website of the new yorker magazine. joining us is the editor of the new yorker s magazine. nick thompson. good to have you here. pleasure to be here. i m a user of the on-line machine but not an expert and i bet i didn t explain it exactly right. how does the strongbox idea work? and did i screw any of it up? you set it up perfectly. it begins with a system that keeps your computer address safe. if i hand you a package, in between i break up the package and give it to 100 people in between. once you have logged in no one can identify the computer it comes from. the person logs in to tor and the file is encrypted and then it is passed through our servers to us. it is still encrypted. we take it off a machine on to a flash drive and then to another computer that is not connected to the internet and doesn t have a hard drive and we decrypt it. the whole time, from when it passes to you to me there s no way to trace where it came from. it is encrypted and by the time
something we consider when setting immigration policy. that s not from some dissertation that somebody had to dig out of the harvard library. that s on the on-line machine at alternative right.com where they are cutting up onions to make themselves fake cry over the holocaust. where the heritage foundation s author of the immigration study is expounding on the criminality of brown people who we ought to consider keeping out of this country. when the heritage foundation, the leader conservative think tank was considering hiring him, his most recent public output. the thing he was doing on-line the before heritage hired him is writing about the inferiority of latinos as a group and this is the world where the heritage foundation went to to find an author of their study of immigration reform and turns out