This Company Can Find Stolen Smartphones (If Only AT&T, Verizon And Sprint Will Let It)

whitesmoke_35627724_11_610x436By Gerry Smith

When Lawrence Flynn’s smartphone was stolen in Atlanta in July, he assumed it was gone for good. Weeks went by. Police had no leads.

“I had given up hope,” he said.

But an investigator at Absolute Software had not given up. Four months after the theft, Flynn, 57, got a call from the company, which attempts, for an annual fee of $30, to recover a customer’s stolen phone no matter where it ends up.

Using forensic tools embedded in the phone, the investigator tracked down Flynn’s Samsung Galaxy S4 in an unlikely place: more than 1,400 miles away in the Dominican Republic. Local police retrieved the device at an electronics store in the Dominican city of San Cristobal.

Earlier this month, Flynn opened his mailbox and found his phone.

“I’m overjoyed,” he said. “It’s a $600 phone.”

As the underground market for stolen smartphones has become a global industry, Absolute Software has positioned itself as a private detective agency of sorts, hunting down pilfered devices across the globe and helping bring thieves to justice.

The company’s team of former law enforcement officers has recovered more than 30,000 devices — mostly laptops and PCs — over the past two decades in more than 104 countries. Flynn was among the first to sign up for the company’s new smartphone recovery service earlier this year.

Read More This Company Can Find Stolen Smartphones (If Only AT&T, Verizon And Sprint Will Let It).

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Mandela and the Question of Violence

President Bill Clinton with Nelson Mandela, Ju...

President Bill Clinton with Nelson Mandela (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

By Ta-Nehisi Coates

I was right to be wrong, while you and your kind were wrong to be right. —Pierre Courtade

I have the misfortune of being near the end of Tony Judt’s Postwar at a moment when of the great figures of our history, Nelson Mandela, has passed. Judt’s gaze is relentless. He rejects all grand narratives, skewers Utopianism (mostly in the form of Communism), and eschews the notion that history has definite shape and form. States are mostly amoral. In one breath he will write admiringly of the Nordic countries. In the next he will detail their descent into eugenics in the mid-20th century.

This is what I mean when I say that Judt has an atheist view of history. God does not care about history, and history does not care about humans. There is no triumphalism, in Postwar, about Western values and democracy. What you see is a continent at war with itself. The upholding of democratic values is a constant struggle, often lost—in the colonies, in the Eastern bloc, in Greece, in Portugal, in Spain. Even among the great Western powers there is the sense that no one is immune to the virus of authoritarianism.

There is great humility in Judt’s portrait of Europe, a humility that is largely absent from the portrait of the West foisted upon the darker peoples of the world. Non-African writers love to congratulate Nelson Mandela on not becoming another “Mugabe,” as though despotism is something Africans are uniquely tempted toward; as though colonialism was not, itself, a form of kleptocratic despotism. I too am happy that Mandela did not become another Mugabe. I am happier still that he did not become—as far as these analogical games go—another Leopold.

This Western arrogance is as broad as it is insidious. There was a well-reported piece in the Times a few days ago on the disappointment that’s followed Mandela’s presidency. A similar note has been sounded in seemingly every obit and article concerning Mandela’s death. It’s not so much that these stories shouldn’t be written, it’s that they shouldn’t treated the subject as though a man were biting a dog. That people are shocked that South Africa, almost 20 years out of apartheid, is struggling with fairness and democracy, reflects a particular ignorance, a particular blindness, and a peculiar lack of humility, about our own struggles.

On the great issue of the day, the generations that followed George Washington offered not just disappointment but betrayal. “The unfortunate condition of the people whose labors I in part employed,” Washington wrote, “has been the only unavoidable subject of regret.” Americans did not simply tolerate this “unfortunate condition,” they turned it into the cornerstone of the American economic system. By 1860, 60 percent of all American exports came from cotton produced by slave labor. “Property in man” was, according to Yale historian David Blight, worth some $3.5 billion more than “all of America’s manufacturing, all of the railroads, all of the productive capacity of the United States put together.”

Read More Mandela and the Question of Violence – Ta-Nehisi Coates – The Atlantic.

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Fox News Anchor: Santa Is White and Jesus Was, Too

megyn kelly

Megyn Kelly (Photo credit: glamourmagazine)

By Stephen A. Crockett Jr.

Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly isn’t comfortable with the idea of a black Santa and wants to make a few things clear, especially to kids: Santa Claus is white and so was Jesus.

The anchor, who had an all-white lineup on her news analysis show, cleared up any misgivings that culture blogger Aisha Harris may have created with an article in Slate that explained the duality she faced seeing a white Santa as a child and a black Santa in her home.

Harris’ position is that as the cultural makeup of society has changed, it is time for an all-inclusive Santa.

Her answer: A St. Nick penguin. She writes:

Why, you ask? For one thing, making Santa Claus an animal rather than an old white male could spare millions of nonwhite kids the insecurity and shame that I remember from childhood. Whether you celebrate the holiday or not, Santa is one of the first iconic figures foisted upon you: He exists as an incredibly powerful image in the imaginations of children across the country (and beyond, of course). That this genial, jolly man can only be seen as white—and consequently, that a Santa of any other hue is merely a “joke” or a chance to trudge out racist stereotypes—helps perpetuate the whole “white-as-default” notion endemic to American culture (and, of course, not just American culture).

Sounds good, right?

Read More Fox News Anchor: Santa Is White and Jesus Was, Too – The Root.

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A Newtown Moms Reflections On Love And Loss One Year Later

Purity and Innocence

Purity and Innocence (Photo credit: Puzzler4879)

By Alissa Parker

Last week, I received a frantic phone call from Robbies brother, James, who was looking for his wife, Natalie. James and Natalie moved to Connecticut two months after our family did and have been our solid rock this last year after we lost Emilie. Natalie works a couple of blocks from their home in Danbury and had not returned home that night. Robbie and I looked at each other with panic, knowing that something was really wrong.

After James called 911, we learned that Natalie had been hit by a car while walking home from work and was in surgery at the hospital. As we sat there with James, hearing the doctors explain the extent of her serious injuries, we knew she was truly lucky to be alive. Natalies head had been badly injured and the bleeding in her brain could have easily killed her. For days, we sat in her hospital room… waiting. Waiting to see any signs that could give us hope that Natalie would be able to recover.

The ICU doctor came to check on her one afternoon and began talking to her and irritating her to see if she would react. Natalie, only able to open one eye at the time, reached up and grabbed the doctor’s hand and angrily shoved it away. Again and again, each time he tried to touch her, SLAP! she would hit him away. James, seeing his wife for the first time somewhat awake, walked up to her side and sweetly said her name. The irritated Natalie immediately turned her head towards James, smiled and reached her hands out towards him, needing her loving husband’s hands.

Read More  A Newtown Moms Reflections On Love And Loss One Year Later | Alissa Parker.

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In Newtown, memorials are gone but reminders are everywhere

Forgotten Future

(Photo credit: much0)

By Lee Higgins

Just two weeks after the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School last December, the elaborate memorials that drew hundreds of mourners from around the country came down.

Gone were the 26 Christmas trees — one for each victim — that lined the road leading to the Sandy Hook firehouse, where parents learned the fates of their children. The wooden angels staked in a hillside, where many stopped to pray, were pulled from the ground. The bouquets of flowers were picked up, the candles collected. Town officials said it would all be processed into “sacred soil,” perhaps to put at the site of a permanent memorial.

Residents of Newtown had bid farewell to 20 of their children and six more of their neighbors, and sought a sense of normalcy.

Yet nearly a year after the massacre, even after the school itself has been demolished, they struggle to make sense of what they saw and heard last Dec. 14 and in the days that followed. The images, they say, are seared into their memories, and although the physical memorials are gone, they see them every day.

It could be putting a daughter on the school bus, hoping she will return that afternoon. Or picking up a son at school and seeing a police officer in the lobby, knowing why he’s there.

Read More  In Newtown, memorials are gone but reminders are everywhere | Al Jazeera America.

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We Are This Close to Losing Our Democracy to the Mercenary Class

Money

(Photo credit: 401(K) 2013)

By Bill Moyers

I met Supreme Court Justice William Brennan in 1987 when I was creating a series for public television called In Search of the Constitution, celebrating the bicentennial of our founding document. By then, he had served on the court longer than any of his colleagues and had written close to 500 majority opinions, many of them addressing fundamental questions of equality, voting rights, school segregation, and — in New York Times v. Sullivan in particular — the defense of a free press.

Those decisions brought a storm of protest from across the country. He claimed that he never took personally the resentment and anger directed at him. He did, however, subsequently reveal that his own mother told him she had always liked his opinions when he was on the New Jersey court, but wondered now that he was on the Supreme Court, “Why can’t you do it the same way?” His answer: “We have to discharge our responsibility to enforce the rights in favor of minorities, whatever the majority reaction may be.”

Although a liberal, he worried about the looming size of government. When he mentioned that modern science might be creating “a Frankenstein,” I asked, “How so?” He looked around his chambers and replied, “The very conversation we’re now having can be overheard. Science has done things that, as I understand it, makes it possible through these drapes and those windows to get something in here that takes down what we’re talking about.”

That was long before the era of cyberspace and the maximum surveillance state that grows topsy-turvy with every administration. How I wish he were here now — and still on the Court!

My interview with him was one of 12 episodes in that series on the Constitution. Another concerned a case he had heard back in 1967. It involved a teacher named Harry Keyishian who had been fired because he would not sign a New York State loyalty oath. Justice Brennan ruled that the loyalty oath and other anti-subversive state statutes of that era violated First Amendment protections of academic freedom.

I tracked Keyishian down and interviewed him. Justice Brennan watched that program and was fascinated to see the actual person behind the name on his decision. The journalist Nat Hentoff, who followed Brennan’s work closely, wrote, “He may have seen hardly any of the litigants before him, but he searched for a sense of them in the cases that reached him.” Watching the interview with Keyishian, he said, “It was the first time I had seen him. Until then, I had no idea that he and the other teachers would have lost everything if the case had gone the other way.”

Toward the end of his tenure, when he was writing an increasing number of dissents on the Rehnquist Court, Brennan was asked if he was getting discouraged. He smiled and said, “Look, pal, we’ve always known — the Framers knew — that liberty is a fragile thing.  You can’t give up.”  And he didn’t.

Read More Bill Moyers: ‘We Are This Close to Losing Our Democracy to the Mercenary Class’ | Alternet.

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Miami Gardens Police Chief Resigns After NAACP Outcry Over Racial Profiling, Bullying

imagesBy Allie Conti

Just two days after the NAACP said that the Miami Gardens Police Department may be committing “the most pervasive, most invasive, and most unjustified pattern of police harassment in the nation,” the city’s police chief has resigned.

Matthew Boyd was the first and only person to lead the force, which was formed in 2007. The officers have been accused of racially profiling both customers and employees at a local convenience store that was participating in a “zero tolerance” program meant to reduce crime by aggressively targeting suspicious-looking people. Store owner Alex Saleh got much more than he bargained for when he agreed to participate in the program. Perhaps most egregiously: One employee of the 207 Quickstop, Earl Sampson, was arrested 419 times for trespassing in the past five years, according to city records.

In response, Saleh installed 15 video cameras to record the routine harassment and to call into question how somebody can be trespassing while they’re at work. After the Miami Herald released some of his footage last month of cops manhandling elderly patrons and illegally searching the premises, it became national news reported by places like NPR and MSNBC.

Despite the national outrage, Boyd was quick to defend his police officers. He cited Miami Gardens’ zero-tolerance policy and its high crime rate, which is indeed among the highest in the county. (Last year the area saw 25 murders, 16 forcible rapes, and 369 robberies, according to the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.) Still, Quickstop 207 has never been robbed once in the 17 years that Saleh has owned the store.

Read More  Miami Gardens Police Chief Resigns After NAACP Outcry Over Racial Profiling, Bullying.

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More Than Half of Americans Now Have Tougher Gun Laws

340a.Assemblance.GunControl.USCRP.WDC.26Januar...

(Photo credit: Elvert Barnes)

By Mark Follman

An unthinkable massacre ignites an intense national debate. Then, Congress does nothing. The powerful gun lobby wins again. End of story.

So went the popular narrative last spring with the collapse of gun control legislation on Capitol Hill. Meanwhile, scores of people have been wounded or killed in five new mass shootings and other gun rampages around the country, and an estimated 30,000 have been killed by firearms—including hundreds of young children, as documented in our latest investigation.

But no, the gun lobby did not “win.” The real action after Newtown was not in the nation’s capital—it was in most statehouses around the country, where no fewer than 114 bills were signed into law, aiming in both political directions. America has warred over its deep-rooted gun culture on and off for decades, and Newtown set off a major mobilization on both sides.

Determining how that battle changed the terrain in 2013 isn’t just a matter of the total number of laws passed (some of which contain multiple measures), but also the types of activity and swathes of population they affect. Unsurprisingly, the redder states mostly continued to deregulate firearms, while bluer coastal states—and a more politically split Colorado—moved aggressively to tighten restrictions.

Based on data from the nonpartisan Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, which tracks state legislation closely, here’s how the barrage of new measures has altered Americans’ ability to legally bear arms:

Strengthening gun regulations:

  • 41 new laws in 22 states made it harder for people to own guns, carry them in public, and enhanced the government’s ability to track guns.
  • Additionally, 15 laws in 15 states made it harder for people with serious mental health problems to possess guns—a major factor among mass shooters, as our ongoing investigation has shown.
  • Together, these laws affect more than 189 million people.

The most sweeping restrictions came in Colorado, Connecticut, Maryland, and New York, including background checks for gun buyers and bans on assault weapons and high-capacity magazines. Although tracking gun ownership is anathema to the National Rifle Association and its allies, 18 states and the District of Columbia boosted their capabilities to do so: New measures included requiring lost or stolen firearms to be reported (Maryland, New York) and criminalizing the tampering with manufacturers’ identification marks on firearms (Rhode Island). From Florida to Colorado to Washington state, lawmakers required more rigorous reporting of mental health records to the FBI’s criminal background check system and imposed greater restrictions on the mentally ill.

Read More  More Than Half of Americans Now Have Tougher Gun Laws | Mother Jones.

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Jobs That Pay Less Than $15 An Hour Are Replacing Higher Wage Work

On Strike for Low Wage Workers

(Photo credit: Light Brigading)

By Bryce Covert

A growing share of the country’s jobs pay less than $15 an hour, replacing higher wage jobs, according to a new report from the Alliance for a Just Society.

The number of jobs in occupations that pay a median wage below $15 an hour grew by 3.6 million between 2009 and 2012, increasing by about 3 percent. During the same time period, the number of jobs that pay above that level fell by 4 million. There were more than 51 million jobs paying less than $15 an hour last year. Someone making $15 an hour working 40 hours a week, 52 weeks a year will make $31,200, while experts say a two-income family with two kids needs $72,000 a year to be economically secure.

The report also notes that there is a huge number of people vying for the jobs that pay better. It calculates that there were seven job seekers for every projected job opening that paid above $15 an hour in 2012 and 17.9 million more job hunters than higher wage jobs.

The report is the latest to find that low-wage work has grown in the post-recovery economy at the expense of better paid jobs. Since the end of the recession, most of the jobs added have paid less than $13.83 an hour, while middle class jobs have dropped off. One in four American workers is expected to be in low-wage work over the next decade.

To help raise the living standard of the growing number of workers who find themselves in the lowest paid work, cities and states have been raising their minimum wages. On Election Day this year, voters in New Jersey increased their wage to $8.25 an hour with automatic increases tied to inflation and voters in a small town in Washington state increased their wage to $15 an hour. Voters also approved raises in Albuquerque, NM; San Jose, CA; and Long Beach, CA in the 2012 election. Meanwhile, the Washington, D.C. council unanimously voted to raise the city’s wage to $11.50 an hour at the beginning of the month and the Massachusetts state Senate passed an increase to $11 an hour with automatic raises. A handful of other states are also working on potential raises. The action comes while federal lawmakers have let the national wage remain at $7.25 an hour for four years, although President Obama and Democratic Congressmen have backed a hike to $10 an hour. If the wage had kept up with inflation, it would be over $10 an hour, and if it had kept up with increasing worker productivity, it would be over $20 an hour.

Read More Jobs That Pay Less Than $15 An Hour Are Replacing Higher Wage Work | ThinkProgress.

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