French revolt over Edvige: Nicolas Sarkozy’s Big Brother spy computer

President Nicolas Sarkozy faced an embarrassing split in his Cabinet today over a computer system that a new French internal intelligence service will use to spy on the private lives of millions of law-abiding citizens.

Hervé Morin, the Defence Minister, broke government ranks to side with a growing revolt against Edvige, an acronym for a police database that will store personal details including opinions, the social circle and even sexual preferences of more or less anyone who interests the State.

Edvige, which is also a woman’s name, was created by decree in July to store data on anyone aged 13 or above who is “likely to breach public order”.

“Sarkozy’s Big Sister”, as it has been dubbed, will also track anyone active in politics or trade unions and in a significant role in business, the media, entertainment or social or religious institutions. Listed people will have limited rights to consult their files.

“Surely this is a strange mixing up of categories,” said Mr Morin, who was a senior centrist party MP until he joined the Cabinet of Mr Sarkozy last year.

“Is it useful to gather data such as telephone numbers, sexual orientation and details of taxes and assets and so on without knowing exactly what is the point?” he asked.

Mr Morin was slapped down by Michèle Alliot-Marie, the Interior Minister, who heads Mr Sarkozy’s drive to implement the law-and-order pledges of his 2007 election campaign. “It is odd that Mr Morin has not managed to find my telephone number,” she said. “I would have set his mind at rest.”

The Government is depicting Edvige as a modernised version of the files that have long been gathered by officers of the Renseignements Généraux (RG). This police intelligence service has acted as the eyes and the ears of the state, spying on citizens under various names since it was created by Joseph Fouché, Napoleon Bonaparte’s police chief. Civil liberties groups said that the RG has files on 20 million people.

The police spy service, whose officers snoop in cafés, work places, housing estates and union meetings, was amalgamated this year with the DST (Departement du Surveillance du Territoire), the counter-espionage and anti-terrorist agency that equates to Britain’s MI5. Edvige will be the main tool of the new combined super-agency, called the Direction Centrale du Renseignement Intérieur (Central Directorate of Internal Intelligence).

The anti-Edvige opposition started after the National Commission on Information Technology and Freedom (CNIL), the data privacy watchdog, forced the Government to publish the secret decree that created Edvige in July. This alerted rights groups to the potentially vast scope of the network, whose full name is Exploitation Documentaire et Valorisation de l’Information Générale.

“With just a few clicks of the mouse, any government official or civil servant will have access to intimate data,” said Francois Bayrou, leader of the centrist MoDem party and a fierce opponent of President Sarkozy. The Socialist party demanded that the Government put the system under judicial supervision.

Michel Pezet, a former member of the CNIL agency, said: “The Edvige database has no place in a democracy. There is nothing in the decree that sets limits or a framework. Whether the database is used with or without moderation depends only on orders from up high. The electronic Bastille is upon us.”

Hundreds of associations, including the main judges’ union, civil liberties defenders, gay rights groups and leftwing lawyers have joined the anti-Edvige mutiny. Fifteen lawsuits have been filed against it at the Conseil d’Etat, the highest civil court, and an online petition has gathered more than 100,000 signatures.

Most newspapers — with the exception of the pro-Sarkozy Le Figaro — have joined the anti-Edvige campaign. “The defence of public order cannot justify such a threat to individual liberties,” said Le Monde. The newspaper L’Alsace said: “Under the allure of a woman’s Christian name, it is the continuation of Fouché’s tradition with a data network.”

Defenders of Edvige pointed out that everyone is electronically tracked these days and that people volunteer their biographies and private details on Facebook and other networking sites.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article4703054.ece

Update on Dr. Paul’s Special Annoucement

Friends,
I just sent this release to the national wire.

Ron Paul to Hold Major
Press Conference Wednesday

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: Jesse Benton
September 8, 2008

ALEXANDRIA, VIRGINIA – Congressman Ron Paul will hold a press conference in the Ball Room at the National Press Club on Wednesday, September 10th at 10:00 am. Dr. Paul will announce his intentions for the fall presidential election and will be accompanied by several special guests.

This event comes on the heels of Dr. Paul’s historic three-day Rally for the Republic in Minneapolis, Minnesota that drew over 12,000 supporters.

http://www.campaignforliberty.com/blog/?p=471

HERE WE GO. Scientists Await Start-up Of Large Hadron Collider

*Certain or uncertain doom, who knows?*

ScienceDaily (Sep. 8, 2008) — The moment that James Pilcher has been waiting for since 1994 will arrive at 1:30 a.m. CDT on Wednesday, Sept. 10, when the world’s largest scientific instrument is scheduled to begin operation.

Pilcher is among six University of Chicago faculty members and more than a dozen research scientists and students, both graduate and undergraduate, who have contributed to the design and construction of the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, the particle physics laboratory in Geneva, Switzerland.

“This year, more than 11 of us will be in residence full-time at CERN, and the rest will be in Chicago,” said Pilcher, Professor in Physics. Along with Indiana University, the University of Chicago also houses a computing center that will support LHC data analysis for various Midwestern institutions.

Physicists at Chicago and elsewhere built the particle detector for the ATLAS (A Toroidal LHC ApparatuS) experiment at LHC, with the search for the Higgs boson and supersymmetry in mind. Theoretically speaking, the long-sought Higgs boson is the particle that endows all objects in the universe with mass. Evidence of supersymmetric particles, meanwhile, could provide an understanding of the dark matter, which makes up about a quarter of the mass of the universe.

Pilcher has been involved with ATLAS since 1994, first in its design, then in the search for funding, and finally in its construction and assembly. He served as chair of the experiment’s 150-institution collaboration board in 2000 and 2001.

“Now our team is working to get all parts of the detector working together and to be ready to analyze the first data this fall. It’s gratifying that we will finally be doing science soon after all these preliminaries,” Pilcher wrote via e-mail from Geneva.

LHC scientists and engineers injected the first protons into the accelerator during two weekend sessions in August. During these tests, the proton beam traveled around only part of the collider, which measures approximately 17 miles in circumference.

“On Sept. 10, the plan is to try and take both beams around the full machine,” Pilcher said. “Of course, after that, there is still a lot of work and tuning before physics can start.”

The preparations remind Mel Shochet, the Elaine M. and Samuel D. Kersten Jr. Distinguished Service Professor in Physics, of the early 1970s, before the accelerator was turned on at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. “There is enormous anticipation of finding phenomena never before seen,” said Shochet, a member of the ATLAS collaboration.

But the process involves more than pressing the “on” button and making instant discoveries. “Turning on, understanding and optimizing the performance of the accelerator and the detectors will take hard work and time. That effort will pay off in the years ahead as important scientific discoveries are made.”

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/09/080908140102.htm

Lou Dobbs’ Independent Convention

Lou Dobbs Tonight
Monday, September 8, 2008

Today, Lou Dobbs Tonight kicks off its week-long Independent
Convention. All week, we’ll be focusing on the issues ignored
by the major party candidates—the issues that matter to
ordinary Americans. Here are some of the stories we’ll be
reporting on:

* With four months left of the Bush Administration, lots of
executive branch officials have left early, and several
agencies have been gutted by turmoil, scandal, and
resignations. As long as American workers are paying their
taxes, shouldn’t their government be working for them?

* Democrats and Republicans have been ignoring the needs of
middle class families and have become too beholden to special
interests. In 1998, there were 10,000 registered lobbyists.
Today there are more than 17,000, each doling out contributions
lawmakers in exchange for influence. Independent candidates are
saying enough is enough. One such candidate is David Krikorian
from Ohio. He is running as an Independent, non-party candidate
because he says he intends to serve the people, not a political
party and not special interests.

* With the large number of new voter registrations this
election year, there is a growing potential for voter fraud.
Studies from the Heritage foundation, Demos, and the Government
Accountability Office all suggest that some people are
registering despite not being eligible to vote in this country.
We’ll take a closer look.

Lou’s nationally-syndicated talk radio show, The Lou Dobbs
Show, debuted this spring. Join us weekdays from 3-6 p.m.
Eastern for a look at news and politics aimed at independent
thinkers. Visit LouDobbsRadio.com to check your local listings
or listen live online.

Today, with the election less than two months away, we’ll be
talking politics with Ken Walsh, who covers the White House for
U.S. News & World Report. GOP strategist Ron Kauffman will
recap the Republican convention. John Avalon, author of
“Independent Nation: How the Vital Center is Changing American
Politics” will offer a few thoughts on both parties’ efforts to
reach out to centrist voters. And as always, Lou will be taking
your calls on the Independent Hotline at 877-55 DOBBS.

Lou’s book INDEPENDENTS DAY is now on sale in bookstores and on
Amazon.com and BarnesandNoble.com. In Independents Day, Lou
issues a rallying cry to American citizens eager for a change,
focusing particularly on the critical issues and challenges of
the 2008 election.

Check out the completely re-designed
http://www.loudobbs.com, featuring the latest
updates on Lou’s TV and radio shows, audio and video clips,
written commentary and more.

Kenya turns white in freak storm

PARTS of Kenya have been turned white following a massive hailstorm, stunning residents who have never experienced such freak weather conditions before.

The country, which is situated on the Equator, has seen hailstorms before but the ferocity of this one, 158 miles north west of the capital was unprecedented.

There have been reports that villagers have been eating the ice that has fallen over 30 acres from the sky and have pelted each other with snowballs. “We thought a big white sheet had been spread, so we decided to come and see for ourselves. We thought it was Jesus who had come back,” one villager is reported as saying.

“We have never seen anything like this. We like the ice so much because with the sun being hot, you take it and you feel satisfied,” another resident has said.

Weather experts said the storm was caused by the convergence of cold air from the Indian Ocean and warm air from the Congo.

http://www.clitheroeadvertiser.co.uk/strange-but-true/Kenya-turns-white-in-freak.4455946.jp

Palin believes protection of Israel is a `biblical imperative’

Washington, Sept.4 (ANI): Alaska Governor and Republican vice-presidential nominee Sarah Palin may never have been to Israel, but according to sources close to her, she is a staunch supporter of the Israeli cause, making her a favorite with the staunchly pro-Israel neo-conservative elements in the Republican Party.

According to the Washington Times, most Republicans and conservatives outside Alaska know little about Palin’s foreign policy views, but Palin’s counselor Tucker Eskew, leaves no one in doubt about where she stands.

“She would describe herself as a strong supporter of Israel’s, with an understanding of Israel’s fear of an Iran in possession of nuclear weapons,” Eskew told The Washington Times.

Palin’s brand of evangelical Protestantism is especially well disposed to the preservation of Israel for biblical reasons, said Merrill Matthews, an evangelical Christian and a Dallas-based health-policy specialist.

Palin was baptized as a teenager at the Wasilla Assembly of God Church. She frequently attends the Juneau Christian Center, which is also part of the Pentecostal Assemblies of God. Her home church is the Church of the Rock, an independent congregation.

Meanwhile, she is getting rave reviews from Jewish Republicans.

“The fact that she keeps the flag of Israel in her office means she has Israel in her heart. I am confident the Jewish community will be impressed with the strong pro-Israel views of Governor Palin as she begins to travel the country and … discuss the critical issues in this campaign,” one Jewish republican was quoted, as saying. (ANI)

http://in.news.yahoo.com/139/20080904/888/twl-palin-believes-protection-of-israel.html

Super-smasher targets massive mystery

MEYRIN, Switzerland – In the beginning was the big bang.

God may have been around before then — but as far as scientists are concerned, the big bang is as far back as they can go. And to get back there, they’re getting ready to blast subatomic particles so energetically that the extreme conditions of the freshly born universe will be re-created on Earth.

Will those “little big bangs” crack age-old scientific mysteries? Or, despite repeated assurances from the world’s top experts, will they create black holes that could gobble up the planet? After decades of preparation, scientists are finally switching on a machine that will separate the facts from what is plainly science fiction.

The machine is the $10 billion Large Hadron Collider, or LHC — the most powerful, most expensive particle-blaster ever invented. On Wednesday, Europe’s CERN particle-physics lab is due to start shooting beams of protons through the LHC’s 17-mile-round (27-kilometer-round) ring of tunnels beneath the French-Swiss border.

It will take months for the machine to reach full power. But eventually, those protons will be whipped up to 99.999999 percent of the speed of light, slamming together with the energy of two bullet trains colliding head-on. Underground detectors as big as cathedrals will track the subatomic wreckage on a time scale of billionths of a second. Billions of bits of data will be sent out every second for analysis.

As big as the numbers surrounding the LHC are, the mysteries it was built to address are bigger:
What was the newborn universe made of?
What causes things to have mass?
Why is most of that mass hidden?
Where did all the antimatter go?
Is our entire universe a mere sliver of all that is?

“The LHC is the most powerful microscope that’s ever been built,” said John Ellis, a theoretical physicist here at CERN. “It will be able to explore the inner structure of matter on a scale that is 10 times smaller than anyone’s been able to do before.”

Ellis said the LHC also serves as “the most powerful telescope ever built,” even though it looks inward rather than outward.

“We know that the way elementary particles interacted with each other controlled the very early universe,” he explained. “So with the LHC we are able to, in some sense, re-create the conditions that existed in the universe when it was just a fraction of a second old — the sort of thing that the optical telescopes just can’t see.”

What’s the point?
Past experiments in particle physics have yielded scores of practical spin-offs, ranging from new medical therapies to high-tech industrial materials — and even the World Wide Web, which you’re using to read this report. But the potential for spin-offs isn’t why more than 10,000 researchers around the world are looking forward so anxiously to the LHC.

“People ever since the ancient Greeks – and probably a long time before that – have wanted to understand how matter is made up, how it behaves, where the universe comes from,” said Ellis, surrounded in his office by stacks of research papers. “And so we are responding to that continuing human urge.”

The quest is not without controversy: Scientists say there’s a chance that the LHC could create microscopic black holes, a phenomenon never before observed on Earth. They hasten to add that the tiny singularities will instantly pop out of existence, but that hasn’t stopped critics from trying to block the collider’s startup. Two of the critics have filed suit in federal court in Hawaii, seeking the suspension of LHC operations until more studies are done.

Responding to the critics, CERN has issued a series of reports explaining why the LHC will pose no threat. Ellis was one of the report’s authors. “If the LHC were to make microscopic black holes, it would be tremendously exciting — and no danger,” he said.

The 62-year-old London native has spent more than half his life at CERN, delving into topics ranging from dark matter to the theory of everything. Once the LHC is up and running, he expects to find out whether the theories he and other physicists have developed over all those years lead to solid evidence — or lead to a scientific dead end.

“Theoretically, that would be the most interesting possibility, because it would really mean that we had to tear up our notebooks of the last 45 years and start more or less from scratch,” Ellis said.

The God Particle
The theory described in all those notebooks is known as the Standard Model, which ranks among the scientific world’s most successful theories. The Standard Model lays out a menagerie of subatomic particles and their interactions — and provides the basis for inventions ranging from television sets to microwave ovens to nuclear bombs.

Only one elementary particle predicted by the Standard Model has not yet been detected: the Higgs boson, which is thought to interact with other particles to give them mass. Without the Higgs, the big bang might have been an insubstantial flash in the pan — all energy, and no mass. Or so the theory goes.

The elusive Higgs boson looms so large as a gap in the Standard Model that Nobel-winning physicist Leon Lederman wrote a book about it called “The God Particle.” (He joked that he wanted to call it the “Goddamn Particle,” but his editor wouldn’t let him.)

“This is in some sense the holy grail of particle physics, to find this missing link in the Standard Model,” Ellis said. “So that’s one thing that we’re really looking forward to with the LHC. In fact, back when we persuaded the politicians to stump up the money to build the thing, that’s probably what we told them.”

Not even the LHC will be able to spot the Higgs boson directly. Instead, physicists will have to infer its existence through an analysis of the other particles that should be created when it decays. It’s not an easy task, but Ellis believes the evidence should turn up within a year or two of the machine’s startup.

Even that won’t mark the end of the quest. Ellis compared the Higgs boson to a doorway that should lead beyond the Standard Model.

“I don’t think that the Higgs door, if you like, is just closing off the room, and there is nothing beyond,” he said. “I believe there’s going to be a lot more physics beyond. What it’s going to be, I don’t know. Maybe it’s supersymmetry. Maybe space has additional dimensions. Maybe it’s something that we haven’t thought of yet. I certainly hope it’s something we haven’t thought of yet. It would be great to come across a real surprise.”

But Ellis and his colleagues at CERN have two nagging concerns in the back of their minds: What if somebody else finds the magic door first? Or what if they spent all these billions of dollars and there’s no Higgs particle at all?

A competitive twist
Fifteen years ago, when Leon Lederman wrote “The God Particle,” he thought the Higgs boson would be found in the Superconducting Super Collider, a project that was just getting started in Texas. That machine would have been four times as powerful as the LHC — but when the costs started running far beyond the initial estimates, Congress killed the program.

Over the decade that followed, U.S. scientists weren’t just waiting for the LHC to be built: The focus shifted to the Tevatron collider at Fermilab in Illinois, which theorists figured might have just enough punch to pick up the Higgs’ trail.

Last year, researchers at Fermilab passed the word that they had found some interesting data — readings that hinted at the presence of the Higgs but weren’t yet solid enough to publish. That added a competitive twist to the grail quest.

“The longer we wait, the higher the probability that Fermilab discovers something that we wouldn’t mind discovering ourselves here,” Jos Engelen, CERN’s chief scientific officer and deputy director general, said last year.

Beyond the God Particle
What if physicists don’t find the God Particle they are expecting to see? Ellis acknowledged that was a possibility. “This might be a little bit difficult to explain to our politicians, that here they gave us 10 billion of whatever, your favorite currency unit, and we didn’t find the Higgs boson,” he said.

But Ellis has faith that even then, there’d be something to discover — maybe something even weirder and more wonderful than the Higgs boson.

“Probably the most likely option then might be extra dimensions,” Ellis said. “And there are some ideas where if you have some additional dimensions of space, you could somehow do the job that the Higgs does in the Standard Model.”

For years, string theorists have noted that their equations come out better if they assume that the universe has nine or 10 spatial dimensions instead of the three we can perceive. The LHC could provide the first evidence of those extra dimensions: Some theorists say the collisions could produce anomalously heavy particles, suggesting that part of their momentum was going into the extradimensional realm. Harvard physicist Lisa Randall estimates that the LHC could nail down the evidence for extra dimensions in five years.

Other theorists have focused on the idea that every subatomic particle should have an as-yet-undetected “supersymmetric” partner that mirrors many of the characteristics of the particles we know, but is dramatically different in other respects. The partners would have greater masses and a different spin, for example.

To date, no actual evidence of supersymmetry has been found. But if supersymmetric particles don’t exist, then a lot of the theories that look beyond the Standard Model would have to be thrown out.

If supersymmetric particles do exist, they could account for a large part of the universe’s dark matter. That’s the 90 percent of all matter that scientists can detect only by its gravitational effect — a puzzle that has bedeviled astronomers for decades. “There are good reasons to think that these dark matter particles, if they exist, will be observable in the LHC,” Ellis said.

Exploring the big-bang frontier
One of the LHC’s detectors, known as ALICE, is devoted to studying the stuff that the universe was made of less than a billionth of a second after the big bang. Earlier experiments have hinted that the stuff was a super-hot liquid consisting of subatomic particles known as quarks and gluons.

For one month out of every year, the LHC will switch from smashing protons to smashing heavy lead ions, in an effort to re-create that quark-gluon soup and let ALICE analyze the recipe.

Yet another detector, LHCb, will study the tracks of particles containing specific types of quarks and antiquarks. The Standard Model predicts that equal amounts of matter and antimatter should have been produced in the big bang — but today, we see hardly any antimatter in nature. That’s a good thing, because matter and antimatter annihilate each other when they come in contact, leaving pure energy behind.

LHCb will follow up on earlier experiments that suggest matter won out over antimatter because they somehow decay in different ways.

And then there are the wild cards in the deck: Could the LHC really create black holes or exotic forms of matter? What about all these claims that the world is in peril?

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/24525554/