Our Picks“Ghost Guns” Available Online | Calibrating Domestic Intelligence | What It’s Like to Fight a Megafire, and more

Published 15 November 2021

·  ‘Ghost Guns’: Firearm Kits Bought Online Fuel Epidemic of Violence

·  A ‘Truth Commission’: Paris Terror Trial Grips France

·  Canada Spy Service Increasingly Worried About Violent Online Rhetoric

·  Report: Hackers with China Ties Linked to Global Password Thefts

·  New Report: “Network of Networks: The Muslim Brotherhood in Europe”

·  Calibrating Domestic Intelligence at the 20-Year Mark

·  Video Games, Extremism and Terrorism: A Literature Survey

·  Politicians Face Violence and Threats from Voters—and Each Other. Are We Nearing a Civil War?

·  What It’s Like to Fight a Megafire

·  Personality Type, as well as Politics, Predicts Who Shares Fake News

‘Ghost Guns’: Firearm Kits Bought Online Fuel Epidemic of Violence  (Glenn Thrush, New York Times)
The untraceable weapons, assembled from parts, can be ordered with a click by children, gang members and felons. They are increasingly the lethal weapon of easy access around the U.S., but especially California.

A ‘Truth Commission’: Paris Terror Trial Grips France  (Financial Times)
François Hollande had just finished four hours of testimony in the terrorism trial of 20 men accused of carrying out the November 13 2015 attacks in Paris when one of them stood up as if to address the packed courtroom. It was Salah Abdeslam, the only surviving alleged member of the Isis-backed extremists who struck targets in the French capital, killing 130 people. A showdown loomed between the former president and the defendant, who had earlier in the trial justified the attacks as a moral response to French air strikes in Syria and blamed Hollande directly for them. “Ah no, Mr Abdeslam, if you have questions you can go through your lawyers!” Jean-Louis Périès, the presiding judge, interjected to cut short the confrontation and end a marathon day of hearings. Hollande’s presence and his stand-off with one of the alleged protagonists encapsulated how the criminal trial, now in its third month, has been acting as a cathartic moment for France. Not only is the country trying the individuals accused of the attacks at the Bataclan theatre, café terraces and Stade de France, it is also having a public reckoning over the events, and the damage they inflicted on French society. A purpose-built courtroom in a heavily fortified Palais de Justice in Paris has become a stage for the accused, investigators, survivors and politicians in power at the time to give testimony, and for experts in psychology and sociology to explain the context.”

Canada Spy Service Increasingly Worried About Violent Online Rhetoric  (Reuters, VOA News)
Canada’s spy service said on Friday it was increasingly concerned about the rise of violent ideologically motivated online rhetoric, which it blamed in part on tensions caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
The Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) said since the start of the pandemic, threats posed by extremists had “evolved with unprecedented multiplicity and fluidity.” (Cont.)