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New Questions Undermine Government’s Spying Claims
By Marcy Wheeler
As the House considers defunding NSA dragnet collection today, the credibility of the program just got murkier
So this is what all that data collection was/is about.
We have our first winner!
And no one thought the commercial side of this venture would pay off?
il giant Chevron has been granted access to "more than 100 email accounts, including environmental activists, journalists, and attorneys" involved in a long-running dispute involving damage "caused by oil drilling" in Ecuador, reports the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) which, with EarthRights International (ERI), is opposing the New York court's decision says:
After years of litigation, an Ecuadorian court last year imposed a judgment of over $17 billion on Chevron for dumping toxic waste into Amazon waterways and causing massive harm to the rainforest. Instead of paying, Chevron sued more than 50 people who were involved in the Ecuador lawsuit, claiming they were part of a conspiracy to defraud the oil giant. None of the individuals represented by EFF and ERI has been sued by Chevron or accused of wrongdoing.Both EFF and ERI have warned that Chevron's subpoenas will have a "chilling effect" on people who would speak out against the oil company's activities in Ecuador and elsewhere.
The background to the case was reported by Common Dreams staff writer Lauren McCauley:
The oil giant is demanding the records in an attempt to cull together a lawsuit which alleges that the company was the victim of a conspiracy in the $18.2 billion judgment against it for dumping 18.5 billion gallons of oil waste in the Ecuadorean Amazon, causing untold damage to the rainforest.EarthRights International has also raised concerns that the presiding judge, Lewis Kaplan, who has been "accused of prejudice against Ecuadorians and their lawyers" made some sweeping and startling arguments in this case:
Kaplan's decision upheld Chevron's sweeping subpoena with an argument that is as breathtaking as the subpoena itself. According to Judge Kaplan, none of the accountholders could benefit from First Amendment protections since the accountholders had "not shown that they were U.S. citizens."You can read the court documents here (pdf).
The next essay portrays our backward march to infamy.
You'd almost think all those wars we fought for democracy and freedom were propaganda, wouldn't you (if you consider how quickly those who wound up with democracy's huge profits are willing to demolish the vehicle that brought them)?
Profits.
A loaded term it seems.
Onward Back to Feudalism
By Phillip Faruggio
July 23, 2013
From the Tuesday July 9 USA Today Money Section:
“Big investors have poured more than $10 billion into the single family home rental market in recent years… The biggest, the Blackstone Group, has bought 29,000 homes in 13 markets, 25,000 of them in the past year.” Of the top 10 cities with the highest institutional investor purchases of rental housing three are in my state of Florida (Lakeland with 29%, Miami with 22% and Orlando with 19%).
So, as the subprime and “I flip, you flip” bubble bursts, the sharks move in to become like their counterparts from hundreds of years earlier: Land lords! Didn’t you all know where that term came from? Search your history books and learn how a feudal society looked way back when. You had the barons and other gentry owning these vast estates of land. They then rented some of the farm land out to their tenants, or Serfs. The serf worked the land and either gave part of his crop back to the Lord of the manor, or simply paid him his rent in cash. Of course, most of the serfs merely worked for the barons and rich gentry, in their mines or factories…. Or as servants in their mansions.Go and get the 1993 Claude Berri film Germinal, based on the novel by Emile Zola. It captures the essence of life as a serf, renting housing and working the mines owned by the baron of the manor. The film reveals the labor injustices when one lives in a feudal market with no union to protect him or her. This is the type of society our dear America has been drifting back into these 30 years or so. The weakness of the labor movement goes hand in hand with the rise of residential rental properties. You see, it really is common sense:
The less you earn or have in savings, the less likely you will own your place of residence. Or, in another way of looking at things, the more you must pay out of pocket for your health care, the less you can afford to own and maintain your own housing. Isn’t that what feudalism was all about?So, there you have it. When less than 10% of private sector workers are unionized, and the ones that are have unions that suck up to the boss, the door is opened for a feudal-like society. When more and more of you and your kinfolk work part-time jobs so the corporation can save on benefits etc… you get my drift don’t you?
The low income slum neighborhoods that we all drive past from time to time (as we keep our car doors locked and windows closed) are slowly becoming the poster child for the rest of us. This writer lived in corporate-owned rental housing when we moved to Indianapolis in the mid 90s. We shopped around and found this beautifully adorned housing complex. Their model apartment was something out of some Norman Rockwell scene. They even had two racquetball courts at the clubhouse and a little mini gym! So, we signed a one-year lease in late November.
The week before Christmas, my wife was at the kitchen sink preparing dinner, and suddenly the entire faucet just popped off shooting water all about! At about the same time, there was this tremendous Midwestern storm hitting us. As if in a Woody Allen movie, the ceilings in our living room and master bedroom just rained down water… so powerful that we needed to lay pots on the floor to catch it.
Bottom line to this story: We realized later on that the Chicago Corporation which had recently purchased this complex two years earlier did absolutely no structural repairs — only lots and lots of fresh coats of paint throughout.
What we need in this country, and in every nation for that matter, is no such thing as absentee landlords. The American dream was a great idea when families would buy a two family home and rent out one apartment to help with the mortgage.
. . . We need to look at better and more viable ways to house our citizens. Why not have local towns and cities buy up the rental properties and charge the tenants a fairer price? On top of that and this is key, have the local governments that would own the rental properties offer the tenants a deal: “We will put aside a nice portion of your rent toward a down payment for you to own this place in the near future.” Do you think that the tenant might very well take better care of that place? Do you think that without a profit being made on all rental properties, that the charges would be considerably less?
You want real economic stimulus? Multiply the millions of Americans who now rent housing by the 30 to 40 percent they each will save every month when profit is taken out of the equation. A family that now pays an absentee landlord $1000 a month for a small home will most likely only have to pay $600 or $700; that’s an extra few hundred dollars monthly added to their bank accounts.
Call me a socialist, or even a commie radical. Bottom line: the only sharks I wish to see are those in the aquarium.
Think there are a few other problems for the 99% besides lack of decently-priced housing and health care?
I do.
The US Government Is Metamorphosing Into the Borg
Monday, 22 July 2013
“Any intelligent fool can make things bigger, more complex, and more violent. It takes a touch of genius — and a lot of courage — to move in the opposite direction.”
—E. F. Schumacher
When I moved to Seattle in 1996, I had thought I knew how to order a cup of coffee: “I’ll have a cup of coffee please.” Soon I realized that it was more complicated: “I’ll have a Venti soy dolce latte, topped with sprinkled cinnamon and caramel drawing on whip cream, with coffee on the side please.”
Referring to the US government is increasingly becoming as challenging as ordering coffee in Seattle: “Petro–imperial, coal–fired, plutocratic, oligarchic, inverted totalitarian, fascist, propagandist Big Brother, with democracy on the side.” Things are beginning to simplify though. Soon you’ll be able to refer to the US government with one single word — theBorg.
Two recent news reveal that Homo sapiens aren’t always loyal to a tyrannical regime. Edward Snowden opened the valve so that crude secrets could flow out of NSA’s pipelines — to benefit humanity. And, in protest of Ameri ca’s “dirty wars,” Brandon Toy publicly resigned last week from his job at the US Defense contractor General Dynamics. In his resignation letter, published on Common Dreams, Toy wrote: “I have always believed that if every foot soldier threw down his rifle war would end. I hereby throw mine down.”
What if the US military were to replace not–to–be–trusted Homo sapiens with completely trustworthy Robo sapiens?
On 11 July 2013, the US Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) unveiled the “Atlas” humanoid robot. Before I go on, take a look at the skeletal structure of Atlas here. Now, in your mind’s eye put some smooth metal over the skeleton, and then take a look at a Borg here (stationed at the Hollywood Entertainment Museum). Do y ou not think they are siblings, or more appropriately two members of the Borg collective? They are—because both are creation of the human mind.
Inspired by the Fukushima nuclear catastrophe the DARPA Robotics Challenge (DRC) was launched last October. Nine months later, Atlas, a six–foot tall, 330–pound baby was born (developed by Boston Dynamics with DARPA funding). Atlas “May Foreshadow Age of ‘Robo Sapiens’” is how the New York Times headlined the news. The DRC program manager Gill Pratt gave a rather emotional justification for his program with these words:
“Two weeks ago 19 brave fire fighters lost their lives. A number of us who are in the robotics field see these events in the news, and the thing that touches us very deeply is a single kind of feeling which is, can’t we do better? … I think the answer is yes.”The MIT Technology Review noted that “Atlas is designed to eventually take on some of the most dangerous and high–stakes jobs imaginable, such as tending to a nuclear reactor during a meltdown, shutting off a deep–water oil spill, or helping to put out a raging wildfire.” But Atlas isn’t there yet. “We’re talking about a robot roughly on par with the motile competence of a one–year–old child,” according to DARPA. In time though, Atlas and its various siblings that DARPA is creating now, will grow up.
DARPA insists that Atlas is not being designed for adversarial military tasks, but for humanitarian reasons—to aid rescue efforts during future natural and human–made disasters. Not eve ryone is convinced though. “The US military has shown off what may become the soldier of the future: a hulking robot that would easily look at home in Hollywood's Terminator franchise or an Isaac Asimov novel,” the Australian reported. And Michael Allenopined about Atlas in Opposing Views, “DARPA is famous for trying to create new military weapons, so that could be a possibility as well.” The latter is a good hint worth exploring.
In 1968 (I was one–year old) if I had told you that the US government would someday use the Internet to spy on US citizens and people of the world — you would have said: “That’s a toddler talking.”
As it turns out, that year, the Advanced Research Projects Agency (ARPA, later renamed DARPA) of the US Department of Defense approved a plan to develop what would become the ARPANET — the progenitor of what we now call the Internet.
The Internet’s gene is through and through military. So it should come as no surprise to anyone that the Obama administration has figured out a way to spy on all forms of global Internet communications. After Atlas grows up, the “homeland security, anti–terrorism and warfare will never be the same,” the Examiner.com noted.
When the US government assures the public that a particular military program is being developed for humanitarian reasons, should we believe? History tells us — we must not.
In 1961 the US Government initiated the Project Plowshare — to develop “techniques to use nuclear explosives for peaceful construction purposes” — to benefit humanity. Due to public opposition the program was terminated in 1977.
One of the first proposed Plowshare nuclear experiments was Project Chariot. In 1958 Edward Teller, father of the hydrogen bomb went to Alaska to unveil the project: a plan to blast six large thermonuclear bombs at Point Thompson, between two Iñupiat villages (Point Hope and Kivalina) in the Arctic, to carve a new harbor on the Chukchi Sea coast.
Because of the courageous and creative efforts by the Iñupiat people of Point Hope, two University of Alaska biologists William Pruitt and Leslie Viereck who were fired for speaking out against the plan (and three decades later were honored by the Alaska State Legislature for the same act for which they were fired by the University), and a handful of conservationists — Project Chariot was stopped, preventing the US government “from inflicting a catastrophe worse than Chernobyl on its own land and people,” as was noted in historian Dan O’Neill’s groundbreaking book, The Firecracker Boys.
While the larger experiment was stopped, Point Hope–based Iñupiat conservationist and Goldman Prize winner Caroline Cannon wrote in her testimony in the anthology, Arctic Voices: Resistance at the Tipping Point that I edited:
In a recent article I had written that the human mind is like a boomerang. The ingenuity and the deviousness of the human mind are the two sides of the same coin. In future, no one should be surprised, if Atlases get deployed on the streets to crush people’s resistance — against American tyranny — at home and abroad.“Even though the bombs were not detonated, the area is still radioactively contaminated by an experiment to estimate the effect that radioactive material would have on water sources. Materials from a 1962 nuclear explosion at the Nevada Test Site were transported to our homelands in August 1962, used in several experiments, and then buried. … Many of our young people have died of cancer. My own daughter was diagnosed with leukemia in August of 2005, which is known to be linked to exposure to radiation. To see young people die in big numbers like that is alarming.”
We don’t need robots. Instead we need to “move in the opposite direction” that Einstein had suggested. We need to care for each other and give space to nonhuman biotic communities to thrive on this Earth.
Gill Pratt’s question “can’t we do better?” could be answered more honestly, not by developing “Robo Sapiens” that could offer help during disasters, but among other things, by stopping Canada and the US from becoming rogue, reckless petrostates (and continue another century of petro–capitalism) that will lead to dangerous climate change with many more deaths from fires (like the one in Arizona that Pratt was lamenting).
Capitalism thrives, not by addressing the causes of injuries, but by constantly producing new Band–Aids — for sale. Atlas is more than capitalism though. It is also about militarism. We would do well to pay attention and challenge its construction, rather than wake up later and see whole lotta destruction.
Equipped with Atlases on the ground, backed by drones in the sky, and real–time global surveillance — the US government will soon be ready to announce: “Resistance is futile.”
What was once only the realm of science fiction is increasingly becoming reality that we have to contend with. We would do well to pay attention to journalist Chris Hedges’ premonition that “Revolt Is All We Have Left.”
(Subhankar Banerjee is a photographer, writer and activist. Over the past decade, he has worked tirelessly for the conservation of ecoculturally significant areas of the Arctic, and to raise awareness about indigenous human rights and climate change. He founded ClimateStoryTellers.org, and is editor of the anthology Arctic Voices: Resistance at the Tipping Point (New York: Seven Stories Press, July 3, 2012).)
Revolt.
Another loaded term.
For the 1%.
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