[ IMAGES: Images ON turn off | ACCOUNT: User Status is LOCKED why? ]

Bush reelected :-(
Author Thread
Marv
Posts: 35540
Alba Posts: 69
Joined: 9/2/2002
Member: #315
4/28/2006  10:12 PM
http://select.nytimes.com/2006/04/28/opinion/28krugman.html?hp=&pagewanted=print

April 28, 2006
Op-Ed Columnist
The Crony Fairy

By PAUL KRUGMAN
The U.S. government is being stalked by an invisible bandit, the Crony Fairy, who visits key agencies by dead of night, snatches away qualified people and replaces them with unqualified political appointees. There's no way to catch or stop the Crony Fairy, so our only hope is to change the agencies' names. That way she might get confused, and leave our government able to function.

That, at least, is how I interpret the report on responses to Hurricane Katrina that was just released by the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs.

The report points out that the Federal Emergency Management Agency "had been operating at a more than 15 percent staff-vacancy rate for over a year before Katrina struck" — that means many of the people who knew what they were doing had left. And it adds that "FEMA's senior political appointees ... had little or no prior relevant emergency-management experience."

But the report says nothing about what caused the qualified people to leave and who appointed unqualified people to take their place. There's no hint that, say, President Bush might have had any role. So those political appointees must have been installed by the Crony Fairy.

Rather than trying to fix FEMA, the report calls for replacing it with a new organization, the National Preparedness and Response Agency. As far as I can tell, the new agency would have exactly the same responsibilities as FEMA. But "senior N.P.R.A. officials would be selected from the ranks of professionals with experience in crisis management." I guess it's impossible to select qualified people to run FEMA; if you try, the Crony Fairy will spirit them away and replace them with Michael Brown. But she might not know her way to N.P.R.A.

O.K., enough sarcasm. Let's talk about the history of FEMA.

In the early 1990's, FEMA's reputation was as bad as it is today. It was a dumping ground for political cronies, headed by a man whose only apparent qualification for the job was that he was a close friend of the first President Bush's chief of staff. FEMA's response to Hurricane Andrew in 1992 perfectly foreshadowed Katrina: the agency took three days to arrive on the scene, and when it did, it proved utterly incompetent.

Many people thought that FEMA was a lost cause. But Bill Clinton proved them wrong. He appointed qualified people to lead the agency and gave them leeway to hire other qualified people, and within a year FEMA's morale and performance had soared. For the rest of the Clinton years, FEMA was among the most highly regarded agencies in the federal government.

What happened to that reputation? The answer, of course, is that the second President Bush returned to his father's practices. Once again, FEMA became a dumping ground for cronies, and many of the good people who had come in during the Clinton years left. It took only a few years to transform one of the best agencies in the U.S. government into what Senator Susan Collins calls "a shambles and beyond repair."

In other words, the Crony Fairy is named George W. Bush.

So what's the point of creating a new agency to replace FEMA? The history of FEMA and other agencies during the Clinton years shows that a president who is serious about governing can rebuild effective government without renaming the boxes on the organizational chart.

On the other hand, the history of the Bush administration, from the botched reconstruction of Iraq to the botched start-up of the prescription drug program, shows that a president who isn't serious about governing, who prizes loyalty and personal connections over competence, can quickly reduce the government of the world's most powerful nation to third-world levels of ineffectiveness.

And bear in mind that Mr. Bush's pattern of cronyism didn't change after Katrina. For example, he appointed Julie Myers, the inexperienced niece of Gen. Richard Myers, to head Immigration and Customs Enforcement — an agency that, like FEMA, is supposed to protect us against terrorism as well as other threats. Even at the C.I.A., the administration seems more interested in purging Democrats than in improving the quality of intelligence.

So let's skip the name change for FEMA, O.K.? The United States will regain effective government if and when it gets a president who cares more about serving the nation than about rewarding his friends and scoring political points. That's at least a thousand days away. Meanwhile, don't count on FEMA, or on any other government agency, to do its job.
AUTOADVERT
MaTT4281
Posts: 34894
Alba Posts: 4
Joined: 1/16/2004
Member: #538
USA
4/29/2006  2:33 AM
921
Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268
USA
4/29/2006  8:58 PM
Posted by Marv:

The United States will regain effective government if and when it gets a president who cares more about serving the nation than about rewarding his friends and scoring political points. That's at least a thousand days away.
Its 921 days, not "atleast a thousand" like the article says. MaTT's been counting. Marv, awesome article. This line is so fitting of this thread. Its as if it was written by MaTT.

Good stuff. This "Crony Fairy" type of stuff always paves the way for corruption. Its going to take a while to clean up what the Bush administration will do in their 8 years of power.
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268
USA
4/29/2006  9:07 PM
I wasnt around when watergate happened but was the Nixon presidency as bad or worse?

Losing cause in Iraq, no control over Iran, hiring incompetant friends and allowing disasters like Katrina, no sign of Bin Laden, PHONE TAPPING, gas prices at record high, almost sold our ports to the enemy, outing a CIA undercover agent, 9/11 allegations, Halliburton and Rumsfeld! I'm just getting into politics so I'm not sure but has it ever been this bad?
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Marv
Posts: 35540
Alba Posts: 69
Joined: 9/2/2002
Member: #315
4/29/2006  9:38 PM
Posted by Silverfuel:
Posted by Marv:

The United States will regain effective government if and when it gets a president who cares more about serving the nation than about rewarding his friends and scoring political points. That's at least a thousand days away.
Its 921 days, not "atleast a thousand" like the article says. MaTT's been counting. Marv, awesome article. This line is so fitting of this thread. Its as if it was written by MaTT.

Good stuff. This "Crony Fairy" type of stuff always paves the way for corruption. Its going to take a while to clean up what the Bush administration will do in their 8 years of power.

I'll go with the lower number any day!

"You're doing a heck of a job, Brownie!" It's as disingenuous of a satement as the one Dolan made to Larry!
Marv
Posts: 35540
Alba Posts: 69
Joined: 9/2/2002
Member: #315
4/29/2006  9:47 PM
Posted by Silverfuel:

I wasnt around when watergate happened but was the Nixon presidency as bad or worse?

Losing cause in Iraq, no control over Iran, hiring incompetant friends and allowing disasters like Katrina, no sign of Bin Laden, PHONE TAPPING, gas prices at record high, almost sold our ports to the enemy, outing a CIA undercover agent, 9/11 allegations, Halliburton and Rumsfeld! I'm just getting into politics so I'm not sure but has it ever been this bad?

I'd say Nixon was worse. He greaty escalated the war in VIetnam, resulting in just a SICK number of deaths. Plus all sorts of illegal bombing runs in other parts of SE Asia. Had his "enemies' list," where he sicced any federal agencies at his disposal on the people who didn't support him. Turned the Army loose to open fire on college students protesting against the war. Did all sorts of illegal wireetaps. And of course covered up the Watergate break-in.

Silver, this guy truly polarized the nation. Even deeper than the red state/blue state thing today. I was in college when he resigned, and the feeling was of ultimate triumph. We felt like we had done it - actually excercised the power of the poeple to overthrow a corrupt dictator. It was unreal. Plus being against Nixon got you laid big time!
Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268
USA
4/29/2006  10:05 PM
^Wow, thanks Marv.
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Marv
Posts: 35540
Alba Posts: 69
Joined: 9/2/2002
Member: #315
4/30/2006  9:45 AM
This is a very interesting article on Freud's view of fundamentalists, dictators and tyrants. Belongs in the Bush thread for obvious reasons!

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/30/magazine/30wwln_lede.html?_r=1&oref=slogin&pagewanted=print

April 30, 2006
The Way We Live Now
Freud and the Fundamentalist Urge

By MARK EDMUNDSON
To most of us, Sigmund Freud, who was born 150 years ago next Saturday, is known chiefly as a provocative and highly controversial student of individual psychology. He is the man who theorized the unconscious and the Oedipus complex. What is less well known — and now perhaps more important — is that Freud devoted the final, and maybe most fruitful, phase of his career to reflections on culture and politics. In his later work, Freud brought forward striking ideas about the inner dynamics of political life in general and of tyranny in particular.

Adolf Hitler, who rolled into Freud's home city of Vienna on March 14, 1938, preceded by thousands of troops, was no surprise to Sigmund Freud. Nor would the many forms of tyrannical fundamentalism that have grown up in Hitler's wake and have extended into the 21st century have shocked him very much. In books like "Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego" and "Totem and Taboo," Freud predicted Hitler and his descendants almost perfectly. Now, in an age threatened by fundamentalisms of many sorts, Freud's thinking may be more usefully illuminating than ever before.

It is possible that Hitler and Freud actually encountered each other. Hitler spent some of the unhappiest years of his life in Vienna, just before the beginning of World War I. He had come to the great city with hope of becoming a major artist, but he was rejected from art school, not once but twice. In short order, he ran out of money and was reduced to sleeping in doorways and even to begging from time to time. If Hitler and Freud had passed each other on the streets of Vienna, after Freud's return from his highly successful 1909 trip to America, Freud would have seen a street rat, a rank denizen of the mob. (Freud was no populist.) Hitler would have seen a Viennese burgher (he despised the upper middle class) and probably would have identified Freud as a Jew as well. Hitler would perhaps have drawn back in shame at his threadbare overcoat and his broken shoes. Though he might, if things were bad enough, have extended his hand to beg. Whether Freud gave or not (he could well have; he was generally good-hearted) would have made no difference; the encounter would still have left young Adolf seething.

In March 1938, the street rat was back, in full dress uniform, riding through the center of Vienna in an open-topped Mercedes, holding onto the windshield with his left hand and with his right giving the salute to thousands of Viennese citizens, greeting the absorption of their small country into the Reich with howls of joy. ("Finis Austriae," Freud wrote in his diary that March.) Now Hitler was in robust middle age; Sigmund Freud was 81 and desperately ill with the cancer of the jaw that would, in London, a year and a half later, end his life.

Freud, sick as he was during the early spring of 1938, generally refused to take any medication stronger than aspirin. He wanted to think and to write, and for that he needed to keep his mind clear. He stayed away from morphine and from liquor. But staying away from intoxicants and keeping his mind clear meant more than that to Freud. It meant staying away from religion (Freud was a lifelong atheist); it meant staying away from romantic love (Freud called it "the overestimation of the erotic object") and it meant staying away from the kind of politics embodied by the onetime street rat now traversing Vienna in his Mercedes. Why were people so potently and ruinously drawn to Hitler and to all of the other agents of collective intoxication on offer in the world? Freud believed that he knew.

t the center of Freud's work lies a fundamental perception: human beings are not generally unified creatures. Our psyches are not whole, but divided into parts, and those parts are usually in conflict with one another. The id, or the "it," is an agent of pure desire: it wants and wants and does not readily take no for an answer. The superego, or over-I, is the internal agent of authority. It often looks harshly upon the id and its manifold wants. The superego, in fact, frequently punishes the self simply for wishing for forbidden things, even if the self does not act on those wishes at all. Then there is the ego, trying to broker between the it and the over-I, and doing so with the greatest of difficulty, in part because both agencies tend to operate outside the circle of the ego's awareness. The over-I and the it often function unconsciously. Add to this problem the fact that "the poor ego," as Freud often calls it, must navigate a frequently hostile outside world, and it is easy to see how, for Freud, life is best defined as ongoing conflict. In a passage in "The Ego and the Id," Freud observes that the ego is a "poor creature owing service to three masters and consequently menaced by three dangers: from the external world, from the libido of the id and from the severity of the superego. Three kinds of anxiety correspond to these three dangers, since anxiety is the expression of a retreat from danger."

About this conflict — about this painful anxiety — what is to be done? Humanity, Freud says, has come up with many different solutions to the problem of internal conflict and the pain it inevitably brings. Most of these solutions, Freud thinks, are best described as forms of intoxication. What the intoxicants in question generally do is to revise the superego to make it more bearable. We like to have one glass of wine, then two, Freud suggests, because for some reason — he's not quite sure what it is in scientific terms — alcohol relaxes the demands of the over-I. Falling in love, Freud (and a thousand or so years of Western poetry) attests, has a similar effect. Love — romantic love, the full-out passionate variety — allows the ego to be dominated by the wishes and judgment of the beloved, not by the wishes of the demanding over-I. The beloved supplants the over-I, at least for a while, and, if all is going well, sheds glorious approval on the beloved and so creates a feeling of almost magical well-being. Take a drink (or two), take a lover, and suddenly the internal conflict in the psyche calms down. A divided being becomes a whole, united and (temporarily) happier one.

Freud had no compunction in calling the relationship that crowds forge with an absolute leader an erotic one. (In this he was seconded by Hitler, who suggested that in his speeches he made love to the German masses.) What happens when members of the crowd are "hypnotized" (that is the word Freud uses) by a tyrant? The tyrant takes the place of the over-I, and for a variety of reasons, he stays there. What he offers to individuals is a new, psychological dispensation. Where the individual superego is inconsistent and often inaccessible because it is unconscious, the collective superego, the leader, is clear and absolute in his values. By promulgating one code — one fundamental way of being — he wipes away the differences between different people, with different codes and different values, which are a source of anxiety to the psyche. Now we all love the fatherland, believe in the folk, blame the Jews, have a grand imperial destiny. The tyrant is also, in his way, permissive. Where the original superego has prohibited violence and theft and destruction, the new superego, the leader, allows for it, albeit under prescribed circumstances. Freud's major insistence as a theorist of group behavior is on the centrality of the leader and the dynamics of his relation to the group. In this he sees himself as pressing beyond the thinking of predecessors like the French writer Gustave Le Bon, who, to Freud's way of thinking, overemphasized the determining power of the group mind. To Freud, crowds on their own can be dangerous, but they only constitute a long-term brutal threat when a certain sort of figure takes over the superego slot in ways that are both prohibitive and permissive.

As the Nazis arrived in Vienna, many gentile Viennese, who had apparently been tolerant and cosmopolitan people, turned on their Jewish neighbors. They broke into Jewish apartments and stole what they wanted to. They trashed Jewish shops. They made Jews scrub liberal political slogans off the sidewalk, first with brushes and later with their hands. And they did all of this with a sense of righteous conviction — they were operating in accord with the new cultural superego, epitomized by the former corporal and dispatch runner, Adolf Hitler.

On the day after Hitler arrived in Vienna, a gang of Nazis stormed into Freud's apartment, at 19 Berggasse. They ransacked the place and made off with a fairly large sum of money. ("I never got so much for a single session," Freud, never at a loss, observed.) They only left, it is said, when the old man, trembling and frail, appeared from out of his consulting room and fixed them in his long-practiced stare. The Nazis, the story continues, scrambled for the door.


In his last days, Freud became increasingly concerned about our longing for inner peace — our longing, in particular, to replace our old, inconsistent and often inscrutable over-I with something clearer, simpler and ultimately more permissive. We want a strong man with a simple doctrine that accounts for our sufferings, identifies our enemies, focuses our energies and gives us, more enduringly than wine or even love, a sense of being whole. This man, as Freud says in his great book on politics, "Group Psychology and the Analysis of the Ego," must appear completely masterful. He must seem to have perfect confidence, to need no one and to be entirely sufficient unto himself. Sometimes this man will evoke a god as his source of authority, sometimes not. But in whatever form he comes — whether he is called Hitler, Stalin, Mao — he will promise to deliver people from their confusion and to dispense unity and purpose where before there were only fracture and incessant anxiety. But, of course, the price is likely to be high, because the simplifications the great man offers will almost inevitably involve hatred and violence.

Freud's implicit morality is counterintuitive. Though Freud acknowledged the uses of mild intoxicants like love and art, he was nonetheless extremely suspicious of any doctrine or activity that promised to unify the psyche — or to unify the nation, the people — without remainder and to do so forever. Freud believed that the inner tensions that we experience are by and large necessary tensions, not because they are so enjoyable in themselves — they are not — but because the alternatives to them are so much worse. For Freud, a healthy psyche is not always a psyche that feels good. For Herbert Marcuse, author of a brilliant meditation on Freud, "Eros and Civilization," Freud's politics are potentially the politics of ecstasy. We can collectively undo our repressions and regress toward collective erotic bliss. For Philip Rieff, author of the equally perceptive and original "Freud: The Mind of the Moralist," Freud appears to be a deep political pessimist who thinks that the healthiest individuals will probably be those who turn completely away from politics. But another way to look at Freud is to see him as someone who suggests that a considerable measure of freedom and even relative happiness can come from following a self-aware middle way. If we are willing to live with some inner tension, political as well as personal, we need never be overwhelmed by tyranny or fall into the anarchy that giving into the unconscious completely can bring.

For Freud, we might infer, a healthy body politic is one that allows for a good deal of continuing tension. A healthy polis is one that it doesn't always feel good to be a part of. There's too much argument, controversy, difference. But in that difference, annoying and difficult as it may be, lies the community's well-being. When a relatively free nation is threatened by terrorists with totalitarian goals, as ours is now, there is, of course, an urge to come together and to fight back by any means necessary. But the danger is that in fighting back we will become just as fierce, monolithic and, in the worst sense, as unified as our foes. We will seek our own great man; we will be blind to his foibles; we will stop questioning, stop arguing. When that happens, a war of fundamentalisms has begun, and of that war there can be no victor.

Mark Edmundson teaches English at the University of Virginia. He is currently completing a book about the last two years of Freud's life.


Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company
Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268
USA
4/30/2006  2:29 PM
That was a very good read Marv. Freud was something else. I needed to read some of the stuff twice just make sure I got all of it. I'm in awe of the guy Marv. I always wonder what makes people so much smarter than everyone else around them. Father of modern Psychology indeed!

Does Freud's Ego, Superego and id really apply to our times? Maybe I'm being naive and a bit ethnocentric in a way but I dont think we as a society will follow our great man blindly. I dont think our society (NY, NJ & CT) has that fundamentalist urge. Have I completely misunderstood what Edmundson is trying to say? I really dont see the parallel.
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Marv
Posts: 35540
Alba Posts: 69
Joined: 9/2/2002
Member: #315
4/30/2006  7:26 PM
Silver I'm with you on Freud. Guy was just an inspired genius.

Here's what I take from from Edmundson - when we feel threatened by terrorism, we're going to want protection, security, annihilation of the enemy (action of the id). At the same time we're going to have part of us thinking you can't just destroy other people, you have to think these things through and try to figure out solutions (the superego). This creates a lot of inner tension and discomfort, both wanting to feel safe by destroying the enemy and also wanting to do the "right thing." So what this lays us opon to, is a charismatic fatherly figure who will tell us it's GOOD to attack and destroy the enemy. We're doing it in the name of demoracy, it's all OK, TRUST ME, you don't have to be conflicted or feel bad about this. You can have your cake (security) and eat it too (sense of moral superiority).

Now, Bush as a father figure??? Well check this out -

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/04/30/weekinreview/30reading3.html?pagewanted=print
April 30, 2006
The Reading File
What 'I' Means

In The Chronicle of Higher Education, James M. Breslow reports on a paper published in The Journal of Research in Personality, which suggests that one advantage President Bush had over Senator John F. Kerry in the 2004 election was that he sounded older and less depressed.

In the 2004 presidential campaign, President Bush was often described as coming across like a cowboy, while his challenger, Senator John F. Kerry, was labeled a flip-flopper. An analysis of the candidates' linguistic styles, however, shows the president spoke more like an older person, while Senator Kerry spoke like a depressed person, says Richard B. Slatcher, a doctoral candidate at the University of Texas at Austin.

Aided by three other researchers, Mr. Slatcher used a computerized text-analysis program to measure how the candidates for president and vice president differed in the linguistic patterns associated with cognitive complexity, femininity, depression, age, presidentiality and honesty.

Mr. Slatcher says the president's language was most like that of an older person, because, as people do when they age, he used fewer first-person singular words, more positive-emotion words, and had "a greater focus on the future." ...

Mr. Kerry's style was more like someone suffering from depression, Mr. Slatcher says, because of his high use of first-person singular words, physical words like "ache" and negative-emotion words like "hate," along with low use of positive-emotion words, like "happy."

Copyright 2006 The New York Times Company

Interesting, huh? So Bush co-opts peoples' superego functions and makes them feel like it's okay to suspend thinking and doubting for themselves and worrying about dealing with all their messy little conflicts. No surprise that Bush keeps pushing a "with me or against me - with our troops or against our troops - with democracy or against democracy - agenda. Keep it simple and promise deliverance from conflict.

Now SIlver as for your question about our society (NY, NJ & CT) not having that fundamentalist urge- you're an enlightened man and you question yourself and the world around you. Fortuntatelty we live in a section of the country where there's enough of that going on. But we're a minority, for sure. When I speak to people from other parts of the country, I can't tell you how many times I encounter the question, "How can you guys in NY be against Bush when he's watching your backs?" Always a depressing question to have to field.

Anyways, thanks for reading that article and commenting!
Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268
USA
4/30/2006  10:03 PM
Wow. I was real off on Edmundson. That makes a lot of sense and I agree with it for the most part. Isnt that kind of like the 'Milgram experiment'? I guess I didnt want to see it that way with Bush was because I would be saying he is "our great man" or "fatherly figure". I didnt want to give him the credit of doing that. I should stop underestimating him. He is after all, smart enough to be in power through two terms. And that Bush/Kerry style comparision is good stuff! I should get more into psychology to start reading into stuff like that.

And actually, I brought up the tri-state area mainly because I believe this is what all the states will become eventually. My family has strong ties to India which gives me the opportunity to look at the US from that angle. In India atleast, the US has always been represented by either New York or Hollywood. For almost anyone from South-east Asia, it starts and ends in the two big cities, both being cultural hubs. I think thats how people in Iowa and Montana will start doing as well. ESPN, MTV and Optimum Online will export New York and LA to Iowa and Montana. I think or atleast I hope the entire country will make a transition towards being liberal. Any chance this will happen? Am I just being naive?

P.S: I agree that people from some other parts of the country dont understand why we dont have faith in Bush and this just sad.
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
MaTT4281
Posts: 34894
Alba Posts: 4
Joined: 1/16/2004
Member: #538
USA
5/2/2006  2:30 AM
918
Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268
USA
5/2/2006  11:27 AM
http://thankyoustephencolbert.org/
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
martin
Posts: 76264
Alba Posts: 108
Joined: 7/24/2001
Member: #2
USA
5/2/2006  5:55 PM
Happy "Mission Accomplished" Day!
Official sponsor of the PURE KNICKS LOVE Program
Marv
Posts: 35540
Alba Posts: 69
Joined: 9/2/2002
Member: #315
5/2/2006  7:10 PM
Posted by martin:

Happy "Mission Accomplished" Day!

and to you and yours.
Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268
USA
5/2/2006  10:20 PM
2 days to cinco de mayo
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
MaTT4281
Posts: 34894
Alba Posts: 4
Joined: 1/16/2004
Member: #538
USA
5/3/2006  12:18 AM
917
MaTT4281
Posts: 34894
Alba Posts: 4
Joined: 1/16/2004
Member: #538
USA
5/4/2006  1:13 AM
916
Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268
USA
5/4/2006  7:38 AM
tomorrow is cinco de mayo
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Silverfuel
Posts: 31750
Alba Posts: 3
Joined: 6/27/2002
Member: #268
USA
5/4/2006  7:39 AM
http://www.nytimes.com/2006/05/03/arts/03colb.html?ex=1147406400&en=2f0452eb8e96a0d0&ei=5070
A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
Bush reelected :-(

©2001-2025 ultimateknicks.comm All rights reserved. About Us.
This site is not affiliated with the NY Knicks or the National Basketball Association in any way.
You may visit the official NY Knicks web site by clicking here.

All times (GMT-05:00) Eastern Time.

Terms of Use and Privacy Policy