office will soon partner with ICE “in another national program to help enforce the nation’s immigration laws,” the News-Post notes.

Follow the money: While al Qaeda has used the Internet primarily to spread its propaganda and rally new recruits, like other terror groups it has also relied on the Web for fundraising, a Studies in Conflict & Terrorism article explores. Authorities are pushing to regulate an allegedly common method of moving money across the border: stored-value cards, The Arizona Daily Star says. Treasury last week levied sanctions against an Iraqi with ties to an al Qaeda-linked support network operating there, Reuters reports. Congress wants the Pentagon to better track funds spent as part of a cash discretionary fund supporting counterinsurgency in Iraq and Afghanistan, The Christian Science Monitor mentions. A bill in the Missouri legislature would ban the State Employees Retirement System and other entities from investing in companies doing business with governments that support terrorism, The Jefferson City News Tribune notes.

Bugs ‘n bombs: Al Qaeda has “trained a group of female suicide bombers to attack Western targets including airlines,” IPT News quotes from a new intel assessment — as The New York Times has Monday’s Moscow subway bombings reviving “ a peculiar fear in the Russian capital, one that goes beyond the usual terrorism worries of a metropolis: the female bomber.” A La Jolla Institute for Allergy & Immunology egghead has designed an antibody that will treat people exposed to smallpox during a bioterrorism attack, The Voice of San Diego profiles. Regarding attacks on lawmakers after the health care vote, The Minneapolis Star Tribune judges that whoever sent a “potentially used condom” to Rep. Betty McCollum “could have engaged in bioterrorism; body fluids, if present, can potentially transmit one of several serious diseases.”

Up in the air: An American Eagle flight from Chicago was diverted Monday night from Reagan National to Dulles by a suspicious person report, NBC Washington notes. “All selected children will have to go through the new full-body ‘naked’ scanning machines being introduced at airports,” The Daily Mail hears the Brit government ruling Monday — while The Guardian learns from defense sources that RAF jets have been scrambled twice this month in response to terrorist alerts on airliners flying over the U.K. Two breaches occurred at Delhi’s Indira Gandhi International Airport over the weekend, both involving suspects scaling walls to enter restricted areas, The Hindu relates — as the Times of India reports two security inspectors under suspension.

Coming and going: For the first time in recent years, Canada has put its subway networks on “extra alert” in the wake of Monday’s Moscow metro blasts, IANS notes — while AP has Prague’s subways boosting security for the April 8 summit where Obama and his Russian counterpart will sign an arms accord. Amid security warnings, Port of Corpus Christi commissioners will hire only half the marine patrol staff originally planned, the Caller-Times tells. The ongoing saga of Coast Guard demands on inland Minnesota fishing guides continues, but state officials recommend guides start applying for TWICs, The Duluth News Tribune relates. “Could a national identity card help resolve the heated immigration-reform divide?” Time Magazine wonders.

Terror tech: “As threats to Pentagon computer networks . . . continue to grow, the Senate Armed Services Committee is holding up creation of a new Cyber Command,” The Washington Times tells. Britain’s MI5 security agency “is launching an unprecedented round of redundancies to improve the overall level of computer skills among its staff,” The Daily Telegraph records. DHS’s First Responder Technologies program has created a virtual platform where first responders and . . . officials can “collaborate on team projects and critical homeland security initiatives,” News Blaze relays. Researchers have developed a technique to ascertain the “chemical fingerprint” of compounds such as mustard gas, rat poison and VX, providing vital clues to responders, Wired Science says. By mimicking biological tissues that respond to shifting environments, a multifunctional polymer developed by a U-Pittsburgh researcher can decontaminate a range of bio-agents and chemical toxins, Popular Science reports.

Gizmotronica: A U.K. biotech consortium has developed a gadget that trains groups of bees at a time to smell out explosives, obviating costly and time-consuming individual coaching, New Scientist notes. A hand-held version of a Pentagon-developed beam weapon that subjects recalcitrant targets to an ostensibly “harmless” burning sensation could end up being used by police to control rowdy civilians, Homeland Security Newswire relates — while Danger Room reports Israeli boffins’ development of a loud-hailer/weapon so ear-piercing it could kill. “Some of New York’s newest high-tech weapons in the war on terror look like ordinary blankets,” but they’re made of “state-of-the-art material that can protect civilians and rescuers against chemical, biological and radiological attacks,” The New York Post spotlights — as NBC Dallas-Fort Worth sees North Texas business owners turning to an innovative weapon long used in Canada and Europe to foil burglaries: fog combined with a strobe light.

Over there: Monday’s twin suicide bombings in Moscow included an attack on a subway station just steps away from secret police headquarters, The Washington Post reports — while The New York Times sees the blasts presenting “a grave challenge” to P.M. Vladimir Putin’s record of curbing terrorism. Moscow authorities say they will step up security measures, not just on the subways, during Orthodox Easter (April 4) and Victory Day (May 9) celebrations, RIA Novosti notes. A pipe bomb explosion in Athens on Sunday night killed a 15-year-old Afghan boy, injuring his mother and sister, Kathimerini recounts. “As if South Africa’s own high crime rate and the threat of European football hooligans weren’t enough, World Cup planners are also bracing for a possible terror attack,” AP leads.

Courts and rights: A Chicago cabdriver charged with trying to send money to an al Qaeda-linked Pakistani terrorist leader will remain in custody after deciding Tuesday not to contest detention, The Chicago Tribune tells. A federal appeals court has ordered a Rhode Island judge to hear more arguments on whether to vacate a $116 million judgment against the PLO over a 1996 terror attack that killed a U.S. citizen and his wife, The Providence Journal reports. Cracks are beginning to appear in the military’s prosecution of three Navy SEALs accused of striking a most-wanted terrorism suspect they had captured in Iraq, The Washington Times leads. An alleged leader of a violent cross-border drug gang believed involved in the slayings this month of three U.S. consulate employees in Juarez was arrested Monday, the Post relates.

This just in, from The Onion: “2,000 MILES BENEATH BAVARIA, GERMANY—Mytron the Fifth, Illuminati ruler and secret mastermind of the entire human race since the year 8449 on the world’s true calendar, died yesterday in his subterranean bedchamber. He was 112. Mytron, who assumed clandestine dominion of the planet upon the sudden withering of Hemmonphanes the Ancient, was perhaps best known for engineering more than 200 wars, economic catastrophes, and famines, and for having psychokinetic control over the inner thoughts of every man, woman, and child on earth. ‘He’ll be missed,’ said a longtime friend and Roman Catholic archbishop who declined to be identified. Mytron is survived by 251 offspring, primarily from his human wives.” Read, also in The Onion: “Computer Company Started In Garage 30 Years Ago Now In Smaller Garage.”

Source: CQ Homeland Security

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Deal Making in Sudan | Enough

United Nations Mission in SudanImage via Wikipedia

Deal Making in Sudan | Enough

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BBC News - Kenya denies links to Somalia's al-Shabab

The caravan passes - Die Karawane zieht weiterImage by alles-schlumpf via Flickr

BBC News - Kenya denies links to Somalia's al-Shabab

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BBC News - Iran nuclear scientist Shahram Amiri 'defects to US'

Underground Iranian Nuclear PlantImage by Doug20022 via Flickr

BBC News - Iran nuclear scientist Shahram Amiri 'defects to US'

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BBC News - Serbian MPs offer apology for Srebrenica massacre

An exhumed mass grave in Potocari, Bosnia and ...Image via Wikipedia

BBC News - Serbian MPs offer apology for Srebrenica massacre
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BBC News - Twelve killed by twin bombings in Russia's Dagestan

dagestanImage by Bolshakov via Flickr

BBC News - Twelve killed by twin bombings in Russia's Dagestan


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BBC News - Google says Vietnam mine opponents under cyber attack

Bauxite mineImage by brouillard23 via Flickr

BBC News - Google says Vietnam mine opponents under cyber attack


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Angola Press - Timor e Moçambique defendem maior difusão do português dentro das suas fronteiras

Sunset, TimorImage by GothPhil via Flickr

Angola Press - Timor e Moçambique defendem maior difusão do português dentro das suas fronteiras

(Use the Quick Google Translator gadget in the sidebar if you can't read Portuguese.)


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Mar 30, 2010

JRS Europe reports on forced migration - Jesuit Refugee Service/USA

QneyyaImage by Hovic via Flickr

JRS Europe reports on forced migration - Jesuit Refugee Service/USA
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The National - Balochistan: Pakistan's Broken Mirror

A typical village kid in Eastern BalochistanImage by Wenchmagnet via Flickr

The National - Balochistan: Pakistan's Broken Mirror
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Southern Sudan prepares for freedom – and puts dream of skyscrapers on hold - The Guardian

Houses in Southern SudanImage by Water For Sudan via Flickr

Southern Sudan prepares for freedom – and puts dream of skyscrapers on hold - The Guardian

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Burma Digest- Children Shot and Killed by the Burma Army

_DSC8283Image by Rusty Stewart via Flickr

Burma Digest - Children Shot and Killed by the Burma
Army

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Myanmar’s persecuted Rohingyas starve in Bangladesh | ABITSU - All Burma I.T Students Union

{{ca|Bandera de la nació Rohingya, imatge propia}}Image via Wikipedia

Myanmar’s persecuted Rohingyas starve in Bangladesh | ABITSU - All Burma I.T Students Union

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Google Says Glitch Blocks China Service - NYTimes.com

Google Says Glitch Blocks China Service - NYTimes.com
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Mar 28, 2010

Book Review - The History of White People

cropped from :Image:Races2.jpg 1820 drawing of...Image via Wikipedia

THE HISTORY OF WHITE PEOPLE

by Nell Irvin Painter

Illustrated. 496 pp. W. W. Norton & Company. $27.95

Review by Linda Gordon

Nell Irvin Painter’s title, “The History of White People,” is a provocation in several ways: it’s monumental in sweep, and its absurd grandiosity should call to mind the fact that writing a “History of Black People” might seem perfectly reasonable to white people. But the title is literally accurate, because the book traces characterizations of the lighter-skinned people we call white today, starting with the ancient Scythians. For those who have not yet registered how much these characterizations have changed, let me assure you that sensory observation was not the basis of racial nomenclature.

Some ancient descriptions did note color, as when the ancient Greeks recognized that their “barbaric” northern neighbors, Scythians and Celts, had lighter skin than Greeks considered normal. Most ancient peoples defined population differences culturally, not physically, and often regarded lighter people as less civilized. Centuries later, European travel writers regarded the light-skinned Circassians, a k a Caucasians, as people best fit only for slavery, yet at the same time labeled Circassian slave women the epitome of beauty. Exoticizing and sexualizing women of allegedly inferior “races” has a long and continuous history in racial thought; it’s just that today they are usually darker-skinned women.

“Whiteness studies” have so proliferated in the last two decades that historians might be forgiven a yawn in response to being told that racial divisions are fundamentally arbitrary, and that deciding who is white has been not only fluid but also heavily influenced by class and culture. In some Latin American countries, for example, the term blanquearse, to bleach oneself, is used to mean moving upward in class status. But this concept — the social and cultural construction of race over time — remains harder for many people to understand than, say, the notion that gender is a social and cultural construction, unlike sex. As recently as 10 years ago, some of my undergraduate students at the University of Wisconsin heard my explanations of critical race theory as a denial of observable physical differences.

I wish I had had this book to offer them. Painter, a renowned historian recently retired from Princeton, has written an unusual study: an intellectual history, with occasional excursions to examine vernacular usage, for popular audiences. It has much to teach everyone, including whiteness experts, but it is accessible and breezy, its coverage broad and therefore necessarily superficial.

The modern intellectual history of whiteness began among the 18th-century German scholars who invented racial “science.” Johann Joachim Winckelmann made the ancient Greeks his models of beauty by imagining them white-skinned; he may even have suppressed his own (correct) suspicion that their statues, though copied by the Romans in white marble, had originally been painted. The Dutchman Petrus Camper calculated the proportions and angles of the ideal face and skull, and produced a scale that awarded a perfect rating to the head of a Greek god and ranked Europeans as the runners-up, earning 80 out of 100. The Englishman Charles White collected skulls that he arranged from lowest to highest degree of perfection. He did not think he was seeing the gradual improvement of the human species, but assumed rather the polygenesis theory: the different races arose from separate divine ­creations and were designed with a range of quality.

The modern concept of a Caucasian race, which students my age were taught in school, came from Johann Friedrich Blumenbach of Göttingen, the most influential of this generation of race scholars. Switching from skulls to skin, he divided humans into five races by color — white, yellow, copper, tawny, and tawny-black to jet-black — but he ascribed these differences to climate. Still convinced that people of the Caucasus were the paragons of beauty, he placed residents of North Africa and India in the Caucasian category, sliding into a linguistic analysis based on the common derivation of Indo-European languages. That category, Painter notes, soon slipped free of any geographic or linguistic moorings and became a quasi-­scientific term for a race known as “white.”

Some great American heroes, notably Thomas Jefferson and Ralph Waldo Emerson, absorbed Blumenbach’s influence but relabeled the categories of white superiority. They adopted the Saxons as their ideal, imagining Americans as direct and unalloyed descendants of the English, later including the Germans. In general, Western labels for racial superiority moved thus: Caucasian → Saxon → Teutonic → Nordic → Aryan → white/Anglo.

The spread of evolutionary theory required a series of theoretical shifts, to cope with changing understandings of what is heritable. When hereditary thought produced eugenics, the effort to breed superior human beings, it relied mostly on inaccurate genetics. Nevertheless, eugenic “science” became authoritative from the late 19th century through the 1930s. Eugenics gave rise to laws in at least 30 states authorizing forced sterilization of the ostensibly feeble-minded and the hereditarily criminal. Painter cites an estimate of 65,000 sterilized against their will by 1968, after which a combined feminist and civil rights campaign succeeded in radically restricting forced sterilization. While blacks and American Indians were disproportionately victimized, intelligence testing added many immigrants and others of “inferior stock,” predominantly Appalachian whites, to the rolls of the surgically sterilized.

In the long run, the project of measuring “intelligence” probably did more than eugenics to stigmatize and hold back the nonwhite. Researchers gave I.Q. tests to 1,750,000 recruits in World War I and found that the average mental age, for those 18 and over, was 13.08 years. That experiment in mass testing failed owing to the Army’s insistence that even the lowest ranked usually became model soldiers. But I.Q. testing achieved success in driving the anti-immigration movement. The tests allowed calibrated rankings of Americans of different ancestries — the English at the top, Poles on the bottom. Returning to head measurements, other researchers computed with new categories the proportion of different “blood” in people of different races: Belgians were 60 percent Nordic (the superior European race) and 40 percent Alpine, while the Irish were 30 percent Nordic and 70 percent Mediterranean (the inferior European race). Sometimes politics produced immediate changes in these supposedly objective findings: World War I caused the downgrading of Germans from heavily Nordic to heavily Alpine.

Painter points out, but without adequate discussion, that the adoration of whiteness became particularly problematic for women, as pale blue-eyed blondes became, like so many unattainable desires, a reminder of what was second-class about the rest of us. Among the painfully comic absurdities that racial science produced was the “beauty map” constructed by Francis Galton around the turn of the 20th century: he classified people as good, medium or bad; he categorized those he saw by using pushpins and thus demonstrated that London ranked highest and Aberdeen lowest in average beauty.

Rankings of intelligence and beauty supported escalating anti-Catholicism and ­anti-Semitism in early-20th-century America. Both prejudices racialized non-Protestant groups. But Painter ­misses some crucial regional differences. While Jews and Italians were nonwhite in the East, they had long been white in San Francisco, where the racial “inferiors” were the Chinese. Although the United States census categorized ­Mexican-Americans as white through 1930, census enumerators in the Southwest, working from a different racial under­standing, ignored those instructions and marked them “M” for Mexican.

In the same period, anarchist or socialist beliefs became a sign of racial inferiority, a premise strengthened by the presence of many immigrants and Jews among early-20th-century radicals. Whiteness thus became a method of stigmatizing dissenting ideas, a marker of ideological respectability; Painter should have investigated this phenomenon further. Also missing from the book is an analysis of the all-important question: Who benefits and how from the imprimatur of whiteness? Political elites and employers of low-wage labor, to choose just two groups, actively policed the boundaries of whiteness.

But I cannot fault Nell Painter’s choices — omissions to keep a book widely readable. Often, scholarly interpretation is transmitted through textbooks that oversimplify and even bore their readers with vague generalities. Far better for a large audience to learn about whiteness from a distinguished scholar in an insightful and lively exposition.


Linda Gordon is a professor of history at New York University and the author, most recently, of “Dorothea Lange: A Life Beyond Limits.”

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Mar 26, 2010

CQ - Behind the Lines for Friday, March 26, 2010

By David C. Morrison, Special to Congressional Quarterly
Lie for a lie: Washington dismisses as "absurd" bin Laden threat to execute any American captives if 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is put to death . . . Occupational hazzard: Qantas pilot allowed to keep flying jumbo jets despite repeatedly complaining of urges to crash the planes . . . Running the clock out: Border-watching Minuteman Civil Defense Corps is punching out. These and other stories lead today's homeland security coverage.
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A Washington securicrat dismisses as “absurd” Osama bin Laden’s threat yesterday to execute any Americans in captivity if 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed is put to death after trial, ReutersRania Oteify and Cynthia Johnston relate. Al Qaeda isn’t known to be holding any Americans at the moment, though an allied Taliban faction captured an American private in eastern Afghanistan last June, The Associated PressSarah El Deeb adds — while The Christian Science Monitor’s Dan Murphy wonders, perhaps redundantly: “Is Osama bin Laden out of touch?”

Feds: “Security threats against members of Congress is not a partisan issue, and they should not be treated that way,” The Washington Post’s Ben Pershing has House GOP Whip Eric Cantor avowing yesterday — and check Mike Madden’s Salon take.“Killing people without due process is . . . never acceptable if carried out in secret. Mr. Obama must explain and publicly justify targeted killings,” The Times of London’s Ben Macintyre maintains — as Agence France-Presse has a legal expert telling lawmakers drone strikes could put CIA officers in foreign courts facing war crimes prosecution. Opponents of Bush-era detainee practices hope reports of White House shifts on detention policies are “simply trial balloons the president himself will eventually pop,” the Los Angeles TimesJulian E. Barnes and David S. Cloud survey.

Homies: “The names ‘Department of Homeland Security’ and ‘Department of Defense’ are redundant. Which one should we drop?” The Hartford Courant’s Robert M. Thorson leads, terming the “homeland security” locution “noxious.” President Obama’s pick to head the TSA has managed to keep his nomination on track for consideration after the spring recess, The Wall Street Journal’s Keith Johnson updates — as CNN’s Mark M. Ahlers hears Robert Harding hedging on screener unionization, while assuring that “any such plan should be done in a way that would not hurt national security,” and Government Executive’s Chris Strohm has the top Senate homeland overseer seeking “five IG reports into the nominee’s previous work.”

State and local: Competing E-Verify bills drew advocates for both sides to a heated Rhode Island House hearing, The Providence Journal reports. New York State homeland security boss Thomas Donlon is yet another Paterson administration deserter, The Albany Times Union tells. While American Jewish institutions must take terrorism “awareness, preparedness and resiliency efforts seriously . . . our response will be appropriate and measured, devoid of the fear that terrorism seeks to instill,” a Jewish Telegraph Agency op-ed inveighs. An Ohio man detained Tuesday allegedly pulled up to a Defense Supply Center Columbus gate announcing he had an explosive device in his vehicle, WBNS 10 News notes. The Minuteman Civil Defense Corps, a border watch group composed of private citizens, has decided to disband, The Arizona Daily Star relays.

Chasing the dime: The European Commission says it wants its own system to track terrorist finances, one that would require the United States to contribute info on its own citizens’ transactions, The New York Times tells. Concerns about Mexican drug mayhem have created a growing demand at the border for bulletproof vehicles, the CEO of International Armoring Corp. tells The El Paso Times. As in most countries — the United States included, if less so — private guards outnumber police 7 to 1 in Guatemala, most of them untrained, uneducated and inexperienced, GlobalPost spotlights. Seeking an in to the sweet homeland security market, LifeLock Inc. has added ex-DHS secretary Tom Ridge to its board of directors, Phoenix Business Journal relates — as The Washington Business Journal sees his successor, Mike Chertoff, joining the BAE Systems board.

Bugs ‘n bombs: Union County, N.J., self-storage managers are cooperating with public-safety officials on random searches for hazardous materials that could potentially be used in explosives, Suburban News notes. From its 1980s inception, the “right-to-carry” movement has increased licensed concealed-gun carriers from fewer than 1 million to a record 6 million today, MSNBC surveys. Two years ago Afghan insurgents obtained several U.S. military systems used to jam signals that detonate IEDs, possibly passing them along to Iran for reverse engineering, Nextgov notes. Nuclear terrorism remains an intelligence priority, but so far terrorist groups haven’t displayed an ability to launch a large-scale WMD attack, Xinhua hears a senior intel officer briefing.

Close air support: A Qantas pilot was allowed to keep flying for three years despite repeatedly complaining of urges to crash one of the jumbo jets, The Sydney Morning Herald reports. Heather Mills, Paul McCartney’s ex, was livid when Heathrow screeners ordered her artificial leg removed and swabbed for explosives, The Daily Mirror mentions — while MusicRooms sees former Pussycat Dolls singer Kimberly Wyatt tweeting that she was “attacked by 10 security workers” at Heathrow because of a “Bullets 4 Peace” pendant. Some 18,000 people on TSA’s “selectee list” are subjected to third and fourth once-overs of passports and other extras, but those “who appeal never get confirmation they were on a list, much less learn why,” The Mansfield (Ohio) News Journal notes.

Coming and going: A mentally ill man on the London Tube in a judge’s wig with wires strapped to his wrists prompted the first activation of Operation Andromeda, Scotland Yard’s new response to “spontaneous sighting of a suspected suicide bomber,” The Daily Telegraph relates. There is less than meets the eye to a series of alarming reports regarding a U.S. intel warning of possible al Qaeda attacks on ships off the coast of Yemen, Newsweek notes. Heightened port security standards would put a dent in cargo theft, which the International Cargo Security Council estimates costs U.S. shippers $25 billion a year, a Security Park op-ed observes. In an escalation of the battle against Indian Ocean buccaneers, a Somali pirate was killed this week in a gunfight between a cargo ship and a pirate skiff, Danger Room relates.

Courts and rights: Federal prosecutors have added felony charges to a long list of misdemeanors filed against an ex-DHS officer who allegedly made unauthorized traffic stops about which he then falsified reports, The Rome (Ga.) News-Tribune tells. The daughter of one of four men convicted in the Holy Land Foundation terror financing case is attacking plans to transfer the convicts to a more secure prison, The Dallas Morning News notes. Word that a new chief judicial officer is being appointed to the Pentagon’s Office of Military Commissions suggests Gitmo tribunals will soon resume, Newsweek, again, notes — while The Washington Post spotlights two Gitmo detainees turned informer who are held in relative comfort but with little chance of release.

Over there: Kenyan terror police have arrested a watch-listed Somalia-born American, The Winona (Minn.) Daily News notes. A Canadian man facing 11 counts of attempted murder denied the charges, but admitted to sending tainted water and explosive devices to a variety of people, The National Post notes. Obeying a Taliban decree, three cell phone providers in a district near Kandahar turn off their antennas every nightfall, The Wall Street Journal relates. Security experts say recent police raids in Indonesia indicate a growing terrorism threat there, Voice of America spotlights.

Screening Room: Bush-era speech-writer Marc Thiessen cites the Joker from “Batman: The Dark Knight” (Warner Bros.) to rebut Obama on Guantanamo’s role as a recruitment tool for terrorists, Media Matters derides. In a Huffington Post homage to network residual checks, David Dean Bottrell fondly recalls appearing on CBS’ “Criminal Minds” as an emotionally unstable scientist who was trying to plant an anthrax bomb in a D.C. subway station. “Is it finally O.K. to have a few laughs at terrorism’s expense? Does this movie disempower terrorists by poking fun at them?” a poster on Elan: The Guide to Global Muslim Culture blogs in re: Chris Morris’s new comedy “Four Lions” (Warp Films). “Art in Action,” screening at Montreal’s Cinema Politica, is an “inspiring film about one ambitious couple and the growth of their art and humanitarian group: the Action Terroriste Socialement Acceptable,” The Concordian recounts.

Kulture Kanyon: A work by a Lebanese-Canadian playwright that imagines a dialogue between a terrorist bomber and one of his victims is among 10 plays on offer in this year’s Magnetic North Theatre Festival, CBC News notes. “Tourism / Terrorism,” a new release by The So So Glos “was a surprise to me,” an Altsounds.com critic leads. Sebastian Faulks’ “A Week in December” (Doubleday), a New York Times pan reads, features “a young Muslim plotting to attack a London hospital, and a hedge fund manager betting that England’s staunchest bank is about to fail. Guess which one is the villain?” Photographer Simon Roberts, recently tapped as Britain’s official Election Artist, worries he may become an innocent victim of U.K. anti-terrorism laws, Amateur Photographer spotlights. “Even terrorist organizations have started to get in on the criminal action,” a Forbes commentary on art theft takes note.

Natty Dread: “It turns out that one of America’s favorite places to drink rum, listen to reggae, and get mugged five blocks from their hotel has revealed itself as one of America’s strongest allies in the War On Terror,” The Spoof spoofs in re: Jamaica. “For decades, Americans have enjoyed the hospitality of this small, beautiful country, and welcomed the friendliness of the people to the point of teasing them for their stereotypical term, ‘Yea, Mon!’ on countless talk shows, sitcoms, and stand-up routines. No more, however, as American terrorism experts have finally realized the truth: Jamaicans have been trying to warn us of the dangers of another small country, Yemen, a country hanging off the ass-end of Saudi Arabia. The Jamaican people have long been telling any American who would listen that Yemen is a danger to them. To wit: American: ‘Excuse me, sir, but can you tell me if Iraq is going to attack us?’ Jamaican: ‘Yea, Mon!’ (In reality, his accent is distorting the name, ‘Yemen’.)”

Source: CQ Homeland Security