TOKYO MASTER BANNER

MINISTRY OF TOKYO
US-ANGLO CAPITALISMEU-NATO IMPERIALISM
Illegitimate Transfer of Inalienable European Rights via Convention(s) & Supranational Bodies
Establishment of Sovereignty-Usurping Supranational Body Dictatorships
Enduring Program of DEMOGRAPHICS WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of PSYCHOLOGICAL WAR on Europeans
Enduring Program of European Displacement, Dismemberment, Dispossession, & Dissolution
No wars or conditions abroad (& no domestic or global economic pretexts) justify government policy facilitating the invasion of ancestral European homelands, the rape of European women, the destruction of European societies, & the genocide of Europeans.
U.S. RULING OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR TO SALVAGE HEGEMONY
[LINK | Article]

*U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR* | U.S. Empire's Casino Unsustainable | Destabilised U.S. Monetary & Financial System | U.S. Defaults Twice A Year | Causes for Global Financial Crisis of 2008 Remain | Financial Pyramids Composed of Derivatives & National Debt Are Growing | *U.S. OLIGARCHY WAGES HYBRID WAR*

Who's preaching world democracy, democracy, democracy? —Who wants to make free people free?
[info from Craig Murray video appearance, follows]  US-Anglo Alliance DELIBERATELY STOKING ANTI-RUSSIAN FEELING & RAMPING UP TENSION BETWEEN EASTERN EUROPE & RUSSIA.  British military/government feeding media PROPAGANDA.  Media choosing to PUBLISH government PROPAGANDA.  US naval aggression against Russia:  Baltic Sea — US naval aggression against China:  South China Sea.  Continued NATO pressure on Russia:  US missile systems moving into Eastern Europe.     [info from John Pilger interview follows]  War Hawk:  Hillary Clinton — embodiment of seamless aggressive American imperialist post-WWII system.  USA in frenzy of preparation for a conflict.  Greatest US-led build-up of forces since WWII gathered in Eastern Europe and in Baltic states.  US expansion & military preparation HAS NOT BEEN REPORTED IN THE WEST.  Since US paid for & controlled US coup, UKRAINE has become an American preserve and CIA Theme Park, on Russia's borderland, through which Germans invaded in the 1940s, costing 27 million Russian lives.  Imagine equivalent occurring on US borders in Canada or Mexico.  US military preparations against RUSSIA and against CHINA have NOT been reported by MEDIA.  US has sent guided missile ships to diputed zone in South China Sea.  DANGER OF US PRE-EMPTIVE NUCLEAR STRIKES.  China is on HIGH NUCLEAR ALERT.  US spy plane intercepted by Chinese fighter jets.  Public is primed to accept so-called 'aggressive' moves by China, when these are in fact defensive moves:  US 400 major bases encircling China; Okinawa has 32 American military installations; Japan has 130 American military bases in all.  WARNING PENTAGON MILITARY THINKING DOMINATES WASHINGTON. ⟴  

August 04, 2015

Machiavellian USA Spying on Japan - Consistent With US Bid for Total Control on Economic & World Stage



http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2015-08/02/c_134472389.htm

Commentary: U.S. spying on Japan proves it has never treated allies as equals
English.news.cn 2015-08-02 16:37:13 [More]

BEIJING, Aug. 2 (Xinhua) -- The recently exposed U.S. spying on Japan, one of its most loyal "allies," has once again proved to the world that U.S. foreign polices are still based on realpolitik and it only sees other countries as objects to control, no matter whether they are "friends" or foes.

The Wikileaks website on Friday posted National Security Agency (NSA) reports and a list of 35 Japanese targets for telephone intercepts of senior Japanese government officials including the Japanese Cabinet Office, the Bank of Japan, the country's finance and trade ministries and major Japanese trading companies.

However, the world is not completely caught off guard when the Wikileaks websites posted NSA reports revealing the United States is also spying on Japan.

The United States is often criticized for applying double standards on various issues, but the world's "freedom leader" has been very realistic and consistent when it comes to eavesdropping: from the potential rivals such as Iran and Russia to close allies such as France and Germany. So there is no reason to believe it should treat Japan differently.

The United States has been trying to maintain its dominance in global politics, economy and military power. And one of the most important reasons for the United States to spy on other countries is that it wants total control -- to be in total control. Namely, it needs to be "omniscient."

Spying on the telephone conversations and emails of other countries' leaders is not only immoral but is also in violation of international law. But the United States did it anyway, because it knew perfectly well that even if it got caught, no one would be there to punish the only super power in the world.

The United States' licentious spying on other countries once again proves how hypocritical its course of defending freedom and democracy is. The truth is that the United States has never treated its "allies" on an equal footing, but sees itself as their superior, having the right to do whatever it wants on them.

It is also noteworthy that stepping up of espionage activities against other countries actually coincides with the rise of emerging markets and the unification of Europe, which, in the eyes of the United States, is gradually encroaching upon its dominance over economy as well as other fields.

The United States is afraid of losing its status as the single pole in the present unipolar world, and the almost reckless spying means, however futile it would be, that it attempts to turn the tide around.

But no matter how much the United States has benefited from knowing other countries' secrets, it will always lose more for the distrusts and mutual suspicions it has stirred up among countries.

Seeing how the United States treats its "allies," the world can have a better measurement of the values it actually "upholds."  [Ouch]

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2015-08/02/c_134472389.htm

Realpolitik =
"politics or diplomacy based primarily on power and on practical and material factors and considerations, rather than explicit ideological notions or moral or ethical premises."
"Realpolitik is sometimes used pejoratively to imply politics that are coercive, amoral, or Machiavellian." [wikipedia]
 ---------------------
COMMENT

I love articles from alternate sources.

So all that insane spying is to keep the US in control economically and otherwise.

But having been caught out, although the US is in violation of international law, there's nobody to sanction the US because the US (Wall Street, Federal Reserve, IMF, World Bank etc) is in financial control, I guess.

'Machiavellian' is a description that definitely fits the US.  Think fake WMDs, Gulf of Tonkin, coups, supporting terrorists etc.



HORNET Onion Routing - Tor Rival?




http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/news/4500250948/Tor-anonymity-called-into-question-as-alternative-browser-surfaces

HORNET -- a Tor alternative?

In other Tor news, researchers from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology and University College London introduced an alternative onion network dubbed HORNET. Short for high-speed onion routing at the network layer, it offers the same promise of anonymous browsing but with better scaling, stronger privacy and higher speed -- researchers claimed it can process anonymous traffic at over 93 Gbps. Researchers also said each HORNET node can process anonymous traffic for "a practically unlimited number of sources."

Like Tor, HORNET uses a group of relay nodes to mix and encrypt traffic -- and hide users' locations and IP addresses -- in layers to ensure anonymity. However, researchers say it is not plagued with the decreased speed that Tor and other anonymity networks regularly experience.

The low-latency onion routing system "uses only symmetric cryptography for data forwarding yet requires no per-flow state on intermediate nodes," researchers wrote.

"Unlike other onion routing implementations, HORNET routers do not keep overflow state or perform computationally expensive operations for data forwarding, allowing the system to scale as new clients are added.

"It is designed to be highly efficient; instead of keeping state at each relay, connection state (such as onion layer decryption keys) is carried within packet headers, allowing intermediate nodes to quickly forward traffic for large numbers of clients."

Because the system does not store per-session states, it also providers "stronger security guarantees" than other onion network options.

The researchers also claimed it is less vulnerable to identity-revealing attacks such as session linkage and packet correlation. However, it is not completely immune to attack; confirmation attacks leveraging flow analysis, timing analysis and packet tagging can potentially be successfully executed to determine identity. "However," researchers wrote, "HORNET raises the bar of deploying such attacks for secretive mass surveillance: the adversary must be capable of controlling a significant percentage of ISPs often residing in multiple geopolitical boundaries, not to mention keeping such massive activity confidential."

Users should not jump on the bandwagon yet, however; HORNET has not yet been peer-reviewed.

http://searchsecurity.techtarget.com/news/4500250948/Tor-anonymity-called-into-question-as-alternative-browser-surfaces


MORE


Tor Browser Challenger:
HORNET stands for High-speed Onion Routing at the NETwork layer
http://cointelegraph.com/news/115001/hornet-high-speed-protocol-for-a-fully-encrypted-anonymous-internet


Researchers claim they’ve developed a better, faster Tor

HORNET, a high-speed onion routing network, could be deployed on routers as part of the Internet.

http://arstechnica.com/information-technology/2015/07/researchers-claim-theyve-developed-a-better-faster-tor/

---------------------
COMMENT


Potential vulnerability points mean nothing to me.

I just think it's cool something new is out.

Wonder who gets to review Hornet and if there's any built-in backdoors? LOL


Tor anonymity network - here.


August 03, 2015

Sweden - ASSANGE: Sven-Erik Alhem former Chief Prosecutor Sweden critical of Swedish Prosecutor Marianne Ny failure to act


Neue Wirren im Fall Assange

Weil der schwedischen Staatsanwältin die Zeit davonläuft, möchte sie den WikiLeaks-Gründer nun doch in der ecuadorianischen Botschaft in London verhören.

TRANS:
New turmoil in the Assange case
Because time is running out, the Swedish prosecutor now wants to interrogate WikiLeaks founder at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London
http://www.tagesanzeiger.ch/zeitungen/Neue-Wirren-im-Fall-Assange/story/27430427

MENTIONS LOOK-UP:

Sven-Erik Alhem
born April 5, 1942,  Malmö
  • former chief prosecutor 
  • social commentator in Malmö and on Visingsö
Issues:  incl.  human rights,  hate crimes, environmental & health & safety violations, various issues relating to traffic, wildlife protection (esp. wolf).

Ahead of the 2006 parliamentary election
ran for Liberal Party
Not elected
  • Columnist in Jönköpings-Posten and Jusek magazine
  • Weblog via newspaper Expressen 
  • expert commentator on television around the law
Published book:  with lawyer & wife Justitia (2008)

Chair of the Association for Victim Support, from 2009
HQ Stockholm.

source
https://sv.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sven-Erik_Alhem

Sven-Erik Alhem
Sven-Erik Alhem former Chief Prosecutor Sweden critical of Swedish Prosecutor Marianne Ny failure to act  
Bing Trans:

"Late justice is sometimes even no justice," legal expert Alhem says. Evidence loses power over time, victims want the thing behind.
[tagesanzeiger.ch]

Google Trans:
 
"This is all very strange, is Sven-Erik Alhem, head of the Swedish victims auxiliary Bunds and earlier prosecutor. Strange mainly because Assange talking yes avowedly wish. "I can not understand why it has not now long since taken place," says Alhem. He criticized Marianne Ny for the hesitation. A survey in London was as a basis still better than no survey." [tagesanzeiger.ch]


Stefan Wahlberg
Rechtsexperte Stefan Wahlberg sagt, es sei Assanges gutes Recht, zu bleiben, wo er ist. «Er ist nicht verpflichtet, die Ermittlungen gegen ihn zu unterstützen», so der Chefredaktor der schwedischen Fachzeitung «Dagens Juridik». [tagesanzeiger.ch]
Trans:

Legal expert Stefan Wahlberg says it is Assange's every right to stay where he is. "He is not obliged to cooperate with the investigation against him," says the chief editor of the Swedish trade journal "Dagens Juridik». [tagesanzeiger.ch]

Niklas Richter Wågnert  
[otherwise referred to as: Niklas Wågnert]

Niklas Wågnert = Stockholm Court of Appeal (Judge)
November 2014
Stockholm Court of Appeal
Decision:  not to lift the arrest warrant for Assange
Trans:
[Supreme Court of Appeal] has asked the prosecutors to look for new solutions. With new situation Assange could challenge the warrant again, says Niklas Richter Wågnert, who was involved in the decision. [tagesanzeiger.ch]

"A new situation may mean that something new has happened in this case, but also that nothing has happened." In the spring, the Supreme Court of Sweden has also confirmed the arrest of Assange. He has asked to comment on the conduct of investigations Marianne Ny. At that time, she decided to appear to travel to London. [tagesanzeiger.ch]
Other source (translation):

Niklas Wågnert, the Stockholm Court of Appeal judge who heard Assange case in November, said the guard of permanent failure interview with the Australian be in London "new circumstances" in the case that would enable it to launch Assange, a complaint about the Swedish [Courts]. If Assange found himself in front of an outstanding payment, he added, it could be a factor for judges to weigh, when the case came to trial.

"The time has passed and nothing has happened - it would be up to the courts to decide whether [a diplomatic dispute between Sweden and Ecuador] would be a good explanation enough for the prosecutor's office does not make progress," he said.
source
http://osterreich.website/2015/07/24/julian-assange-ecuador-und-schweden-in-angespannten-toten-punkt-uber-interview/


Cecilia Riddselius
Swedish Ministry of Justice
is responsible for international legal cooperation

Role:  Deputy Director at the Swedish Ministry of Justice
Stockholm, Sweden


---------------------
 COMMENT

German language article caught my attention because Sven-Erik Alhem, former Chief Prosecutor, Sweden (& victims' support advocate, by look of things), is critical of Sweden Prosecutor Marianne Ny.

Ny has stalled the curious case of the revived Swedish 'investigation' pertaining to what one might call 'alleged allegations' involving Assange, by failing to even question Assange for almost 5 years now.

I say 'alleged' allegations because such 'allegations' were not recorded according to proper police procedure (nor were the alleged complainants interviewed in accordance with proper police procedure), the police database was tampered with, the alleged 'victims' have behaved and made social media statements in a manner which contradicts police claims [see:  Assange Affidavit]

Wondering if Judge Niklas Wågnert (Stockholm Court of Appeal) might be trying to pass the buck by palming off Sweden's failure to act in a timely manner (for almost 5 years) as being the result of a 'diplomatic dispute' with Ecuador, or if it just reads that way because it's a poor translation of a comment as to the latest Sweden prosecution blunders regarding interview arrangements in London? 
It also looks like Sweden could be subject to complaint by Assange should Sweden try the 'new circumstances' angle, which presumably means, should Sweden attempt some legal manoeuvre on the basis of 'new circumstances', after dragging this out for years.  But hard to say; translation's not that great.  Reading some mangled extract, I'm wondering why I bothered grabbing that.  LOL

Anyway, they're some of the Swedish players and that's the latest, I guess.





*Fingers crossed that I have all the links right.  LOL


SINGAPORE - SURVEILLANCE STATE



https://www.digitalnewsasia.com/digital-economy/singapore-is-using-spyware-and-its-citizens-cant-complain

#WikiLeaks #HackingTeam
#Singapore - #Surveillance state, NO:
  • *privacy right
  • *prior judicial auth. req. (leg'n)
#Law #Privacy #Singapore
regulatory structure re #surveillance
= Executive branch controlled / little judicial oversight

#Singapore #SURVEILLANCE incls:
  • CCTV
  • drones
  • Internet / comm. / access
  • SIM card reg.
  • ID req. register websites
  • big data analytics
#Singapore #SURVEILLANCE
'PacketShape
{Blue Coat Systems Inc, USA-based provider}
monitoring various, incl:
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Google Mail
  • Skype
#Singapore
* Has NOT ratified: International Covenant on Civil & Political Rights (ICCPR)


https://www.digitalnewsasia.com/digital-economy/singapore-is-using-spyware-and-its-citizens-cant-complain

---------------------
COMMENT

Mass surveillance must be a given in a country like Singapore, with no constitutional or other legislative checks on monitoring of citizens (and no ratification of the human rights covenant, either).

The degree of surveillance and the lack of civil rights goes back to colonial rule.  

---------------------


Modern Singapore
founded in 1819 as British colony
(by Sir Stamford Raffles)
wikipedia






WikiLeaks - Hacking Team Leak - Release Verified as Legitimate / Singapore Surveillance



Singapore is using spyware, and its citizens can’t complain
By Gabey GohAug 03, 2015

Behind the surveillance curtain

Meanwhile, Goh Su Gim (pic), the security advisor at cybersecurity firm F-Secure in Asia, has examined the Hacking Team documents that have been leaked online, and said he believes them to be legitimate.

“Especially the source code and their Galileo product architecture – it is exactly how security researchers have expected it to be,” he told DNA.

“Many have compiled the source code and replicated what products Hacking Team has been selling to the [Singapore] Government,” he added.

The leaked Hacking Team information also includes email threads that point to other Singaporean agencies showing an interest in the Italian company’s spyware, according to Goh.

These agencies include the Centre for Strategic Infocomm Technologies (CSIT), part of the Ministry of Defence; and the Infocomm Technology Division (ICTD) of the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) back in 2013.

Goh noted that an Israeli company, Nice Systems which specialises in telephone voice recording, data security and surveillance, serves as a partner working with Hacking Team to sell to CSIT and MHA.

“Interestingly, the MHA was interested in its IPA device (Injection Proxy Appliance),” he said.

“This is a networking device, typically installed alongside an Internet service provider’s servers, that can hijack targets’ Internet traffic without their knowing, and surreptitiously deliver malware to their device or computer.

“Tricking a target into opening a file or going to a phishing site may be not be as easy, and this is the perfect appliance to intercept Internet activity on the fly – for example, if a target wants to watch a video or download a new app, the IPA could intercept and prompt the target to install a booby-trapped version of Adobe Flash with the spyware.

“It is also interesting to note at the end of the [leaked] email, [there is the statement]: ‘(As always, but especially in this country, confidentiality is a must. Thanks.)’,” he added.

Why the IDA?

There were no further documents available to show whether discussions with the CSIT and MHA panned out and were converted to sales, Goh conceded.

He said that the F-Secure team was also unable to independently confirm whether the IDA and other agencies in South-East Asia, besides the publicly published list of clients available on the Internet, were or are Hacking Team customers.

However, Goh noted that given what Hacking Team offers, it may seem more relevant for CSIT and MHA to purchase such tools in the name of homeland security.

“But the IDA is a statutory board of the Singapore Government, under the Ministry of Communications and Information, whose mission is to develop information technology and telecommunications within Singapore – with a view to servicing citizens of all ages and companies of all sizes.

“With that said, since it is not an enforcement agency – there is no use for a surveillance tool, unless it is used for research purposes,” he said.

The IDA did not respond to DNA’s repeated requests for comment.

https://www.digitalnewsasia.com/digital-economy/singapore-is-using-spyware-and-its-citizens-cant-complain?page=0%2C1

-------- -------- --------
COMMENT

Thought this a cool article, as the WikiLeaks publication of the Hacking Team data has been independently verified as legitimate.

Israeli involvement is interesting.

The rest (surveillance capabilities) just freaks me out.  LOL


More re:  SINGAPORE SURVEILLANCE



VIDEO




 

Sigue Sigue Sputnik

Hey, Jayne Mansfield Superstar




 Remastered









TRANSCRIPT - VIDEO - Noam Chomsky: You Can't Have Capitalist Democracy



TRANSCRIPT

[Text emphasis added]

Professor Noam Chomsky: 

You Can't Have Capitalist Democracy.



I started by saying that one of the relations between capitalism and democracy is contradiction. You can't have capitalist democracy, and the people who really sort of believe in markets (or at least pretend to understand them) - so if you read Milton Friedman and other philosophers of so-called libertarianism - they don't call for democracy they call for what they call 'freedom.'
There is a very constrictive concept of freedom. It's not the freedom of a working person to control their work, their lives, and so on; it's their freedom to submit themselves to control by a higher authority. That's called 'freedom', but not 'democracy'. They don't like democracy and they're right; capitalism and democracy really are inconsistent.

Actually, what's called libertarianism in the United States, is about as an extreme example of anti-libertarianism that you can imagine. They're in favour of private tyranny – the worst kind of tyranny. Tyranny by private, unaccountable, concentrations of wealth. When they say, “Well, we don't want government interference in the market”, they mean that. They mean - maybe they don't understand it, but if you think it through, it's pretty obvious – the kind of interference in the market they want blocked is the kind that would permit unconstrained tyranny on the part of totally unaccountable private tyrannies, which is what corporations are.

It's worth bearing in mind how radically opposed this is to classical liberalism. They like to invoke, say, Adam Smith. But if you read Adam Smith, he said the opposite. He's famous for not, you know, the claim is that he was opposed to regulation – government regulation – interference in markets. That's not true. He was in favour of regulation, as he put it, when it benefits the working man. He was against interference when it benefited the masters. That's traditional classical liberalism.

This, what's called 'libertarian' in the United States, which likes to invoke the history that you’ve concocted, is radically opposed to basic classical libertarian principles and it's kind of astonishing to me that a lot of young people - say, college students - are attracted by this kind of thing. I mean, you can, after all, read the classical text.

So take, say, Adam Smith. Adam Smith, at the time – he's the icon, you know. He was considered to be a dangerous radical at the time, because he was pretty anti-capitalist in this pre-capitalist era that he was opposed to, and he condemned what he called the 'vile maxim of the masters of mankind': all for ourselves and nothing for anyone else. That's an abomination. Take the phrase 'invisible hand' – everybody's learnt that in high school or college – Adam Smith actually did use the term, rarely. But take a look how he used it. In Wealth of Nations, his major work, it's used once. And if you look at the context, it's an argument against what is now call neo-liberal globalisation and what he argued is this (in terms of England, of course): he said, suppose in England that the merchants and manufacturers invested abroad & imported from abroad; he said, well that would be profitable for them, but it would be harmful to the people of England. However, they will have enough of a commitment to their own country, to England (it's called a 'home bias', in the literature); they'll have enough of a 'home bias' so that, as if by an invisible hand, they'll keep to the less profitable actions and England will be saved from the ravages of what we call neo-liberal globalisation. That's the one use of the term in Wealth of Nations.

In his other major work, Moral Sentiments, the term is also used once, and the context is this - remember, England is basically an agricultural country then - he says: suppose a landlord accumulates an enormous amount of land everyone else has to work for.  He says:  well, it won't turn out too badly, and the reason is that the landlord will be motivated by his natural sympathy for other people.  So he will make sure that the necessities of life and the goods available will be distributed equitably to the people on his land, and it will end up with a relatively equal and just distribution of wealth, “as if by an invisible hand”. That's his other use of the term.

Just compare that with what you're taught in school, or what you read in the newspapers. And it goes across the board. Like, everybody probably has read the first paragraphs of Wealth of Nations, which talks about how wonderful it is that the butcher pursues his interests, and the baker pursues his interests, and we're all happy, so we should be in favour of a division of labour. Everybody's read that. How many people have read a couple of hundred pages into Wealth of Nations, where he has a bitter attack on division of labour for interesting reasons, and reasons that were standard in the Enlightenment in which he lived (very different from ours)? He says if you pursue division of labour, people will be directed to actions in which they'll complete the same mechanical actions over and over. They'll be de-skilled and that's the goal of management for over over 100 years: de-skill the workforce. He says that's what will happen if you pursue division of labour. He goes on to say, this will turn people into creatures as stupid and as ignorant as a human being can possibly be and, therefore, in any civilised society, the government will have to intervene to prevent any development like this. That's Adam Smith's view of division of labour.

Next step – now, here's a research project.  Take the standard edition (scholarly edition) of Wealth of Nations produced by the University of Chicago Press naturally, on the bicentennial – with a scholarly apparatus (you know, footnotes and everything else) – and take a look at the Index.  There's a scholarly index. Look up 'division of labour'. This part of the book is not referenced. You can't find it, unless you decided to read 700 pages; then you can find it.

But that's his concept of the division of labour, and it continues like this – and I'm not extolling, you know, a lot of things that you can harshly criticise, like his advice to the colonies – but, nevertheless, it's a very different picture from what's called 'libertarianism' or 'capitalism' today.

Capitalist democracy would self destruct - capitalism would self destruct – and that's why it hasn't been instituted. The masters understand that they cannot survive a capitalist economy – a laissez fair economy.

Take a look at the history; it's pretty interesting.

So the United States, when it was independent – so it could reject the rules of sound economics and develop. There were other countries that were poised for an industrial revolution and were given the same advice. Like Egypt and India. In fact, India already was the commercial and industrial centre of the world, moreso than England . Egypt was poised for an industrial revolution and it's not impossible that it might have developed as a rich, agrarian society. It had cotton – produced cotton. As I said, that's the main product (like oil today), and it didn't need slaves. It had peasants. It had a developmental government aimed that the industrial development. It could have taken off – just as India could have taken off. But they were not free to reject sound economics because they were ruled by British force. So they were forced to accept sound economics, and Egypt became Egypt, and the United States became the United States. India went through a century of de-development before it finally got independent.

That's what happens when you apply laissez fair principles. In fact, that's essentially how the Third World and the First World divided. Take a look at the countries that developed. They are the countries who violated the principles. England, the United States, Germany, France, Netherlands. One country of the south. One country developed: Japan. The one country that wasn't colonised and was able to pursue the same course that the rich countries developed.

I mentioned that in mid Nineteenth Century – 1846 - Britain was so far ahead of the rest of the world in industrial development that they did decide that laissez faire would be possible, so that moved to what's called a 'free trade era'.

First of all, they imposed sharp constraints on it. They've cut off the Empire. India. India was not allowed. Others could not invest in India, their main possession; and India was not allowed to develop. And there were other restrictions.

Pretty soon, British capitalists called the game off because they couldn't compete. By the 1920s, they couldn't compete with Japanese production so they literally closed off the Empire to Japanese exports. It's part of the background for the Pacific War of the 1940s.

The United States did the same with a smaller empire in the Philippines. The Dutch did the same with Indonesia. All the imperial systems decided: no more free trade, we can't compete. So they closed off the empire and Japan had no markets, no resources, and they went to war. That's a large part of the background.

The United States, in 1945, did move towards laissez fair. In fact it was an important conference (the united states was basically running the world at that point, for obvious reasons) – there was a hemispheric conference called by Washington in February 1945 in Mexico, where the western hemisphere was compelled to adopt an economic charter for the Americas, which banned any interference with market principles. The goal was, in the State Department reports, to oppose the new nationalism in Latin America, which is based on the idea that the people of a country should benefit from the country's resources. That's 'evil', we can't allow that; it's Western and US investors who have to benefit from the resources.

So that was the economic charter of the Americas imposed on the countries of the southern hemisphere, with one exception – here. The United States did not follow those policies. Quite the contrary.

As I mentioned, there was a massive development of a state based economy with an industrial policy – the kind that created the modern high-tech economy. You can see it right across the river. Take look at MIT, one of the main centres of this **** If you had a look at MIT in the 1950s (when I got there) it was surrounded by electronics-based high-tech firms, like Raytheon and iTech, and huge IT firms. Take a look at MIT today, take a look at the buildings, it's Novartis, Pfizer and so on. The reason's completely obvious: during the 50s and 60s, the cutting edge of the economy was electronics based, so the way to get the public to pay for it was to scream 'Russians!' and to get them to pay higher taxes for the Pentagon, and then the Pentagon would fund the research and development – like my own salary, for example (I shouldn't complain too much) – and, of course, private industry was around there like vultures to pick up the products and the research and to market.

Well, since the 70s, the cutting edge of the economy has been moving towards be biology based, so funding – government funding – has shifted. Pentagon funding is declining. Funding from the NIH and other so-called health related government institutions is increasing, and the private corporations understand that. So, now, Novartis, genetic engineering firms and so on, are hanging around trying to pick up the research that you're paying for, so that they can market it and make profits. It's just transparent. It's in front of our eyes, and it takes a very effective educational system to prevent people from seeing it. It's virtually transparent. That's the way this really exists in capitalist democracy, folks.

A final word about democracy then, before I have to leave.

There's a major attack on democracy all the way through. But by now it's reached the point which is pretty remarkable. Take a look at one of the main topics in the mainstream political science (and we're not talking about radicals). Mainstream political science is comparing public attitudes with public policy. It's a fairly straight-forward – it's hard work but a straight-forward effort. We have the public policy so you can see it. There's extensive polling. Quite reliable generally and consistent in its results. It gives you a good sense of what public attitudes are, and the results of this are published in the major books and articles - with references, if you like. The results are very straight-forward. About 70% of the population – the lowest 70% on the income scale – are literally disenfranchised. Their opinions have no affect on policy. Their elected representatives don't pay any attention to them. That's one of the reasons why many of them don't bother voting: they're not going to pay attention to them anyway. You know, I've read the technical literature to understand it in other ways. As you move up the income scale, you get a little more influence on policy. When you get to the top (and contrary to the Occupy Movement, it's not 1% - it's more like one-tenth of 1%) - when you get to the top where the massive concentration of wealth is, they basically set policies. That's not democracy; that's plutocracy. And that's what we have accepted. The good thing about it is that it's changeable. It's not controlled by force. We are very free in that respect, thanks to victories over the centuries. It's not possible now for a corporation to do what Andrew Carnegie, the great pacifist, did in 1890. That gives a lot of options and you have to make use of them.

I'm afraid I've got to leave.

[17:35] APPLAUSE

VIDEO - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98PSkGSk9kw&feature=youtu.be


MIT
= Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
private research university in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Founded 1861.


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COPYRIGHT DISCLAIMER



Copyright Disclaimer under section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education and research.
--------------------- video credits ---------------------
TITLE: A PROGRESSIVE VOICE
VIDEO: Leigha Cohen
AUDIO: Leigha Cohen & Cynthia Smith
VIDO & SOUND EDITING: Leigha Cohen
COPYRIGHT: LEIGHA COHEN PRODUCTION 2014
WEBSITE: www. leighacohen.com
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 COMMENT


Good talk.  

Also relevant to the US free trade agreements that are going down now.
Thought I'd transcribe what was said.

Nearing the end, I realised someone else may have transcribed this somewhere already.

Never mind.  It's a good learning tool, focusing on every word.  Or it can be.  I hope.  LOL

Missing word(s) where marked.  It's something of a drama playing audio at any volume level in this place right now, so filling the gaps will have to wait.  Think it was only the one word. 

This took ages, but it's heaps easier now that I've figured how to minimise, position & hold my Writer window on top of the running video window, so I don't have to flip screens.

*Part re interference in market they want blocked & tyranny reads kind of funny to me.  It's the interference they want blocked so they can get away with tyranny is what he's getting at, I think.  But the sentence seems confusing (to me).

*I disagree with the last part, about there not being rule by force.  We are ruled by force & there's nothing we can do.  Look what happens to protesters.  When they're not beaten, imprisoned etc, martial law is imposed and they're beaten and imprisoned if they dare break curfew, I guess.