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10 votes
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The founders of this new Arkansas development say you must be white to live there
24 votes -
Six months into tariffs, US businesses have no idea how to price anything
29 votes -
Gavin Newsom, California lawmakers strike deal that would allow Uber, Lyft drivers to unionize
30 votes -
Donald Trump administration issues stop-work order for US offshore wind project
29 votes -
US government snaps up 10% of Intel for $8.9B
38 votes -
Bluesky will block Mississippi IP addresses in response to its age assurance law
50 votes -
The crisis of the US university started long before Donald Trump
32 votes -
US Supreme Court allows Mississippi social media age verification law to go into effect
24 votes -
Meta appoints anti-LGBTQ+ conspiracy theorist Robby Starbuck as AI bias advisor
29 votes -
Nvidia, AMD agree to pay US government 15% of AI chip sales to China
21 votes -
Ørsted plans to raise $9bn in rights issue to shore up finances – world's biggest offshore wind developer has been battered by high interest rates and Donald Trump administration's opposition
6 votes -
Donald Trump administration to boost US private equity with new 401(k) order
24 votes -
Donald Trump administration proposes regulatory changes that threaten every unfinished wind project in the US
18 votes -
Make electricity cheap again (part 1)
7 votes -
Panama Playlists — Examining the listening habits of celebrities, journalists, and politicians by scraping their Spotify accounts
16 votes -
US federal government ends information delivery contract critical to hurricane forecasting
20 votes -
South Park mocks Donald Trump
88 votes -
The End Kidney Deaths Act
13 votes -
Why free buses in NYC could backfire horribly
24 votes -
US Federal Communications Commission approves Paramount-Skydance merger following protracted political tug-of-war
15 votes -
Malaysia no longer takes US plastic waste, creating a dilemma for California
42 votes -
The obvious reason the US should not vaccinate like Denmark – it isn't Denmark
6 votes -
UK government seeks way out of clash with US over Apple encryption
15 votes -
Radio geeks reveal how to access crucial hurricane data after US Department of Defense cut it off
29 votes -
A huge fight looms over the NASA budget this fall
26 votes -
US will begin charging some tourists a $250 ‘visa integrity fee’
36 votes -
Global hack on Microsoft SharePoint hits US, state agencies, researchers say
37 votes -
What's next for public television and radio in the US after Republicans strip funding?
21 votes -
Who'all remembers the A-bomb Kid? Guess what he's doing today...
I didn't know where to categorize this. It's not current, kinda politics, kinda tech, kinda a lot of things, but mostly I guess, I was just freaked out and wanted to share/discuss. I read about...
I didn't know where to categorize this. It's not current, kinda politics, kinda tech, kinda a lot of things, but mostly I guess, I was just freaked out and wanted to share/discuss.
I read about this guy 40-50 years ago in The Readers Digest, have never heard anything about him since then, until the other day, a forum chat reminded me and I went rabbit-holing...
John Aristotle Phillips did an independent research project for his Physics degree at Princeton, on how to build a simple nuclear explosive device, including explicit instructions on how and why and etc. His larger goal was to help stop nuclear material proliferation by showing that there were no "secrets" left, no tech hurdles for anyone with a brain, except that of actually acquiring weapons-grade material.
His advisor was no less than Freeman Dyson, who gave him an 'A' and then immediately pulled the paper out of circulation. A couple months later, the Pakistani govt called Phillips, asking to buy a copy of his paper.
So, that's the background. It was his claim to fame back in the '70s.
From there, he went into politics, and etc etc, long story short, he's a top data broker. For decades now, he has been the CEO of one of the biggest US data trawling corporations, holding detailed personal info on at least 175M Americans (as of 2007 - doubtless, it's more today), which they use to help get politicians elected.
"Aristotle has served every occupant of the White House since Ronald Reagan, and consults for several top political action committees."
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Aristotle_Phillips#Aristotle,_Inc.
Perhaps unsurprisingly for someone who's devoted his life to gathering info about other people, there doesn't seem to be all that much out there about him or his company.
So, my gut tells me he has become "a bad guy", just my automatic reaction to anyone who deals in this field ... But, IDK, bigger picture is just, I don't know how to process this info. Maybe there's nothing to process, it is what it is.
IDK. Just looking for other people's perspectives, I guess.
23 votes -
Transit passes are better but free fares are good too
29 votes -
Nebraska sues neighboring Colorado over how much water it’s drawing from the South Platte River
19 votes -
A company tried to put real estate on the Blockchain and now it's facing a lawsuit from the city of Detroit
21 votes -
Data manipulation within the US Federal government
21 votes -
Why US anti-trans campaigns keep returning to the politics of meat
21 votes -
US National Institutes of Health suspends dozens of pathogen studies over ‘gain-of-function’ concerns
32 votes -
Why America built a forest from Canada to Texas
14 votes -
American Academy of Pediatrics (AAP) suing Health and Human Services (HHS) secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. over vaccine policy
30 votes -
The deportation campaigns of the Great Depression
24 votes -
The American civil-military relationship
13 votes -
The Donald Trump tariffs aren't causing US prices to spike. Here's why.
9 votes -
With their rights in peril, US LGBTQ+ comedians are using humor to dilute fear
12 votes -
Managers say they are having trouble finding candidates for nearly 400,000 US manufacturing and technical jobs
37 votes -
Zohran Mamdani’s logo looked nothing like a logo: The bodega-influenced visual language of an outsider campaign for mayor of New York City
32 votes -
US Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac ordered to consider crypto as an asset when making decisions about mortgages
13 votes -
Puerto Rico’s solar microgrids power through blackout meanwhile, feds redirect $365 million away from solar toward grid fixes
12 votes -
The plan to vaccinate all Americans, despite Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
28 votes -
Juneteenth: A visual history
13 votes -
US Supreme Court upholds Tennessee ban on youth gender-affirming care
34 votes -
Trans people can obtain US passport that aligns with their gender identity, judge rules
37 votes