WikiLeaks Is Almost Entirely Out of Money, Still Not Leaking

It’s been a very long time since WikiLeaks was in the news for anything other than Julian Assange’s drawn-out extradition battle (he’s still waiting on Ecuador, chilling at their embassy), but another constant has been its cash woes. The group blames the money issues on an “unlawful financial blockade” by Visa and Mastercard, and decided last year to “temporarily suspend its publishing operations” to focus on fund-raising. More than six months later, the whistle-blowing site has reopened its donation system through a French company, but things are getting dire.

The Wall Street Journal reports today that WikiLeaks managed to spend in the neighborhood of $300,000 in the first half of 2012, but took in just about $40,000 in donations, leaving their cash reserves somewhere around $100,000. That will all be gone “within a few months,” the site said, unless faithful souls deliver “a minimum of €1 million immediately” so that WikiLeaks can “effectively continue its mission.” Good luck with that — maybe throw in a tote bag?

Read more posts by Joe Coscarelli

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via Daily Intel http://nymag.com/daily/intel/2012/07/wikileaks-almost-entirely-out-of-money.html

The Lego Wire

Marissa Mayer has only been CEO at Yahoo! for a day and she’s already creating viral content like a stop motion Lego version of The Wire. Imagine what we’ll get when she’s been there a week.

Audible guffaws at, “What’s up his ass?” “No one likes our season, that’s what.” (via @jonahkeri)

Tags: Legos   The Wire   TV   video

via kottke.org http://kottke.org/12/07/the-lego-wire

China’s Faux Marriage Frenzy

The closet’s corrosive effects are alive and well in China, where an estimated 70% of gay men marry women to satisfy parental expectations. While most of these marriages involve unwitting straight women, some of them are consensual, often conducted via a gay men-lesbian matchmaking site with some 153,000 members. The personal account of one of such couple:

Zhuang Xiang, a 30-year-old accountant from Shanghai, came to understand why he was drawn to boys when he was 17. On flicking through a gay comic book in a shop, he had his great “a-ha!” moment. He met his boyfriend in 2004. And then he married his lesbian wife in 2009. He and his wife don’t live together, but they visit each other’s parents once a week. Mr Zhuang even keeps some of her clothes on display at home, in case of unannounced visitors.

Mr Zhuang says he is lucky to live in a big city like Shanghai, where such a solution is possible. But he wants to live in a country where gay men are accepted. His parents have started to talk about a grandchild. Mr Zhuang and his lesbian wife will likely get a forged certificate of infertility. Keeping up the appearance of their marriage feels like a never-ending battle, he says. But sometimes lies are more sensible than the truth.

The Dish noted the practice awhile back.

via The Daily Dish | By Andrew Sullivan http://andrewsullivan.thedailybeast.com/2012/07/chinas-faux-marriage-epidemic.html?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+andrewsullivan%2FrApM+%28The+Daily+Dish%29

Punishing Cheaters: Are We the Dark Knight—Or Just Dark?

From Science:

ManIf you could confront the pickpocket who ripped you off in the subway, would you simply demand your wallet back, or would you seek vengeance? Your decision to punish the thief might hinge on whether the thief ended up richer than you, a new study suggests. According to most economic theories, self-interest is the prime motivator in human behavior. However, studies show that people consistently sacrifice their own welfare to punish cheats. For example, in a classic economic experiment called the “ultimatum game,” one person holds a certain number of dollars and can offer as many as she likes to a second player. If the second player rejects the offer, the first player loses everything. Rather than accepting any offer, the second player will consistently reject low offers, preferring to receive nothing than to allow her rival to retain the larger sum. In 1999, Swiss economists Ernst Fehr and Klaus Schmidt defined this spiteful reaction toward cheats and freeloaders as “inequity aversion.” They hypothesized that such behavior is essential for cooperation and bargaining, and that it is separate from the desire for revenge, or “reciprocity,” as social scientists call it. However, says Fehr, it isn’t easy to tease apart the two motivations in experiments, much less real life. “This is a long-standing question that has not been answered to our full satisfaction.”

More here.

via 3quarksdaily http://www.3quarksdaily.com/3quarksdaily/2012/07/punishing-cheaters-are-we-the-dark-knightor-just-dark.html

Next iPhone Slims Down

The screen on Apple’s next iPhone model integrates touch sensors into the LCD, making the whole screen thinner and improving the display quality.

via WSJ.com: Today's Most Popular http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702303754904577532121136436182.html?mod=rss_Today’s_Most_Popular

The Elton-Rush Limbaugh bond

The performer talks about his unlikely friendship.

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via POLITICO Top Stories http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0712/78587.html

Mitt ad pulled from YouTube

A record label requests the removal because of a snippet of Obama singing ‘Let’s Stay Together.’

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via POLITICO Top Stories http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0712/78585.html

Is Romney Overreacting to Bain Attacks?

There’s still not much evidence that the Bain attacks have hurt Mitt Romney’s standing with voters. But the Romney campaign’s response could change that.

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://fivethirtyeight.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/07/17/is-romney-overreacting-to-bain-attacks/

The Fraught Politics of the Medicaid Expansion in 1 Interactive Map

The states that have vowed to refuse federal money to cover the poor also have the highest rates of uninsured residents.

Here’s a hard truth about the Supreme Court’s decision on the Affordable Care Act: The people who are going to suffer most from it are the people who need the help most.

To see why, look at this map from our friends at the Advisory Board (larger version here). One key element of the ACA was to expand Medicaid to cover everyone who wasn’t covered by Medicare but made as much as 133 percent of the federal poverty level. That was meant to fill the gap for people who couldn’t afford insurance, but were deemed to be poor enough to exempt from the penalty for not holding insurance, even with a subsidy (that penalty is the one that the Court found was a tax). But the justices ruled that the expansion was unconstitutional because it rested upon coercion: The federal government can’t force the states to take money and spend it on the expansion.

That means that each state can decide whether it wants to opt into the expansion and receive billions of dollars to expand coverage, with the risk that federal support will fall below the threshold of 90 percent of cost after 2020 (you can find a little more technical detail, but not too much, on this Kaiser Family Foundation fact sheet).

Now, for reasons that range from cost concerns to partisan grandstanding, a variety of governors are rejecting the expansion or threatening to do so. Some say they’re concerned that their states will be left with an unmanageable bill in the future; others are rejecting it purely because they disapprove of expanded government involvement in health-care provision.

What this map makes clear is the rather strong correlation between high rates of uninsured residents and states that have rejected or seem likely to reject the Medicaid expansion. You can click on each state to find out where it stands on the law. The five states that have definitively ruled out the expansion — Texas, Florida, South Carolina, Mississippi, and Louisiana — all have a population that’s 20 percent or higher uninsured. All five also joined the lawsuits against the ACA and have Republican governors and legislatures. Elsewhere, California, which also has a high rate of uninsured (and is run by Democrat Jerry Brown) has announced it will participate in the expansion; Arkansas is leaning toward it (believe it or not, the state has a Democratic governor and legislature). Meanwhile several of the states with the lowest rates of uninsured, such as Minnesota and Vermont, have committed to the expansion. So has Massachusetts, which has among the lowest rates of uninsured in the nation — thanks to a landmark health-care overhaul led by the state’s previous governor, a man named Mitt Romney.

If President Obama is reelected, or if the GOP fails to effectively repeal Obamacare, it will be interesting to see the longer-term results of these choices. Many analysts seem convinced that every state will eventually give in and accept the expansion, finding they can’t just leave all that money on the table. But what if they don’t? Will there be a gradual but inexorable migration of lower-income citizens to states that expand Medicaid? Will states that refuse the expansion develop a sort of permanent medical underclass? Or will those governments eventually devise some sort of alternative system?

As the old saying goes, only time will tell.

via Politics : The Atlantic http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2012/07/the-fraught-politics-of-the-medicaid-expansion-in-1-interactive-map/259892/

The Super PAC That Aims to End Super PACs

Jonathan Soros, the son of the liberal financier George Soros, has started a new Super PAC directed at lessening the impact of Super PACs.

via NYT > Most Recent Headlines http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/07/17/the-super-pac-that-aims-to-end-super-pacs/