NYC Harvard Club Book Promotion – “Surveillance State: Inside China’s Quest to Launch a New Era of Social Control”

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SHORT-FUSE NOTICE

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EXPLANATION

Occasionally, a Proposed Topic for Future Meetings has a SHORT-TIME FUSE because a governmental unit is soliciting PUBLIC COMMENTS for a limited time period with a SPECIFIED DEADLINE.

Exhibit A would be the 8/5/2016 Proposed Topic entitled “Clone Rights -- Involuntary Soldiers, Sex Slaves, Human Lab Rats, Etc.”

We had already focused on this topic for our 4/9/2008 meeting more than 8 years ago when the PBS Newshour interviewed a Yale U. Biology Professor who had already created a “Chimaera” with 25% Human DNA and 75% Chimp DNA (Chimps are the animals that share the most DNA with humans).

The Yale U. Biology Professor stated that he was then (2008) in the process of creating a “Chimaera” with 50% Human DNA and 50% Chimp DNA, and that he planned to create in the near future (2008 et seq.) a “Chimaera” with 75% Human DNA and 25% Chimp DNA.

As our 4/9/2008 meeting materials posted on http://www.ReadingLiberally-SaltLake.org disclose, Gwen Ifill who conducted the interview, was oblivious to the issue of the Nazi’s definition of a Jew based on the percentage of Jewish heritage and the Ante-Bellum American South’s definition of African-American based on the percentage of Sub-Saharan-African heritage.

But, even more appallingly, Gwen Ifill failed to ask the obvious question = What happens if the 50%-50% “Chimaera” then already being created happens to exhibit as DOMINANT TRAITS 100% Human DNA and as RECESSIVE TRAITS 100% Chimp DNA!!! Which, of course, would mean that Yale U. was treating as a lab rat a “Chimaera” that is 100% Human!!!

Unfortunately, the 8/5/2016 Proposed Topic was prompted by a Proposal from the National Institute of Health (NIH) which appeared in The Federal Register of 8/5/2016 and which had a 9/6/2016 deadline for public comments!!!

So our 9/14/2016 meeting, which was the first for which our focus had not already been determined as of 8/5/2016 under our normal rules, was too late.

So the reason for inaugurating this Short-Fuse Notice Section is to provide a Special Heads Up that a Proposed Topic has a Public-Comment Deadline that will occur before the first regular meeting date at which the topic can be discussed -- so that any of our readers who want to comply with the Public-Comment Deadline can contact the Proposer of the Topic in order to confer with anyone else who may be considering comments by the deadline.

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PENDING SHORT-FUSE PROPOSALS

1. Re “Clone Rights -- Involuntary Soldiers, Sex Slaves, Human Lab Rats, Etc.” (proposed 8/5/2016), although the 9/6/2016 public-comment deadline of the National Institute of Health (NIH) has passed, this Topic Proposal is still active. PLEASE NOTE ATTACHED TO THIS PROPOSAL THE 1/29/2017 UPDATE ENTITLED0 “HUMAN-PIG CHIMERAS -- DECENT BEHAVIOR DESPITE OPEN BARN DOOR.”

2. Re “Destroying Great Salt Lake To Grow Low-Profit Hay For China” (proposed 9/27/2016), there is a 10/24/2016 public-comment deadline that will occur before our first possible regular meeting (11/16/2016) at which this Proposed Topic could be considered.
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johnkarls
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Joined: Fri Jun 29, 2007 8:43 pm

NYC Harvard Club Book Promotion – “Surveillance State: Inside China’s Quest to Launch a New Era of Social Control”

Post by johnkarls »

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I propose that we read “Surveillance State: Inside China’s Quest to Launch a New Era of Social Control” by Josh Chin and Liza Lin (St. Martin’s Press – Hard Copy 9/6/2022 & Paperback 4/2/2024 – 320 pages but probably many fewer sans notes & index – Hardcover $15.71 + shipping or Paperback $16.39 + shipping or $12.99 Kindle from Amazon.com).


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THE HARVARD CLUB OF NYC CONDUCTED A ZOOM WEBINAR WITH THE AUTHORS ON 8/20/2024 WHICH COMPRISED A 30-MINUTE PRESENTATION FOLLOWED BY 30 MINUTES OF Q&A.

RECORDINGS OF SUCH WEBINARS ARE AVAILABLE ON THE CLUB’S WEBSITE FOR A LIMITED PERIOD – IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO ACCESS THE RECORDING AND ARE NOT A MEMBER, PLEASE CONTACT ReadingLiberally-SaltLake@johnkarls.com AND I WILL ARRANGE FOR YOU TO ACCESS IT IF IT IS STILL AVAILABLE.


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NYC Harvard Club Notice –

ZOOM – Surveillance State: China and the Technology Used to Track Everyone
Tuesday, August 20 @ 07:00 pm – 08:00 pm ET

Join us for a compelling discussion on the implications of modern surveillance technology with authors Josh Chin and Liza Lin, as they present their thought-provoking book, Surveillance State. Explore the promises and perils of a world where surveillance is omnipresent, affecting everything from our smartphones to social media. Engage in a dialogue about the balance between state control and individual liberty, the impact on privacy, and the future of our digital society.

Josh Chin is deputy bureau chief responsible for politics and general news in The Wall Street Journal’s China bureau, and Liza Lin covers technology news for The Wall Street Journal from Singapore, focusing on China and the internet. Together, they co-authored Surveillance State: Inside China’s Quest to Launch a New Era of Social Control. Josh is a recipient of the Dan Bolles Medal and the Gerald Loeb Award for international reporting, while Liza has received awards from the New York Press Club and the Society of Publishers in Asia. Both are acclaimed journalists recognized for their in-depth reporting on China’s surveillance state, with Liza also being a Fulbright Scholar and an International Trade Fellow with the National Press Foundation.

Mark Martinez, Program Committee


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Book Description per Amazon.com (usually quoting from the book’s dust jacket)

Where is the line between digital utopia and digital police state?

Surveillance State tells the gripping, startling, and detailed story of how China’s Communist Party is building a new kind of political control: shaping the will of the people through the sophisticated―and often brutal―harnessing of data.

It is a story born in Silicon Valley and America’s “War on Terror,” and now playing out in alarming ways on China’s remote Central Asian frontier. As ethnic minorities in a border region strain against Party control, China’s leaders have built a dystopian police state that keeps millions under the constant gaze of security forces armed with AI. But across the country in the city of Hangzhou, the government is weaving a digital utopia, where technology helps optimize everything from traffic patterns to food safety to emergency response.

Award-winning journalists Josh Chin and Liza Lin take readers on a journey through the new world China is building within its borders, and beyond. Telling harrowing stories of the people and families affected by the Party’s ambitions, Surveillance State reveals a future that is already underway―a new society engineered around the power of digital surveillance.


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Author Bios per Amazon.com

JOSH CHIN is Deputy Bureau Chief in China for the Wall Street Journal. He previously covered politics and tech in China as a reporter of the newspaper for more than a decade. He led an investigative team that won the Gerald Loeb Award for international reporting in 2018 for a series exposing the Chinese government’s pioneering embrace of digital surveillance. He was named a National Fellow at New America in 2020 and is a recipient of the Dan Bolles Medal, awarded to investigative journalists who have exhibited courage in standing up against intimidation. Surveillance State is his first book. Born in Utah, he currently splits time between Seoul and Taiwan.

LIZA LIN works as the journalist covering data use and privacy for the Wall Street Journal from Singapore. Liza was part of the team that won the Loeb in 2018. Prior to the Wall Street Journal, Liza spent nine years at Bloomberg News and Bloomberg Television. Surveillance State is her first book.


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Book Review Excerpts per Amazon.com (though order modified)

"[A] deeply researched account of how the Chinese government has been using technology to shape its citizens according to its policies since the Cultural Revolution...This is both a granular and a big-picture look at how today’s Chinese Communist Party has flipped the Cold War debate over civil liberties and state control on its head."
―New York Times

"In Surveillance State, Wall Street Journal reporters Josh Chin and Liza Lin reveal just how far Xi and the Communist Party have gone in deploying surveillance technology to rein in the population."
―Washington Post

“[E]ssential reading not only because of what it tells us about China ― and Chin and Lin have gathered spine-chilling material at great personal risk ― but also because of what it tells us about the rest of the world.”
―Bloomberg

“Surveillance State is an engrossing account of how, and why, the technology has become so pervasive.”
―The Economist

"A truly groundbreaking investigation . . . The global scope and deep detail of [Chin and Lin's] account retires the notion of an 'all-seeing' surveillance as some future scenario; it is happening already. They will open your eyes to the astonishing intersection of data, politics, and the human body. Anyone who cares about the future of technology, of China, or of free will cannot afford to miss this."
―Evan Osnos, The New Yorker

“Josh Chin and Liza Lin show how some of Silicon Valley's most celebrated advances, along with some of its most exalted companies, have enabled a vast experiment in Chinese social engineering that is terrifying and seductive in equal measure. Surveillance technologies, both inside China and around the world, are creating an alternative to the liberal order far more swiftly than most people believe. This book gives us a vital glimpse into what might replace it.”
―Anne Applebaum, author of Twilight of Democracy

"Surveillance State could not be more timely, both as a gripping, suspense-filled tale of what is actually happening to Uyghurs in China and as a description of digital dictatorship that makes abstractions like predictive analytics, facial and voice recognition technology, and integrated information systems terrifyingly concrete. People and governments in open societies need to see what is at stake in the decisions we make about how to balance liberty and security in the digital age; this book brings those choices home."
―Anne-Marie Slaughter, CEO of New America

“Surveillance State tackles a critical global issue―how rapidly growing surveillance of all kinds is implicated in struggles for democracy and against authoritarianism…the authors offer a careful and thoughtful, ambitious and journalistic analysis of how excessive and illiberal surveillance is expanding, and must be confronted everywhere. Engaging everyday stories of real people bring this urgent issue freshly to light.”
―David Lyon, author of Pandemic Surveillance

“There hardly is any Uyghur person in the Region who has not been subjected to the oppressive and systematic tactics of this high-tech war that the CCP has waged against its own citizens. Josh Chin and Liza Lin’s book reminds us how easily a state actor can quietly and stealthily take control of its people. As Uyghurs, we know this well. But to the rest of the world, Surveillance State should serve as a wake-up call.”
―Jewher Ilham, author of Because I Have To

“This book is written for the future. It reveals beyond dispute the murky and distorted world we are about to face. Dictatorship and Big Data are closely intertwined. They surveil, control, and remold every individual―all this constitutes a vast, inescapable prison that leaves nowhere to hide, a sort of demonic laboratory…Left unchecked, it will push the rest of the world sliding into an abyss."
―Murong Xuecun, author of Deadly Quiet City

“Surveillance State is a cautionary book. It is fairhanded in detailing the rapacious speed at which China has constructed a model of digital authoritarianism other countries are no doubt eager to learn from. Its value is in showing how such surveillance systems are only as good (or bad) as the people who build them.”
―NPR

“[A] rigorous and alarming study of how the Chinese Communist Party uses surveillance technology to monitor residents and quell dissent.…This wide-ranging and deeply informed study offers crucial insights into the rising threat of digital surveillance.”
―Publishers Weekly

“A study of the Chinese government’s sweeping surveillance program.…The underside of digital technology on full, frightening display.”
―Kirkus Reviews

"Essential reading for those interested in modern China."
―Library Journal

“Building on years of reporting across the country, Chin and Lin explore the CCP’s attempts to harness Big Data and near ubiquitous surveillance networks to scrutinize, track, and even pre-empt the demands of Chinese citizens.”
―The New Statesman

“Josh Chin and Liza Lin's hard-hitting new book, ‘Surveillance State: Inside China’s Quest to Launch a New Era of Social Control,’ superbly narrates what living under China's omnipresent surveillance apparatus means on a human level.”
―The Courier-Journal

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