Edward Snowden’s On-Line Presence Revealed
Posted: June 12, 2013 Filed under: just because, U.S. Military, U.S. Politics | Tags: Ars Technica, Edward Snowden, Glenn Greenwald, modelling, TheTrueHoohah 40 CommentsNSA Leaker Edward Snowden was thought to have no on-line presence until tonight. But now we know differently.
From Buzzfeed (via Anthony DeRosa), Snowden posted hundreds of comments on the Ars Technica forum over the past ten years under the handle “TheTrueHoohah.” Elle Hall and John Herrman at Buzzfeed:
The last of his 753 posts, first discovered by Anthony DeRosa, was posted on May 21, 2012, in response to a question about creating a “Dead Man’s Switch,” a program that would automatically delete a computer’s contents if its owner failed to log in periodically. Snowden replies, “You could write one. There are also plenty of orphaned Open Source ones out there you could pick up that need to be finished, if you want a head start.” This was the first time he had posted on the forum in six months.
Earlier, in a thread titled, “I’m a screwup,” he writes, “Join the army. Worked for me.” Two days later, in a discussion about emerging industries, he suggests “Counterterrorism” is an area that will expand within the next five years.
A number of Snowden’s posts are reproduced at Buzzfeed. Here’s one where he talks about being a high school dropout:
First off, the degree thing is crap, at least domestically. If you really have ten years of solid, provable IT experience (and given that you say you’re 25, I think it’d probably be best to underestimate), you CAN get a very well paying IT job. You just need to be either actively looking now or get the fuck out of California. I have no degree, nor even a high school diploma, but I’m making much more than what they’re paying you even though I’m only claiming six years of experience. It’s tough to “break in,” but once you land a “real” position, you’re made.
It takes a lot of bullshit to get to that point, though. I was unemployed for a full year and then had to work in a non-IT field for six months before I was able to get back in IT and double my salary.
If you do want a degree, I agree that going overseas is a much better idea than attending some $150k domestic diploma mill.
Also, don’t discount the Foreign Service. Someone already mentioned it, and it’s an amazing deal if you can swing it. I’m not talking Foreign Service Officer, either, just standard IT specialist positions.They pay for your (ridiculously nice) housing and since you’ll be posted overseas, the first ~$80k you make will be tax-free.
Military is always an option as that door is not likely to close in the future. If you do decide to join, though, I would suggest considering using the opportunity to learn a new skill, as opposed to further specializing in IT. You only live once.
He posted about getting a job as a model.
So I got invited to model for this guy (potentially NSFW) last week, and I just now got the proofs back from him. He shoots mostly guys, and he’s got some… “questionable” people interested in his work, so I was actually a little worried he might, you know, try to pull my pants off and choke me to death with them, but he turned out to be legit and is a pretty damn good model photographer.
It’s only my third shoot, so be gentle.
Here are the photos
He writes that he works for the State Department:
WINNAR!
Although I’m not a diplomat, I work for the Department of State. I actually signed up because of the opportunity for foreign travel, so I’m not bent out of shape at all. All of the inflexible terms in the OP were to establish some sort of ground rules for the hypothetical so it didn’t veer off into insanity.
That said, I’m surprised by the showing Australia made in the poll. I have to wonder if it’s really the paradise Arsians seem to think it is, but being that this is a nerds’ forum, I’m suprised ANYTHING beat out Japan. I also don’t see the allure of “Scandinavian” countries, but that’s simply because I don’t want to live in a country where warmth and comfort are only spoken of in bedtime stories.
China is definitely a good option career-wise, and I’ve already got a basic understanding of Mandarin and the culture, but it just doesn’t seem like as much “fun” as some of the other places. Who knows where the “needs of the service” will actually end up placing me, though.
Azerbaijan, anyone?
He writes about being discharged from the Army Reserves:
Discharges do not happen fast. Both of my legs were broken during AIT and they held on to me until the doctors cleared me to be discharged, and then after being cleared they held onto me for another month just for shits and giggles.
Psych problems = dishonorable/BC discharge depending on how much they hate you. Lots of alleged homos were in the hold unit, too, but they only got a general discharge at best.
If they think he is fucking with them, he is going to get screwed. Hard.
JJ was right that Snowden is an old movie buff. I haven’t located any posts about that yet, but someone on twitter told me after I tweeted JJ’s comments about North By Northwest and Citizen Kane. Here’s what she wrote:
JJ Lopez Minkoff
June 12, 2013 at 4:51 pm (Edit)
Has anyone noticed lots of this guys stories and quotes seem to come from movies?
North by Northwest? this drunk driving thing
Citizen Kane? That shit about being “An American.”
You can read lots more of Snowden’s musings at the two links above, or just google “TheTrueHOOHA
Ars Scholae Palatinae”
I had a weird feeling about this guy all along. I knew there was something hinky about him. But was he really recruited by the CIA? Is he really a whistleblower? Why didn’t Glenn Greenwald discover his on-line presence? What will we learn next about Edward Snowden?
Saturday: Hillary 2016
Posted: June 8, 2013 Filed under: just because | Tags: Hillary 2016 65 CommentsSo yesterday was our weird anniversary, as Dr. Dakinikat blogged. I definitely remember five years ago yesterday. Almost as if it was yesterday, in fact. Needless to say, while some of the initial sting from June 2008 has subsided, the skin never grew quite back the same as before. The wound was actually first created on May 31, 2008…a wound reopened, with the scab pulled all the way off before it had healed, on June 7th, with the CNN sign blasting “The Clinton Exit” on our TV screens. The talking d00ds may be surprised how Our Girl never left the stage at all that day, but I know most of us here are not, and we never needed any tinglies up our legs to know the difference. (The Ready for Hillary chant grows stronger with every day.)
Looking even further back, Obama’s 2004 DNC speech was the first time I heard him speak. Not knowing anything about his politics at that point, I actually felt sympathy for him that the media kept acting as if he was ‘the first black man who could speak’ … ugh, wtf?! If someone called me ‘the first Indian woman who could speak’ at the DNC Convention, I would have pulled a Daria Morgendorffer eyeroll and just walked out of the building. (“La la la la la… this is my stuff, got to get off, I might go pop …’Excuse me, Excuse me…’ I’ve got to be direct, if I’m off please correct… la la la… you’re standing on my neck “)
At any rate, once the 2008 cycle was underway and all that, Obama grated for a Hillary ‘diehard’ like me obviously. For quite awhile.
Now, here five years later in 2013, I’m just kinda eh.
His speechifying is alright. I guess the kangaroo court-like atmosphere of the “new scandal” every day in the msm/Foxnutz zone grates way more by comparison. Nothing has really changed from Bush to Obama to Obama’s second term, except that the political landscape is even bleaker than that Chris Hedges “2011: A Brave New Dystopia” post at the end of 2010.
Bush III, yada yada political affective disorder-cakes.
But, hey ‘nobody’ could have ever predicted the way things would turn out. Right?
(Paging Emily Dickinson, yup, I’m a ‘nobody’ too, sister!)
I’m actually going to excerpt that second to last link–which is to one of my old posts I wrote in September 2010–in its entirety, because I think now is as good a time as any to revisit my words (plus, I’m an uppity goddess who likes to quote herself):
Evelyn De Morgan, Cassandra (1898)
Digby’s response to Obama’s state secrets (h/t bostonboomer):
Back when everyone naively thought that electing a Democrat would end these obscene royalist decrees, it was argued by a few of us that once given, these powers are rarely given back. But I don’t think anyone expected the Democratic constitutional scholar would actually double down on the dictatorial powers. I confess, I’m fairly gobsmacked.
I often start my frontpage rants in a comment section reacting to the latest buzz in the moment, so you may have seen me post the following bit before. Please bear with another repeat, because it’s the first thing that came to mind when I read about Digby digging up that sorry old excuse that “nobody could have predicted.”
Party of Nobodies…
Nobody could have predicted Bush-Cheney would be a massive failure.
Nobody could have predicted the Iraq war would be an unfounded war and a diversion.
Nobody could have predicted Obama would make Bush-Cheney’s policies the new normal.
I’m nobody, and I endorse this message.
Caturday: Happy Birthday, Marilyn Monroe!
Posted: June 1, 2013 Filed under: just because, morning reads, U.S. Politics | Tags: Benghazi, immigration, John McCain, Louis Gomert, Marilyn Monroe 12 CommentsEighty-seven years ago today, the inimitable Marilyn Monroe was born. To the right is perhaps my favorite photo of Marilyn, taken by Anthony Beauchamp. It projects such strength and awesomeness…and so fabulously complements the vulnerable doe-eyed look that she is known and celebrated for elsewhere.
Huffpo has an interesting 1-and-a-half minute clip of an interview with Marilyn’s “closest” friend Amy Greene, from just two days ago. Greene talks about how she met Marilyn…and she has some very spirited and choice words summing up her thoughts on the film, My Week with Marilyn. I tried to embed the clip, but the code won’t work on wordpress. So please take a moment to click over and watch when you can. You won’t want to miss the punchline!
Also, if you are so inclined, check out this recent drama going down regarding a letter written by Marilyn. The letter in dispute is characterized as follows:
According to The Beverly Hills Courier, Monroe wrote the undated letter to Monroe’s longtime mentor and acting coach, Lee Strasberg, on Hotel Bel-Air stationary. It reads, in part, “My will is weak but I can’t stand anything. I sound crazy but I think I’m going crazy…It’s just that I get before a camera and my concentration and everything I’m trying to learn leaves me. Then I feel like I’m not existing in the human race at all.”
Wow, that gives me chills.
Huffpo also has a nice gallery of photos up for Marilyn’s birthday. One of the last photos:
Undated photo shows US actress Marilyn Monroe a few weeks before she died in 05 August, 1962 at the age of 36. The circumstances of her death have never been cleared up. AFP PHOTO (Photo credit should read STR/AFP/Getty Images)
Damn. Maybe it’s because I turned 32 a couple months ago, but to me that photo looks like a woman just getting started in life.
A few rare shots of Marilyn here, by a reporter who took these photos at the time as a teenager himself for his high school newspaper. He actually ended up selling them to some other small magazine instead of publishing them in his school paper. Anyhow, check them out. They’re all black and white and pretty fantastic for a high school paper photog!
And to the right, a sight for my 30-something crazy cat lady self! According to the internet, it’s Marilyn with her adopted kitty Serafina. I wish I could find the official credits for that photo, but all I was able to track it down on, through a cursory search, was pinterest- and fanpop-type sites. I’ll keep looking, or maybe one of you knows!
In the meantime, here are a few other news stories for you to nibble on this morning with your brew or beverage of choice…
This first one is a doozy. Wingnut radio tinfoil chaser says McCain was “hobnobbing with jihadists” with his Syria trip, and Gohmert faults McCain for being partly responsible for Benghazi. (And, this ‘my friends’ is why I am going to bypass all the political freakshows taking up all the headlines. Cuz, just WTF? Who even cares anymore. The Onion is more realistic.)
Here’s something much better to click over to: May 31, 2013 – American Voters Like Clinton Over Paul, Jeb Bush, Quinnipiac University National Poll Finds. Keep whining about MarshaBenghazi, Jan Brady GOP-ers. That’s really working out for you.
And, this one is an arrow from Marilyn’s bow shot straight into the heart of rightwing canards… New Study Shows Immigrants Pay More Into Medicare Than They Take Out:
A study released by the Harvard Medical School on Wednesday shows that immigrants as whole pay more into Medicare than they use, effectively subsidizing the program. The study found that in 2009 alone, immigrants created a $13.8 billion surplus for Medicare. From 2002 to 2009, immigrants paid a total of $115 billion more to the government health program than they used. American-born workers, on the other hand, posted a $28 billion deficit in the same 2002 to 2009 time frame.
But, hey what are facts in the face of xenophobic hate and mistrust?
And, finally this one here is my favorite and I highly recommend if you click any link in this roundup, it’s this: If I Admit That ‘Hating Men’ Is a Thing, Will You Stop Turning It Into a Self-Fulfilling Prophecy? Seriously, if I excerpted from it, it wouldn’t do the piece justice. Go read now!!
Alright Sky Dancers, your turn. What’s on your list for today? Have a great weekend and would love to hear from you if you get a chance.
Breaking! The Girly Proletariat just scored a win in the “free” market…
Posted: May 28, 2013 Filed under: just because 9 CommentsVia Thinkprogress: BREAKING: Facebook Promises To Take Action On Domestic Violence Content
I’ve been following this story pretty closely “on the ground/grassroots” of Facebook…I’m totally part of all the wimmin cackling and braying for some human rights, dammit. With pride! 🙂
Of course we have to wait and see what pans out action-wise, but the advertiser drop got us this far!Today the “free” market /capitalism worked for the underclass. 15 advertisers threatened to dropped Facebook over its allowance of horrible gender-based violence and hate all over its platform. Facebook heard that, and responded that it is going to screen out things like…videos of girls and women being raped… About time! ( Uh oh, the girly proletariat won a battle…time to bail out a big bank or something 😉
Saturday: Geek Girl Pride
Posted: May 25, 2013 Filed under: just because 31 Comments
Good morning, newsjunkies, and…Happy Geek Pride Day:
Geek Pride Day (Spanish: Día del orgullo friki ) is an initiative to promote geek culture, celebrated annually on 25 May. The date was chosen as to commemorate the release of the first Star Wars film, A New Hope on 25 May 1977 (see Star Wars Day), but shares the same date as two other similar fan “holidays”: Towel Day, for fans of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy trilogy by Douglas Adams, and the Glorious 25th of May for fans ofTerry Pratchett‘s Discworld.
The initiative originated in Spain in 2006 as “Día del Orgullo Friki” and spread around the world via the internet.
With the internet, there really is no dearth of things to celebrate. I thought I’d highlight all the girl geeks that have been in the headlines recently for this morning’s roundup. Before we get to that though, I did a little digging for the origins and popularization of the term “geek girl”:
geekgirl // (say ‘geekgerl)
noun Colloquial a female computer geek, especially on the internet [coined by Rosie Cross, born 1958, British internet publisher in Australia, as the title of her online magazine] 1993.Bibliography: The Macquarie Dictionary Online © Macquarie Dictionary Publishers Pty Ltd.
Wikipedia refers to Rosie Cross’ online zine as a cyberfeminist magazine. Cool, huh! “Cyberfeminist” — I really like the sound of that!
Although, the most common connotation of geek girl tends to be in relation to computer-geeking and tech-journalists, I think the women of the Sky Dancing sisterhood fall under the geek girl umbrella with respect to their various areas of interest. Take our frontpage regulars for example:
- Dr. Dakinikat, the financial economist wonk-slash-jazz pianist-slash-buddhist philosopher queen
- Dr. Bostonboomer, the developmental psychologist, voice of the baby boomer generation, and old school journalism newshound
- JJ aka Minkoff Minx, the medieval studies expert, modern-day equivalent of a medievalist scribe (hee!), and all around renaissance woman if I may say so!
We’ve just got all kinds of enthusiasts of all kinds of disciplines and subject matter here, which I think is perfectly reflective of the broader community of sisters out there, working together, sharing their voices and talents, building friendships and families. Like our girl Hillary says. “It Takes a Village!”
Alright, now onto some Saturday shero reads. First, I’d like to start with a late and great geek girl getting posthumous presidential honors — Obama to Award Presidential Medal of Freedom to Dr. Sally Ride, via SheWired:
President Obama announced Monday his intent to bestow a posthumous Presidential Medal of Freedom to astronaut Dr. Sally Ride, the first American woman in space, whose obituary revealed was survived by her female partner of 27 years.
“We remember Sally Ride not just as a national hero, but as a role model to generations of young women,” said President Obama in a statement. “Sally inspired us to reach for the stars, and she advocated for a greater focus on the science, technology, engineering and math that would help us get there. Sally showed us that there are no limits to what we can achieve, and I look forward to welcoming her family to the White House as we celebrate her life and legacy.”
Icing on the cake:
The release noted that the White House informed Ride’s partner, Tam O’Shaughnessy, and Ride’s mother and sister about the award last week. The award will be presented at a ceremony at the White House later this year.
I will totally cry if a photograph turns up later this year, of Sally’s partner, mother, and/or sister receiving the award on her behalf.
And, did you know:
In December, NASA intentionally crashed a pair of twin satellites into the surface of the moon, and named the crash site after Ride, in recognition of her numerous contributions to NASA’s Grail project and science in general.
Thank you, President Obama. Thank you, NASA. Thank you history–for finally being on the right side of it. And, thanks to Sally Ride and to all the members of the LGBT community, both the activists and the people just leading their lives and trailblazing like Sally. To take a page from Hillary again, this time from her concession speech during the ’08 primaries…what is truly remarkable when “firsts” of these sorts happen, is that in the long run they won’t be remarkable anymore. Girls can now dream of flying in space and winning presidential primaries at all…because they have seen women before them do these things.
I don’t know how many of you are familiar with Jonathan Kozol’s Amazing Grace: The Lives of Children and the Conscience of a Nation, but it is a great book I recommend about the poorest of the poor living in the South Bronx and at one point one of the subjects Kozol inteviews says, “Boys who are doing well in school will tell me, ‘I would like to be a sanitation man.’ I have to guard my words and not say anything to indicate my sense of disappointment. In this neighborhood, a sanitation job is something to be longed for.”
That’s a book excerpt permanently etched into my brain. And, if the boys in the Bronx are dreaming of sanitation work, I can only imagine what girls there see on their horizon, if anything at all.
Hopefully the more trails blazed by more women of various backgrounds, from various walks of lives and various neighborhoods, the more girls (and boys!) can dream, without regard to their gender, class, race, sexual orientation, creed, or special needs.
Here are some girls living the dream…Meet the first all-Emirati, all-girl rock band:
AL AIN // The opening riff of the Deep Purple classic Smoke on the Water pounds out across a college hall.
It’s a common enough scene, as the song has been a standard entry on the playlists of countless heavy rock bands for decades.
However there is nothing ordinary about the five musicians pumping out those familiar chords. They are Random Stars: the first Emirati all-girl rock band.
“Playing rock ‘n’ roll is awesome,” says IT security student Bushra Hassan Al Hashimi, 22, who plays rhythm guitar. “We are the first girls from the UAE who play electric guitars as a band.
“It takes us away from the stress of homework and other college stuff – we play some music and we work on our songs. I’ve always liked rock ‘n’ roll.”
Incidentally, this reminds me of a really badass quote I recently fell in love with by none other than the now-late Ray Manzarek:
“You don’t make music for immortality, you make music for the moment of capturing the sheer joy of being alive on planet earth, ‘WOW! is this fun… this is just the greatest, everybody should live it that way.’”
…which is exactly what the Emirati girls are doing with their band “Random Stars.” I hope you click over and give the rest a read. It’s a great story.
This next one is just awe-inpsiring.
Arunima Sinha, Indian Woman, Is First Female Amputee To Climb Everest:.
Sinha’s guides were concerned about her slow pace until the team reached an 8,750-metre (28,707 foot) junction that climbers pass through on their way to the top of the mountain, Sherpa said.
“But once she got to that point, she gained energy and confidence and started moving really quickly,” Sherpa said.
Slow, steady, and then she was off!
Sinha is an athlete — a former national level volleyball player. Her story is testament to her prudence in turning tragedy on its head:
25-year-old Sinha reached the 8,848 metre-high summit of the world’s highest peak at 10.55 am today, as a member of the Eco Everest Expedition from the Tata Group, an official of the Tourism Ministry of Nepal said.
Sinha, a resident of Ambedkar Nagar in Uttar Pradesh, was pushed out of the general compartment of Padmawati Express for resisting a chain-snatching attempt by some criminals, while travelling from Lucknow to Delhi on April 12, 2011.
She was hit by a passing train and was seriously injured. She was hospitalised with serious leg and pelvic injuries and in a bid to save her life, doctors had to amputate her left leg below the knee.
Sinha had this to say in an interview to an Indian TV station before her climb:
“At that time everyone was worried for me. I then realised I had to do something in my life so that people stop looking at me with pity. I read about people scaling the Mt Everest. I spoke to my older brother and my coach who only encouraged me,” she had told NDTV.
Only 25 years old and such presence of mind, not to mention of body and spirit–a gloriously athletic-yet-geeky combination if you ask me! And, that’s not where the story even ends :
NEW DELHI: Arunima Sinha, the country’s first amputee to conquer Mt Everest, will soon be a police officer.
Arunima last year qualified a written test and skill abilities exam of the central government and qualified for getting an appointment as a Head Constable in the central paramilitary force CISF.
Add gutsy to the list of words to describe this young woman! Cheers to Ms. Arunima Sinha!
And, here’s another gutsy athletic girl… via Upworthy… This Is What It Looks Like When A Gay Athlete Gives Out Her Contact Info To Any Gay Kid In Need:
It’s one thing to be out and proud. It’s a whole other ball game to actively let gay teens know that when they are hurting they can call you. Brittney Griner, who just won a GLAAD award, along with being the #1 pick in this year’s WNBA draft, is an amazing human being, as you will see at 2:50.
Here’s the youtube:
As a My So-Called Life geek/fangirl, I love that Wilson Cruz (“Rickie Vasquez” on MSCL) introduced Brittney Griner…and such a wonderfully delivered, and well-deserved, introduction it is!
And, Ms. Griner’s acceptance. Just WOW. Watch the entire clip if you can.
I don’t know if Griner’s story fits in the geek girl category or not, but this young woman is so well-spoken–and smashingly dressed in a gender-bender suit–that I wouldn’t be surprised if she had some geek in her. Plus she’s a college grad this month! Congratulations, shero!
On Wednesday, the White House honored ten openly gay public officials on “Harvey Milk Day,” calling them “Harvey Milk Champions of Change.” Karen Clark, the longest serving openly gay legislator in the country, was one of the honorees:
Karen Clark
Minnesota State Representative
South Minneapolis, MNRepresentative Karen Clark was elected to the Minnesota House of Representatives in 1980, making her the longest serving openly gay or lesbian state legislator in the country. She represents three inner city neighborhoods in South Minneapolis, the lowest income district in the state. Representative Clark is an advocate for low income, Indigenous American Indian and community of color constituents, including many new Americans. A former public health nurse, current college instructor and co-founder of the Women’s Environmental Institute, some of Representative Clark’s major legislative accomplishments include chief authoring and passing worker and consumer right-to-know toxic exposure laws, affordable housing and homelessness initiatives, youth and dislocated worker job training strategies and numerous human rights, environmental justice and anti-discrimination protections. Recently, Representative Clark authored and helped pass the 2013 Minnesota Freedom to Marry bill with bi-partisan support.
Policy wonk on and keep on blazing trails, Karen Clark!
Two other young women were in my newsfeed this week for their ‘girl genius’ accomplishments. JJ already posted about one of these girls in one of her roundups, but I feel it’s only right to include her again. Via the feminist FB page, “Unpacking the ‘F’ Word”:
INSPIRATIONAL WOMAN: Eesha Khare
(Photo: Intel)
Waiting hours for a cellphone to charge may become a thing of the past, thanks to an 18-year-old high-school student’s invention. She won a $50,000 prize Friday at an international science fair for creating an energy storage device that can be fully juiced in 20 to 30 seconds.
http://www.nbcnews.com/technology/teens-invention-could-charge-your-phone-20-seconds-1C9977955
In a very similar vein, the FB Page “Women’s Rights News” posted this infographic about another geek girl, one Ms. Brittany Wenger:
And, on that uplifting note and image, I’m going to turn the floor over to you in the comments!
What’s on your blogging and reading list this Saturday?


















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