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Rational Security

The "Eldritch Portents" Edition

Rational Security

The Lawfare Institute

Foreignpolicy, Nationalsecurity, News, Government, Politics, Middleeast

4.82K Ratings

🗓️ 11 April 2024

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

This week, Alan and Quinta were joined again by Brookings Senior Fellow and Lawfare Senior Editor Molly Reynolds to talk over the week’s national security news, including:

  • “The 702nd Time’s the Charm?” Section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act was originally set to expire on December 31, 2023. But somehow, Congress has managed to keep kicking the can down the road—and we’re once again in the middle of an argument about whether and to what extent the legislature should reform the bulk surveillance authority. How did we end up here, and is there any indication that Congress will manage to pass a lasting reauthorization in some form this time around?
  • “Magic Mike.” Speaker of the House Mike Johnson’s troubles don’t stop with FISA, however. He’s also tangled up in a prolonged dispute with his caucus over the U.S. aid to Ukraine—which is becoming a matter of rapidly increasing urgency, with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky warning that his country “will lose the war” if the aid is not approved. Johnson now says he’ll put his own aid package on the table, still tying that aid to another tranche of aid to Israel. But will the House actually vote this time, or is this just another head fake?
  • “Finally, We Can Talk About Linux.” A few weeks ago, a single software engineer alerted the world to an alarming discovery: malicious code inside a key piece of Linux software that, had it gone undetected, could have caused a catastrophic cyberattack. What on earth actually happened here? And what could stop it from happening again?

For object lessons, Alan recommended an adorable giraffe growth chart for keeping track of your child's height. Quinta took a cue from Molly and endorsed a podcast by a local NPR affiliate—“Lost Patients,” a series about mental health care from KUOW and the Seattle Times. And Molly shared a story about misprinted pens from the Clinton impeachment trial, as told in Peter Baker’s book "The Breach."

Other references from this week’s show:

  • A chart explaining how dark it gets during a total solar eclipse
  • Bruce Schneier’s Lawfare article about the XZ Utils backdoor




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Transcript

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0:00.0

What was the totality situation in Minnesota on?

0:05.0

It was super lame. I mean we weren't in the path of the totality and it was super

0:09.7

overcast. So like you couldn't... We basically got there was zero there was there was nothing

0:14.4

Bupkis which was which was unfortunate though though it meant that my wife and I could

0:19.4

take mid-afternoon naps without feeling too bad that we were missing out on anything.

0:24.0

What about you guys?

0:25.0

I think here it was like 87% coverage.

0:30.5

Maximum at 320 PM. Yeah. What does what does that mean like like I mean presumably the effect is not linear right like so actually I found a very cool graph that basically shows brightness against time toward totality

0:48.0

which is not not linear it looks kind of like a log graph actually.

0:55.0

Yeah, I assume.

0:56.0

But especially because your eyes adjust to the change in brightness initially, like as it gets

1:02.4

slightly darker and then as it approaches totality it gets

1:06.4

rapidly dark very very quickly so not only is it like really dark but your

1:11.2

eyes haven't your pupils haven't adjusted. So it's those like last couple of percent of like really

1:15.0

like really, oh my God the world is ending.

1:18.0

Yeah, basically.

1:19.0

I had family up in Vermont for totality and apparently it was pretty cool.

1:26.7

If you had asked me before the eclipse like how many people do you know who are going to travel to be in the path of totality?

1:35.0

I don't know what I would have told you, but it almost certainly...

1:38.0

I would have said zero.

1:40.0

Because it turns out I knew many people who made this choice.

1:45.0

Yeah. Most of them, I think including our fine law fair colleague Hayman,

...

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