Fighting the Surveillance State Begins with the Individual
Fed up with the state's surveillance regime? There are ways to use available technology to frustrate government efforts to spy on you.
Fed up with the state's surveillance regime? There are ways to use available technology to frustrate government efforts to spy on you.
While Israel receives praise for being a "democracy" in the undemocratic Middle East, its surveillance policies mirror those of China, which is decidedly not democratic.
Governments regularly suppress freedom—yet few complain. One wonders if Stockholm syndrome is at work.
This latest Middle East conflict is ultimately little more than gang warfare. We oppose it as a matter of principle.
Under the guise of "modernizing" communications, the Canadian government is vastly expanding its power to regulate social media and threaten free speech.
While Hillary Clinton’s call to have Trump supporters “deprogrammed” has been met with snickers, her attitude is in line with most of this country’s governing elites.
Naomi Wolf has taken on the American medical bureaucracy for its lies and malpractice in dealing with covid.
Some small municipalities in Pennsylvania have disbanded their police departments, so others want to tax them for “depending” on state police. There is an even better course of action: allow private policing.
Fed up with the state's surveilance regime? There are ways to use available technology to frustrate government efforts to spy on you.
Governments are using intimidation to regulate independent journalists on the decentralized internet.