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9 votes
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Nutty Putty: ‘I really, really want to get out’
17 votes -
Alan Smithee - the director who doesn't exist
I just found out about this and it's something I guess I should have known about before. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Smithee Alan Smithee (also Allen Smithee) is an official pseudonym used...
I just found out about this and it's something I guess I should have known about before.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alan_Smithee
Alan Smithee (also Allen Smithee) is an official pseudonym used by film directors who wish to disown a project. Coined in 1968 and used until it was formally discontinued in 2000,[1] it was the sole pseudonym used by members of the Directors Guild of America (DGA) when a director, dissatisfied with the final product, proved to the satisfaction of a guild panel that he or she had not been able to exercise creative control over a film. The director was also required by guild rules not to discuss the circumstances leading to the movie or even to acknowledge being the project's director.
12 votes -
The Left Rights - I'M ON CRACK (2010)
6 votes -
Mortiferum - Archaic Vision Of Despair (2019)
5 votes -
Elizabeth Warren calls out Facebook for allowing lies in political ads by lying in a Facebook political ad
@juliacarriew: Elizabeth Warren is now running FB ads with a false statement about Mark Zuckerberg and FB endorsing Trump for president, to draw attention to FB's controversial policy allowing politicians to make false statements in ads. https://t.co/hulwrb3cc3
17 votes -
SEC files emergency action and obtains a temporary restraining order to halt Telegram's cryptocurrency token offering
6 votes -
A worst-possible wildfire scenario for Southern California
8 votes -
NASA aims for first manned SpaceX commercial crew mission in first-quarter 2020
6 votes -
For the first time in decades, EPA is overhauling how communities must test for lead in water
3 votes -
The most detailed map of auto emissions in America
5 votes -
Whistleblower explains how Cambridge Analytica helped fuel US 'insurgency'
3 votes -
One of forty-three allegations of sexual misconduct against Trump
8 votes -
An unseen victim of the college admissions scandal: The high school tennis champion aced out by a billionaire family
9 votes -
American Airlines delays 737 MAX’s return until January 2020, as grounding costs continue to mount
8 votes -
Turkey begins military offensive in Syria, days after Trump announced pullback of US troops
16 votes -
Robbie Basho - The Dharma Prince (1966)
6 votes -
GitHub and US Government developers
15 votes -
Mike James Kirkland - What Have We Done? (1972)
3 votes -
Chip Ganassi Racing expands to three cars with addition of Marcus Ericsson
3 votes -
Cosplayers who are not white, thin, or physically able thrive at NY ComicCon
9 votes -
China’s state TV network cancels all NBA broadcasts
14 votes -
President Trump's lawyers said the President and his administration won't cooperate in an ongoing impeachment inquiry
26 votes -
PG&E releases list of California cities, counties on power shut-off watch
10 votes -
How Boeing tried to kill a great airplane—and got outplayed
9 votes -
US blacklists Chinese tech firms over treatment of Uighurs
6 votes -
Stockton's basic income trial: Early results show how money is spent
6 votes -
Supreme Court allows blind people to sue retailers if their websites are not accessible
23 votes -
NSA whistleblower dropped from Australian cyber conference at the last minute
6 votes -
This coastal prefab stands tall above rising sea levels
6 votes -
Adobe is deactivating the accounts of all Venezuelan users with no refunds due to US sanctions
11 votes -
IRS: Sorry, but it’s just easier and cheaper to audit the poor
17 votes -
The strange, uncertain fate of one of the world’s most valuable salmon habitats
5 votes -
Senator calls on NBA to cancel games in China amid growing controversy
7 votes -
Liturgy - God of Love (2019)
3 votes -
"We are in a war zone against this disease.” Climate change is fueling fire blight, and Northern Michigan’s apple orchards are at risk
4 votes -
Exclusive: Official who heard call says US President Donald Trump got 'rolled' by Turkey and 'has no spine'
9 votes -
Houston Rockets GM Daryl Morey tweets support for Hong Kong protestors; Chinese Basketball Association responds by cutting ties with the Rockets
Apologies for the title, it's not worded that well but I don't know how to word it better. In addition to the CBA cutting ties with the Rockets, Tencent will no longer report on the team or show...
Apologies for the title, it's not worded that well but I don't know how to word it better. In addition to the CBA cutting ties with the Rockets, Tencent will no longer report on the team or show their games. The Rockets have been China's favorite NBA team ever since Yao Ming was drafted by them in 2002. He is now president of the CBA, but that doesn't say anything about what input he had into these decisions. The Rockets are also one of the main contenders for the championship going into this year since Russell Westbrook was traded to them over the summer. They also have the storyline of Westbrook and former teammate and longtime friend James Harden being reunited after three seasons together on the Oklahoma City Thunder.
Here are a few articles/references about the subject:
Tweets by Tencent's former Rockets reporter
ESPN article about team owner Tillman Fertitta tweeting disagreement with Morey
Edit to add another article: Chinese consulate in Houston statement
Nike pulled all Rockets gear from their Chinese web store
Rockets star James Harden says 'sorry' to China over Morey's tweet
NBA reporter Shams Charania says the league is not punishing Morey
16 votes -
Harry Dunn crash: Chief constable demands suspect's return to UK
4 votes -
Moving rocks by hand, Colorado volunteers strengthen eroding landscapes to help withstand climate change
7 votes -
US to step aside for Turkish assault on Kurds in Syria
17 votes -
The court allowed the FCC to kill net neutrality because washing machines can’t make phone calls
8 votes -
So I went along
Time for a story. Some of you might remember that I was planning on going abroad. I intended to visit New York City with one of my best friends, setting foot in the United States for the first...
Time for a story.
Some of you might remember that I was planning on going abroad. I intended to visit New York City with one of my best friends, setting foot in the United States for the first time in my life. I have had reservations about the actions and the state of politics of the US for a while, but I'm by no means an activist; I largely settle for small discussions regarding this topic, online or among friends. This means that I had not considered the current administration as a deterrent to my week-long trip.
For the sake of what I'm about to talk in the rest of this post, some additional personal details are needed for context. I am a EU citizen and a second-generation immigrant, child of a parent born in North Africa. I was fortunate enough not to have to go through having to acquire a "real" visa as my country is part of the ESTA program. This program is a fast track of sorts that allows a non-citizen to get clearance to get into the US by providing information through an online form. As I went through that automated process, I arrived at one step that worried me: they asked about being a citizen of another country. Now, I have both an EU ID and passport but I have double-nationality from my parent and so I also have ID and (an expired) passport from that country.
That country is not unstable or known to host terrorists or extremist organizations but I was wondering if I would be lumped in with immigrants from more troubled countries and so I hesitated to put that information at all. But then I figured that it would be a bad idea to lie and then have to explain why I lied if they figured out. And I didn't visit that country for a decade. So in the end I did input that info. This decision stayed with me and caused me anxiety until the end of the 72 hour waiting period. I thought about being denied while having already spent roughly a thousand bucks on the airplane ticket and the hotel. Fortunately in the end everything went through. That put my fears at ease.
Let us fast forward to the day of the trip. My friend and I had the good idea to stay up really late the night before even though our flight was outrageously early. I think I slept for 3 hours if that. And during the 8 hour flight I absolutely could not sleep despite my best efforts. This is just me setting the stage for some heavy sleep deprivation.
Arriving at JFK, we eventually stumble upon the horribly long queue for customs. When we got to an officer, my friend went first, giving his passport and scanning his fingerprints. I went just after him, doing the same. However, the officer seems to have an issue. They close their booth and ask me to follow them. My friend's watching and is like "wtf is going on", the only thing I manage to say is "welp later I guess", maybe not realizing what is going on.
My passport withheld, I'm led to a waiting room... and told to wait there, no reason given. The officer tells me that "it" should be quick. As I scan the room, I mostly see Arab or Asian people with an additional one or two white-passing people. I sit and get my phone out to message my friend where I am and what I was told, when an agent immediately tells me that no phone is allowed. I can only imagine how panicked my friend was getting at that point.
An hour passes.
With still no reason given for what I'm going to call an arrest, I then had had time enough time to see people go through, leave and for others to take their place all the while I listened to the officers talk to each other and interact with the visitors.
The ratio of people stayed mostly the same, meaning the majority was comprised of Arab and Asian people, roughly half didn't speak English at all. There were two types of processing. The first one was people waiting 20 minutes and getting called to a counter in the same room, getting their passport back and being allowed to leave. The second one was people waiting at least half an hour and getting summoned to go with an officer to an ominous corridor, staying at least half an hour and then being allowed to leave.
The officers at the counter chatted within themselves in a friendly manner, typing on their computer at the same time, a nice front immediately shattered by how they talked down to everyone. One elderly person went to get something in their luggage placed at the opposite end of the room when two officers yell at them to sit back down. An asian person was using their phone unaware of the restriction when an officer warns them: "Don't use your phone. Don't use your phone! Hey! Don't use your phone! Oh for the love of- DON'T. USE. YOUR. PHOOONE." Apparently talking slowly to a visitor in a foreign language means they can obviously understand what the office is saying and that they're just acting like they don't understand. And more variations of cliché American cop tropes.
A half hour passes - still no reason given.
My friend tries to approach the room to get information and I hear an officer asking firmly for him to go away. (Un)fortunately an officer finally summons me. They lead me into a room and I'm invited to sit down. The officer apologizes for the wait, and then begins an hour long interview. They are very friendly and ask what places I intend to visit, they ask me about my childhood, my parents, my relation to my other country, my education, my hobbies, my jobs. Then I'm asked to unlock my phone. They go through every app and ask me to explain what they all do. They capture my Facebook name, contact names, what is open in my browser, and more stuff that I can't see.
I cannot describe how distressing it is to see an officer of the law go through your phone. I could not predict if they would stumble problematic material or if they would interpret things the wrong way. This is why I hate people that say "oh I don't care about privacy, I've got nothing to hide". You think I have anything at all to hide?! I am a law-abiding citizen of my country, I have never harbored any intention of committing a crime in my entire life, I can't harm a fly for heaven's sake!
And finally after all of this I am allowed to go. I get to my friend and hug them and try to get out of this place as fast as possible.
Maybe you're wondering if I tried to oppose any of this? Hell no. Not using my phone, waiting without reason, giving an ungodly amount of personal information and give access to my phone to a stranger, I did not fight through any of this. Why? I was afraid. I was an alien going through customs in the Patriot Act era. It was very clear to me that if I tried to block any of this process I would not go out of that airport to the US. I have my principles in privacy, but I did not want to waste a literal thousand bucks and more of my time.
So I went along.
50 votes -
Why New York City stopped building subways
10 votes -
How important was "Moneyball" to the success of the 2002 Oakland A's?
6 votes -
The meaning of Donald Trump’s crazily damning self-defence
16 votes -
Second whistleblower comes forward after speaking with IG, has first-hand knowledge: Attorney
16 votes -
Ron Johnson says he was blocked by President Trump from telling Ukraine foreign aid was coming
11 votes -
Trump’s calls with foreign leaders have long worried aides, leaving some ‘genuinely horrified’
11 votes -
Bernie Sanders hospitalized for blocked artery, had two stents inserted; campaign events canceled until further notice
38 votes