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. ⟴  
Showing posts with label Democracy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Democracy. Show all posts

December 21, 2015

Undercover British Political Police: RAPE WOMEN POLITICAL CAMPAIGNERS

Article
SOURCE

http://www.politics.co.uk/comment-analysis/2015/12/09/undercover-policing-how-women-forced-the-police-to-own-up




UNDERCOVER BRITISH POLITICAL POLICE:  RAPE WOMEN POLITICAL CAMPAIGNERS
Undercover police: How women forced the Met to own up

Wednesday, 9 December 2015 9:18 AM

By Jenny Jones

When the inquiry into undercover policing re-opens today we should congratulate several strong women. First, there are the innocent women who had their lives torn apart by police officers who deceived their way into their beds and their family lives. These women pursued a brave civil action against the Metropolitan Police and after many years forced a much-delayed and reluctant apology. Secondly, there is Doreen Lawrence, the mother of Stephen Lawrence, whose equally dogged campaign for justice was subject to police spying. And thirdly we should congratulate Theresa May, the Home Secretary, who has made some very wise decisions about policing issues within the UK, since taking on the job.

The Met's apology is not only an important vindication of all these women’s hard work in identifying the officers, it exposes how it institutionally supported those officers and their behaviour for so many years. The Met financed the lies. It refused to confirm or deny the existence of these police officers. And it spent hundreds of thousands of pounds fighting the court case against the women. No disciplinary action has been taken against the senior officers who authorised this huge waste of public funds and police time and resources.

So will the Met continue to spin these acts as those of a few rogue officers who formed casual sexual relationships using their undercover identities? The truth is the taxpayer funded officers to form long term emotional bonds with these women as a deliberate tactic to gain access to the network of campaigners whom they wanted to spy upon.

I'm curious as to how the Met will try to justify their policy of Neither Confirm Nor Deny (NCND), as this was the brick wall which the women faced when they initially brought forward their allegations and it was this policy which forced them into taking a civil action. How could any of these women have faith in a police investigation into undercover officers where the Met wouldn’t even acknowledge that they exist?

My own questions to the Mayor of London on this highlighted this inconsistency. The Met has maintained a blanket policy and has defended that position in court, but they also claim to regularly carry out risk assessments about the danger faced should officers have their identities exposed. If it does revisit risk assessments on undercover operatives, do they always find the officers would be 'placed in significant danger as a result of their identities being revealed'? If that's the case, why bother doing the risk assessments in the first place?
One of the big things missing from this inquiry is what UK undercover officers were doing while working in continental Europe. This has already been raised in the German Parliament. We know that some of them operated abroad and the inquiry should assure itself that the rule- breaking which went on in the UK stopped at the English Channel. The refusal of the inquiry to look at this, despite my appeals to the Home Secretary, will leave an air of suspicion about what our police got up to on foreign soil.

The Met has maintained that the Special Demonstration Squad was an aberration, which functioned outside the normal channels of accountability within New Scotland Yard. But if it was an aberration, it was an aberration that was allowed to continue for 40 years. While I would support much of the Met’s undercover work which is short term and aimed at serious crime, it’s clear it sees spying on thousands of innocent people who are involved in perfectly legitimate campaigns as a regular part of their work.

I say this as someone who was labelled a domestic extremist and was on the Met database for 10 years. This was not only a waste of public funds, but damaging to the democratic process, especially when the Met Police are spying on people who are trying to hold them to account for their failures, as I was. It crosses a line to pry into the lives of campaigners who are taking court cases against them, or organising public meetings criticising their actions.

There may sometimes be legitimate reasons for the Met Police to do so, but they should have to justify every action, to ensure that it isn't simply about saving themselves from public embarrassment.

Baroness Jenny Jones is a Green Party peer and London Assembly member.


http://www.politics.co.uk/comment-analysis/2015/12/09/undercover-policing-how-women-forced-the-police-to-own-up




UNDERCOVER BRITISH POLITICAL POLICE:  RAPE WOMEN POLITICAL CAMPAIGNERS
Undercover police had children with activists
Disclosure likely to intensify controversy over long-running police operation to infiltrate and sabotage protest groups

Rob Evans and Paul Lewis

Saturday 21 January 2012 07.15 AEDT
Two undercover police officers secretly fathered children with political campaigners they had been sent to spy on and later disappeared completely from the lives of their offspring, the Guardian can reveal.

In both cases, the children have grown up not knowing that their biological fathers – whom they have not seen in decades – were police officers who had adopted fake identities to infiltrate activist groups. Both men have concealed their true identities from the children's mothers for many years.

One of the spies was Bob Lambert, who has already admitted that he tricked a second woman into having a long-term relationship with him, as part of an intricate attempt to bolster his credibility as a committed campaigner.

The second police spy followed the progress of his child and the child's mother by reading confidential police reports which tracked the mother's political activities and life.

[ ... ]

EXTRACT - CONTINUED AT SOURCE




BRITISH POLICE TACTICS
A HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATION ...

IS *ENDORSED* BY
EUROPEAN COURT
OF HUMAN RIGHTS (2012)



KETTLED BY BRITISH POLICE:
Baroness Jenny Jones is a Green Party peer and London Assembly member  - Wikipedia.

Kettling
-- aka 'containment'
-- aka 'corralling'
-- fm German 'kessel' - 'cauldron' or 'kettle'
-- term used to describe encircled army about to be annihilated
-- thus a MILITARY TACTIC


Kettling - Police Military Tactic

-- in protest terms, aim is to prevent splintering of protesters
-- to prevent forced splintering of police
-- kettle formed by large cordons of police surrounding protesters
-- once kettle formed (ie once protesters are surrounded)
-- police cordon is tightened, incl. use of baton charges
-- to restrict territory occupied by protesters
-- police deny protesters access to food, water, and toilet facilities
-- for arbitrary period determined by police

-- protesters & bystanders therefore harassed & assaulted before being arbitrarily held captive

-- protesters imprisoned by cordon for several hours, 'cooling'

-- and left with one choice of exit: controlled by the police
CRITICISMS
Kettling - Police Military Tactic
-- indiscriminate
-- results in detention of law-abiding citizens & bystanders
-- denied food, water & toilet facilities for excessively long periods, in some cases
-- tactic used to foment disorder to change focus of public debate

2012 European Court of Human Rights
-- following legal challenge
-- ruled kettling lawful

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kettling
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Jenny Jones, Baroness Jones of Moulsecoomb
was kettled at demonstration against student fees
in December 2010

Zain Sardar, from the Young Greens:

"People have been kettled for up to nine hours without food and without medical assistance ..."

"Kettling is an infringement of the fundamental right to peaceful protest."

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-london-12293394

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

European court says 'kettling' tactics in 2001 lawful
15 March 2012
"Kettling" tactics used by the Metropolitan Police to contain crowds in 2001 were lawful, the European Court of Human Rights has ruled.

The controversial method was used during anti-globalisation demonstrations in London on 1 May 2001.

The court said there had been no violation of Article 5 - the right to liberty and security - of the European Convention on Human Rights.

Three people - George Black, a Greek national from Australia; Bronwyn Lowenthal and Peter O'Shea - who had nothing to do with the demonstration, took the case to Europe claiming they were "deprived of their liberty".

They were joined by Lois Austin, from Basildon, Essex, who had been taking part in the protest.
'Volatile conditions'

The court said: "The police had imposed the cordon to isolate and contain a large crowd in dangerous and volatile conditions.

"This had been the least intrusive and most effective means to protect the public from violence. Although the police tried to start dispersing the crowd throughout the afternoon, they had been unable to do so as the danger had persisted."

It was the first time the court in Strasbourg had been asked to rule on kettling.

[...]

The European Court's Grand Chamber of 17 judges, presided over by Belgium's Francoise Tulkens, said: "Even by 2001, advances in communications technology had made it possible to mobilise protesters rapidly and covertly on a hitherto unknown scale.

"Article 5 did not have to be construed in such a way as to make it impracticable for the police to fulfil their duties of maintaining order and protecting the public."

The judges ruled that the convention also placed a duty on the police "to protect individuals from violence and physical injury".

Earlier this year, in a separate case, the Met won its appeal against a High Court ruling over kettling tactics used during G20 demonstrations in 2009.

[ ...]

http://www.bbc.com/news/uk-17378700




---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

COMMENT

What the British political police have done to these women political campaigners, for the sake of British authorities infiltrating and spying on Britons exercising their lawful and democratic political rights, is depraved and worse than being killed (in my view).
Doing a quickie check on Baroness Jenny Jones, I came across 'kettling' and it drew my attention.

The term most likely arises from the military tactic of surrounding opposing forces.

So now I know what kettling is and what those references 'cauldron' were, when I was following the self-defence action in Novorossiya without a clue what they were talking about. 

Maybe I've read about kettling since and have forgotten, which is possible.  Apologies in advance if I'm repeat posting.  lol

While I can understand the reluctance of courts to prevent police being able to do their work (which does, indeed, involve maintenance of order and protection of  the public),  indiscriminate and aggressive policing (such as kettling) which can (and has) been misused and is illegitimate as a police tactic (see 9-hour kettling reference above).

In upholding the tactic of kettling protesters and bystanders (ie indiscriminately assault, imprisonment & protracted cruelty meted out by law enforcement authorities), the European Court of Human Rights has proven itself to be as illegitimate as the law enforcement authorities it has backed.
The ECHR is another joke institution.  Don't expect much of this 17-judge farce.
------------


Protesters need to read military manuals (or even historic information about Roman battle formations etc), to figure how to circumvent the cauldron thingy.  

Pre-planned protester splinters might be the go.
Can't believe I've flipped sides.  Usually I side with the authorities whenever I see what looks like a violent rabble that needs hosing down or something.
I'm bound to flip and do a 360 ... I'm not much of a rebel.  lol



December 16, 2015

Video - Julian Assange - 'The End of Democracy' - Angela Richter & Srećko Horvat


ASSANGE
VIDEO

The End of Democracy
Julian Assange (via video)
in conversation with Angela Richter & Srećko Horvat







Das Ende der Demokratie
Julian Assange (per Video)
im Gespräch mit Angela Richter und Srećko Horvat
from Volksbühne Berlin

The end of democracy
Julian Assange (via video)
in conversation with
Angela Richter & Srećko Horvat
from Volksbühne Berlin




Introduction
Sebastian Kaiser
Volksbühne at the Rosa-Luxemburg-Platz

Written intro along the lines that:
the ideal of 'democracy' has figured prominently in the post WWII West.

However, the reality is that "powerful corporations act like states" and wars are waged in the name of freedom, while "our digital activities are tapped and recorded almost entirely".

WikiLeaks

"taking the promise of democracy seriously under advanced technological conditions"
-- transparency
-- exposure of secret data flows
-- platform for whistleblower information
-- redeeming internet freedom
-- online and active
Assange
-- hailed as a hero and cypherpunk genius by many
-- denounced as high-tech terrorist
-- exposed to public death threats
-- persecuted by governments and intelligence services
-- for 'damages' allegedly suffered
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Assange

9 December 2015 discussion

-- Volksbühne via live stream from Ecuador embassy
-- theatre director Angela Richter
-- Croatian philosopher Srećko Horvat

Discussion
-- Transatlantic Trade & Investment Partnership (TTIP)
-- geopolitical implications
-- of  huge influx of refugees into Europe
-- reflecting on democracy’s criminal history
-- potentially opening an alternative view on Europe

--------------------- ꕤ ----------------------




COMMENT

About to watch/listen to this latest video (link at top page). 

Sounds an interesting talk.

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------



Julian Assange 



WikiLeaks Website
https://wikileaks.org/index.en.html 

Latest Book
'The WikiLeaks Files'
http://www.versobooks.com/books/1931-the-wikileaks-files




October 26, 2015

Transcript - Audio - JULIAN ASSANGE Interview By Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project

Transcript
SOURCE


http://www.thepressproject.gr/podcast/final_assange.mp3





TRANSCRIPT

[for quotations, confirm audio]


INTERVIEW
JULIAN ASSANGE, WIKILEAKS


INTERVIEWED BY:
Kostas Ephemera
The Press Project Podcast

On:  Monday, 20th October 2015

AUDIO SOURCE
http://www.thepressproject.gr/podcast/final_assange.mp3


Hi, I'm  Kostas Ephemera from the Press Project, and I'm speaking to you from the Embassy of Ecuador.

I'm here with Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, and he's agreed to give us some answers for the Greek audience.

The first question is:  through the work of WikiLeaks & people like Edward Snowden, people now know that the system is corrupted.  Although we've had movements like the Indignados and Occupy Wall Street, they don't seem to last.  Why is that?

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks

The visible, apparent failure of Occupy Wall Street to produce a clear result has discouraged people, at least in the West, from engaging in large, mass gatherings.

However, a great many lessons and networks did emerge from Occupy Wall Street and have continued on in other areas.

More generally, the problem of mankind has always been its lack of understanding about how the world actually works, and the first task of human beings is to educate themselves and each other.  That is what has led to all the advances that mankind has achieved.

Further advances in relation to how to restructure society or how to produce better institutions can only occur as a result of:

(a) new information which further reveals how modern human institutions actually behave; and

(b) the conveyance of that information into people's heads, in an accurate manner.

The problem of (a) is the problem of secrecy.  The problem of (b) is the problem of media accuracy.

Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project

OK, you spoke of the media.  When you started WikiLeaks, you collaborated with some of the biggest international media, but after a while they backed off.  Why?

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks

Well, all institutions eventually become defined by their own quest for power, regardless of how they start.

Large media organisations have been around for a long time and are powerful and, so, their management and ownership class, has learnt how to exploit that power by doing favours for other power groups that are around them, or defending their own social class or their shareholders directly.

The only exception is when the organisation is small, or where it has an ideological leader that has firm control over the organisation's destiny, or, perhaps, where its business model is populist and directly relies on its readers.

2:56

As a result of our publications, we have contracts with more than a hundred and ten (110) different media organisations around the world, and in a number of different publishing projects, we've given all those hundred and ten (110) media organisations exactly the same material and, so, we're able to compare results.

And we can see the geopolitical biases, cultural biases, the political interference from owners, the political interference from the management class, and redaction and censorship, for political purposes or because of fears of legal costs, or because of cultural sensitivities.

For example, The Guardian newspaper, El Pais, Le Monde & The New York Times, extensively redacted material in the diplomatic cables publication, for reasons other than protecting people from retribution, whereas The Hindu newspaper (which is the highest quality English newspaper in India), only redacted two cables.

4:07
Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project
*** [???]  the dictum "If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear" works, after all, for the system.

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks

First of all, the national security state is very powerful.

In the United States, the  Defence Department alone feeds ten percent (10%) of the US population in terms of its salaries and direct contracts.

That ten percent (10%) of the population has a social group on its periphery.  It's people they are related to.  For example, they have good friends, business partners.  It maybe extends to thirty (30%) or forty (40%) percent of the entire US population.

Media proprietors tend to have many business interests and, so, those business interests intersect with the national security state.

So there has been suppression of the story, first of all.

Secondly, it is a complex story about spy agencies and it involves the interception of nearly the entire world.

It's not easy for people to imagine such a thing and still believe in it.

This interception is a lot like the concept of god:  it is invisible; intangible; knows what you're doing; knows what everyone is doing; it seems that one has to take it on faith.

The fact is, strangely, mass surveillance is the first god in that respect, that has been proven to exist, that even atheists can believe in.

5:53

But-- atheists can say they believe in, but, really, most people don't believe in things they haven't directly seen themselves, because most people don't see direct -- they don't see the National Security Agency or GCHQ spies under their bed -- they don't understand the danger.

6:17

But I'm pleased that they don't understand the danger, because if everyone understood the danger, the response wouldn't be to stop mass surveillance:  the response, by most people, would be become extremely conformist.

Now, this old result of 'nothing wrong'.  So what is it?

'If you have nothing to hide, you have nothing to fear.'

That encodes within it exactly the problem.

People try and guess what it is that these powerful agencies might consider wrong, and they are not sure where the boundaries are, and so they adjust their own behaviour and start to self-censor.  But it's intellectually bankrupt.

7:00

In the end, even if you are a baker, not involved in any politics at all, its not simply a matter of arbitrary injustice might trip you up anyway, because of confusion and incompetence in the national security state.  But it is necessary to protect forces in society that keep society honest.

For example, human rights activists, journalists, and opposition politicians.

These are all involved in preventing society collapsing due to corruption or incompetence.

And if those elements can't operate, then society will decay.

7:46

And it will even affect 'the baker' when society does decay.

So it's not just about you.
It is about this professional class of people who are involved in trying to holding government to account.

If they can't hold government to account, government will go bad.

Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project

Oh, yeah.

Lately, governments are becoming more aggressive, while their people find it harder to control them.

Are conspiracy theorists not wild enough anymore?

8:11

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks

The US government is prosecuting me for conspiracy to commit espionage and general conspiracy.

And the government has conspiracy theories about the people, and even laws called 'conspiracy'.

It is interesting if you look at some conspiracy.  You know, some unfounded paranoid conspiracy theories, spread around by people about the capacities of the National Security Agency and some other national spying services, they were not paranoid about.

8:46

I knew that at that time, and we know even more now.

But the bigger concern is where all of that is going.

I like to joke that the only thing that has saved mankind is bureaucracy, corruption and incompetence, because massive spy agencies like the National Security Agency that are intercepting nearly all the world's electronic communication, of nearly every person, would completely dominate the Earth if they were not corrupt, if they were not bureaucratic, and if they were not incompetent.

But, fortunately, secrecy breeds incompetence and corruption, and these are very large secret organisations, so they are also very corrupt ones -- corrupt and incompetent.

The problem is that the commercial sector like Google and Facebook are not corrupt or incompetent, as traditionally defined.

They are in a highly competitive commercial market and so they have become extremely efficient at collecting information, and the security agencies then simply stick their fangs into the big corporate players and suck the information out from there.

Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project

Let me ask you something different.

Greece, now, has a left-wing government with very friendly relationships with Ecuador and with *** [???]

How would you like to ask Greece for political asylum?

10:08

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks

I would be very interested to hear of such an offer from Greece, as we know there's a lot of support from the Greek population, and it would be a legally and politically important gesture here in Europe.

It's an interesting question [whether] the true nature of Greek power permits such an action or not.

Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project

Why do you think Greek government is powerless to offer you asylum?


10:33

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks

If I had been Cyprus, what would I have done in this conflict with the troika?

I can see that there's different arguments for going different ways, but what I would have found most interesting would be to use the conflict to create an intense unity within Greece and, provided you have control over the police, the army and the law, and you have a healthy population and no natural disasters, you can do a lot.

But there is really that question.

And you effectively create a war-time footing, which has effectively been a problem like war for Greece, and Greece has survived much harsher circumstances in war, so there's no reason to believe it couldn't survive a conflict of that type and, in fact, a number of good things might come out of that conflict -- but only if you have control of the police and the army.  And, I think, the reality is that Syriza did not have full control over those three services, so that was not an option.

11:42

Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project
In Greece, we have suffered and continue to suffer the results of austerity.

Does the TTIP mean such kind of austerity for the whole of Europe?

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks

TTIP is the US-EU portion of a much grander project.

That grand project [is] the three t'd agreements:  TTIP, TISA, and TPP.

It's a project to create a new grand enclosure, a modern form perhaps analogous to the partition of Africa or the construction of the European Union -- a new economic and legal regime that will incorporate fifty-two (52) nations -- 1.6 billion people -- and, most importantly, two-thirds of global GDP.

It has been constructed politically by playing the China card.

So whenever something that radical and that large occurs, it's because it has the backing of several powerful forces.

In this case, it has the backing of the major US multinationals, who have been always trying to achieve agreements like this.

But it has also managed to get the backing of the US national security class, who view it as a strategic way of isolating China, India and Russia.

13:07

By playing that China card, they've also scared much of the establishment in Western Europe to coming into the system, and a lot of the South-East Asian countries like Australia.

It is the most radical construction of an international regime since the construction of Europe [ie the European Union], and it cements once and for all, international and neoliberalism [interests?] into those fifty-two (52) countries, in a binding international treaty which is exceedingly difficult to withdraw from -- much more difficult than Greece withdrawing from Europe [ie the European Union].

13:45

It covers nearly every aspect of the economy:  transportation, all services -- and services make up about seventy-five percent (75%) of the European economy, so that means all internet services, banking services, consulting engineers and accountants.  In fact, it covers everything that you can't drop on your foot.

[Laughter]

14:10

It arises -- let's go back to World War II.

After World War II, the US had fifty percent (50%) of the global GDP and it started to construct some international institutions to deal with that and the  Bretton Woods system, the WTO [World Trade Organisation] and, eventually the WTO became an institution with its own goals to expand, and it included India, Brazil, Russia and China.

And the WTO became too democratised for the United States and there was several rounds of negotiation in the WTO in the 2000s, called the Doha Rounds, to negotiate some mutual lowering -- lower of tariffs and other mechanisms -- and the the US didn't like where things were going.  So it effectively created a negotiation outside the WTO with its allies that it could push around, and the result is those T-3 agreements.

So, as negotiations originally started in Doha show, [the US] set up this legal and trading system covering two-thirds of global GDP.  So its multinationals get what [they] want and, also, to isolate China.

15:35

To my mind, the single most significant issue is that it locks in, for at least decades, the US model of global multinational-led neoliberalism -- this radical new form of international neoliberalism -- which means that if Greece elects a different government, or Syriza wants to go a different way, it can't.  It's too late.  There's clauses in the treaty, such as if the government tries to introduce new legislation it will be penalised.

16:25

It may even be seriously anti-economic.

It does introduce the establishment of a great many new monopolies for the US pharmaceutical and copyright industries, which is anti-economic.

But just having such an invasive level of regulation for ninety-seven percent (97%) of industry in an international trade agreement suggests that it will calcify around economic activity.

17:01

It's very hard to change this international agreement, and as industry changes and new inventions come onto the scene, and there's new ways of working and new ways of trading, countries which have signed up to this treaty system will be bogged down in this international regulation.

17:22

Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project

One last question.

These days, the refugee crisis is the main issue for all Euro summits, but the people who participate in those meetings are the very same leaders of countries who sold their weapons, or, actually, their armies actively contributed to the bombing of the refugee countries.

What are your thoughts on that?

17:40

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks

Well, it's a moral disgrace, you know, that the US is not taking Syrian refugees, and that the UK has said it will take only four thousand (4,000) per year over five (5) years.

It's no surprise to anyone.  But, I mean, the situation comes about as a result of US, UK and French policy in the Middle East, together with the behaviour of US regional allies in the Middle East -- Qatar, Turkey, Jordan, Israel and Saudi Arabia.

But we published cables, including in my new book -- The WikiLeaks Files -- showing that the US has been trying to overthrow the Syrian government since at least 2006 and has very serious plans to do that; was trying to make the Syrian government 'paranoid,' trying to get it to 'over-react' by instilling that fear and paranoia, trying to make it worried about coups; trying to stir up sectarian tensions between Sunni and Shi'ites; trying to make its efforts to stop the originator of ISIS -- the ISI, the Islamic State of Iraq -- to make Syria look weak, and the fact that it was trying to crack down on terrorists at all, pushed that as an example of Syrian government not having full control over its territory, to encourage the government overthrow; trying to stop foreign investment in Syria and secretly funding a variety of NGOs in Syria and, also, *** [???], using Saudi and Egypt to help push that along.

There's an interesting question:  what is even in it for the US, this result?

19:37

Well, it's not about the US population as a whole, of course. 
It's about the particular factions that pushed for it -- whether they have a benefit -- and, of course, the CIA perceives they have a benefit.  They create a problem and then they're given a greater budget to clean 'the problem' up.

Similarly, with the contractors, arms dealers and arms manufacturers:  if there's no 'problem', then their budgets are cut.  So they create problems.

It's also part of a grand area strategy to, you know, weaken Hezbollah, to allow Israel greater control over Golan Heights and maybe a buffer zone as well; to knock out a regional ally of Iran; to knock out the last Russian base, that's left outside the former Soviet Union, in Tartus; to create a path for a gas pipeline [with] a proposed path from Qatar to Saudi, up through Syria to Europe, which will compete with Russian gas.

20:39

So there's like, as I said before:  like most significant changes that happen in the world, they happen because significant forces come together, and with multiple motivations.

It's what we see here.

But an easily predictable disaster.  But from the US perspective there's nothing for them to dislike about having Europe flooded with Syrian refugees.

In fact, we have an interesting speculation about the refugee movements.  We looked through our cables.

So the speculation was this: occasionally, opponents of a country will engage in strategic depopulation -- which is, to decrease the fighting capacity of a government, you try and get people to flee the country.

21:28

In the case of Syria, it is predominantly the middle class that is fleeing, because it is the most able to flee -- it has the language skills, money, some connections, and that's the engineering class, the management class, the bureaucratic class, precisely the class that is needed to keep the government functioning, and encouraging it to flee Syria -- for example, Germany saying that they will accept any refugees and by Turkey taking nearly two (2) million refugees, it does significantly weaken the Syrian government.

22:09

So we looked for other recent precedents of that.

In 2007, the Iraqi government made a formal demand of Germany to stop encouraging migration from Iraq to Germany.

Now, in that case clearly Germany wasn't trying to collapse the Iraqi government, but nonetheless the Iraqi government was feeling the same effect, that it was weakening its governing capacity.

Sweden, in the Iraq war, is documented in the cables as making its contribution to the Iraq war, as it said to the United States, the acceptance of the Iraqi refugees was part of its contribution.

So, regardless of whether there is design behind it, the forces engaged in trying to overthrow the Syrian government must be happy with the results.

Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project

We have the same effect of brain-drain from Greece due to the economic crisis now.  Or the brains go.

Julian Assange, WikiLeaks

Exactly.

So, the result is to weaken.

As a political asylee myself, I'm not suggesting at all that Syrians shouldn't be treated kindly as refugees.

But we should understand that engaging in the situation that causes depopulation of a country does encourage its collapse.

Kostas Ephemera, The Press Project

Thank you very much.

--- end audio ---





More



Article by Kostas Ephemera 
(Greek) 

(English translation)   here

2014 US population estimated at 322,583,006
-- ref:  http://www.worldometers.info/world-population/us-population/


USA DOD Beneficiaries

Therefore, 10% of that estimate total population is equal to 32,258,300.6 Americans
-- ie over 32-million US citizens benefit directly from US Dept of Defence.

Adding estimates of periphery associations, perhaps up to over one-third of the total US population would benefit, either directly or indirectly, from the US Dept of Defence.


Troika = European Troika  /  tripartite committee led by European Commission (Eurogroup) with European Central Bank (ECB) & the International Monetary Fund (IMF) - representing the European Union (EU) in its foreign relations, particularly re common foreign policy & security policy -- see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/European_troika


Syriza - a left-wing political party in Greece, originally founded in 2004 as a coalition of left-wing and radical left parties. It is the largest party in the Hellenic Parliament, with party chairman Alexis Tsipras serving as Prime Minister of Greece -- ref:  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syriza


Bretton Woods system -- landmark system for monetary and exchange rate management established in 1944  - ref:  http://www.investopedia.com/terms/b/brettonwoodsagreement.asp




September 24, 2015

DECLINE AND FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE - Edward Gibbon

Decline and Fall
ROMAN EMPIRE

HISTORY OF THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE ROMAN EMPIRE
Edward Gibbon, Esq.
With notes by the Rev. H. H. Milman
Vol. 1
1782 (Written), 1845 (Revised)

http://www.gutenberg.org/files/731/731-h/731-h.htm



Summary & Extracts
Wikipedia Entries - Edward Gibbon (author)


Edward Gibbon
1737 – 1794
English historian and Member of Parliament

The Decline and Fall
known for
  • quality and irony of its prose
  • use of primary sources
  • open criticism of organised religion

Unusually for 18th century:

  • Gibbon not content with second-hand accounts when the primary sources were accessible 
  • But:  most of these were drawn from well-known printed editions
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Grandfather, also named Edward
lost all of his assets
result of the South Sea Bubble stock market collapse in 1720
... but regained much of his wealth in time

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Maternal neglect

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Westminster School
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Westminster_School
{  Royal College of St Peter in Westminster  }

boarder

independent school within
precincts of Westminster Abbey

earliest recorded evidence of the school dates from 1371
in Westminster Abbey's muniments  {land titles records}

buildings now used date back to 11th century
originally part of the Anglo-Saxon Abbey at Westminster

1540
Henry VIII ordered the dissolution of the monasteries in England

personally ensured the School's survival by royal charter
 College of St. Peter carried on
with forty "King's Scholars" financed from the royal purse

available to members of the public from across the country,
so long as they could pay their own costs,
rather than private tuition provided to the nobility

Mary I's brief reign
Abbey was reinstated as a Roman Catholic monastery
but the school continued

Elizabeth I
re-founded the School in 1560
1560 is now gen. taken as date school was "founded"

Located primarily in the precincts of
former medieval monastery of Westminster Abbey

Also at school site:
Church House
HQ of the Church of England

Rooftop Ornament:

The phoenix which was placed on the roof of school in the 1950s to commemorate the school's resurgence after World War II.

[comment:  phoenix looks a lot like a peacock to me.  must be a Persian thing -- ie the mythical bird and the Yezidis peacock]

highest Oxford and Cambridge acceptance
rates of any secondary school or college in the world

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
Further education:

Magdalen College, Oxford
enrolled as a gentleman-commoner
Expelled from Oxford for religious subversion [ here ]

[Dodgy Wikipedia can't even publish the truth of a dead author's bio.  Got the 'expelled' from Oxford from alternate source.] 

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
1753
conversion to Roman Catholicism at Oxford
Sent to Switzerland [on expulsion from Oxford]

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Switzerland

reconversion to Protestantism

father threatened to disinherit him, Christmas Day 1754,
re:   reconversion to Protestantism

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

influence of deist or rationalist theologian Conyers Middleton denied

Gibbon's claim to having been converted by a reading of Middleton is very unlikely

It is claimed:

Gibbon fabricated Middleton story retrospectively in his anxiety about the impact of the French Revolution and Edmund Burke's claim that it was provoked by the French philosophes, so influential on Gibbon.

further "corrupted" by the 'free thinking' deism:
playwright/poet couple David and Lucy Mallet

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
1759 - 1770

served on active duty & reserve
South Hampshire militia
1762 deactivation
coinciding with the militia's dispersal
end of Seven Years' War
*must have remained a reservist given 1770 date? 

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Father died 1770

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

1763 - Grand Tour
Grand Tour (of continental Europe)
included a visit to Rome

Claimed he:
first conceived the idea of composing a history Rome
later extended to the entire empire
incident known as:  the "Capitoline vision"

"It was at Rome, on the fifteenth of October 1764, as I sat musing amidst the ruins of the Capitol, while the barefooted fryars were singing Vespers in the temple of Jupiter, that the idea of writing the decline and fall of the City first started to my mind."  [Edward Gibbon]

Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
disputes this as:
  • "creation of memory" or a "literary invention" 
  • given that Gibbon journal is undated

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
"Ruins of the Forum
looking towards the Capitol, 1742, by Carnaletto"
image source | roberthorvath30.wordpress.com
see also

‘Capitoline Vision’ of Edward Gibbon

https://roberthorvat30.wordpress.com/2013/10/15/the-capitoline-vision-of-edward-gibbon-on-this-day-in-history/
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
Other

US Mercantile Empire
Modelled on Roman Empire


US Mimicry
[image source:  wikipedia  - public domain]


"Capitol" 
Latin
  associated with Roman temple
to Jupiter
Optimus Maximus on Capitoline Hill

USA
established upon ratification
United States Constitution
formally began:  Mar. 1789

New York remained home to Congress

1790 - Residence Act
passed to pave the way for a permanent capital

Philadelphia was chosen as a temporary capital 
for ten years (to Dec. 1800)

until capital in Washington, D.C. would be ready

US Capitol
aka called Capitol Hill

in  Washington, D.C.
is the seat of the US Congress, the legislative branch of the US
federal govt

original building was completed in the year 1800
subsequently expanded
distinctive neoclassical style and has a white exterior

War of 1812
Capitol was partially burned
by the British - 1814
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Capitol

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
1774
 initiated a freemason of the Premier Grand Lodge of England

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Became the archetypal back-bencher
benignly "mute" and "indifferent"
support of the Whig ministry invariably automatic

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Decline & Fall well received by public
Rapid & lasting fame

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Medical

extreme case:  scrotal swelling, prob. hydrocele testis
  • chronic inflammation
  • numerous procedures
  • last of series, caused
  • unremitting peritonitis (inflammation of membrane that lines abdominal cavity)
  • inflammation set in and spread
  • caused death
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
 Death

"English giant of the Enlightenment"

died:  12:45 pm, 16 January 1794 - age 56

---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------
Decline & Fall
criticised for scathing view of Christianity
chapters XV and XVI.

... resulted in the banning of the book in several countries
... alleged crime was disrespecting ... character of sacred Christian doctrine, by:

"treat[ing] the Christian church as a phenomenon of general history, not a special case admitting supernatural explanations and disallowing criticism of its adherents"
... the chapters excoriated the church for:

"supplanting in an unnecessarily destructive way the great culture that preceded it" and for "the outrage of [practising] religious intolerance and warfare"

... assumed to be entirely anti-religion

... was supportive of religion to extent that work/history Decline and Fall was not influenced and swayed by official church doctrine

... Christianity chapters are heavily ironical & cutting about religion
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

Gibbon verdict on the history of the Middle Ages:

"I have described the triumph of barbarism and religion."
But:

... politically, he aligned himself with the conservative Edmund Burke's rejection of the democratic movements of the time as well as with Burke's dismissal of the "rights of man."


Winston Churchill
"I set out upon ... Gibbon's Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire [and] was immediately dominated both by the story and the style. ... I devoured Gibbon. I rode triumphantly through it from end to end and enjoyed it all."
Modelled his writings on that of Edward Gibbon

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edward_Gibbon
---------------------- ꕤ ----------------------

COMMENT

Glad I looked up Edward Gibbon.

His history is a history of place and time, and it touches on significant movements of the period -- which contrast with the Dark Ages that followed the Fall of Rome and are relevant to religion etc.

Churchill
"Democracy is not some harlot in the street," he said in condemning the Greek Communists toward the end of World War II, "to be picked up by some man with a Tommy gun. Democracy is based on reason, a sense of fair play, and freedom and a respect for the rights of other people." [here]
On the contrary, both Democracy & Religion are the harlots of the beneficiaries of wealth and privilege and are both probably the 'opium of the people' in a sense  ... in terms of conditions that involve illusion, at least.
1931 Paris - Opium Den
Skimming the editor's and author's introductions and noting how Decline and Fall was banned in several countries, as it did not preserve the special protections this harlot of privilege and power enjoyed, filled me with disgust.

Very interested in the Fall of the Roman empire, because I see what appears, to me, to be the fall of Europe right now.

Not sure how I'll go with reading Decline and Fall seated at a desktop.  It will take me forever.

Drawn to the chapters on Christianity. 

Do not understand why the beliefs of a break-away religious sect/cult from the Middle East were adopted by Europe:  why this was adopted over one's own traditions.  

The worship of a foreign mortal and the blend of foreign religion with pagan religion that resulted is intriguing -- as is the role that religion may have played in the decline of the Roman Empire.
Even today, religions receive special protections.  I don't think that should be the case at all.  Organised religion deserves no special regard. It is organised fraud perpetuated perpetrated for political ends, and this organisation is an expression of a host of other things that are tied to personal and group identity, psychology and so much more.
Works of Karl Marx 1843

A Contribution to the Critique of Hegel’s Philosophy of Right
Introduction

https://www.marxists.org/archive/marx/works/1843/critique-hpr/intro.htm

What Carl has to say looks interesting. Might check this out before I launch into the Gibbon's chapters on Christianity.


PS

Struggling reading what Marx has to say.  Sounds like he's opposed to the old order of the German empire.  Struggling with it because each sentence seems to be packed with so much weight.  The manner of presenting unfamiliar ideas is also hard to follow.  But I guess the more you know the easier that becomes to understand?  lol

Might set Marx aside and pop over to visit Christianity destroying the Roman empire.  lol

* Even though this book would be outdated, I think it will be an interesting read. 


August 20, 2015

Undemocratic: EU Commission Breaks Promise for Greater Transparency - Secret TTIP US Trade Agreement

GOOGLE TRANSLATE / GERMAN ORIGINAL

TTIP
EU tightens secret Pose for TTIP documents
German Economic News | Published: 19:08:15 18:14 clock

The European Commission breaks its promise for greater transparency when TTIP. Because time and again documents were made public, the access to the documents of the national parliaments will be more difficult in the future.
Cecilia Malmstrom now limited access to TTIP documents even more. (Photo: AP)
"The European Commission is organizing the negotiations on the transatlantic FTA TTIP as transparent and as responsibly as possible," it says on the part of the EU Commission. Although some NGOs this greatly doubt. However, the Commission believes that it is probably handled too freely with the documents and information about TTIP.
"After a few releases of confidential documents, the Commission had to make the decision to design the confidential report on the tenth round of negotiations in a secure reading room," said the Commission. Access to this confidential report will therefore now be even more difficult to see, even for the members of national parliaments. The reason: "This report also includes tactical considerations and our internal assessment of US positions," said Richard Kühnel, representatives of the European Commission in Germany on Friday in Berlin. "Such leaks weaken our negotiating position and make it harder to achieve the best result in the interest of Europe and its citizens. Despite all efforts to maximize transparency, we must try to prevent that. "

According to the EU Commission "hitherto most transparent bilateral trade negotiations at all" are the TTIP negotiations.
Periodically, the Commission consult with the governments of the 28 Member States and representatives of the European Parliament on the progress of negotiations. "The governments of the EU Member States have access to EU negotiating documents." However, informing the national parliaments was then a matter for the Member States - since, however, apparently confidential documents are made public, governments, the documents no longer simply to their parliamentarians hand off.


The Commission generally so if Member States continue to be no problem even confidential documents to their respective parliaments in a secure way. "We support the easiest possible access to documents, provided that confidentiality is maintained," said Kühnel. Just not more in the document to the 10th round of negotiations, such as the decision of the EU Trade Commissioner Malmström shows.


t the beginning of the week WikiLeaks had launched a fundraising campaign. Up to 100,000 euros are to be collected in order to move potential whistleblowers to publish from TTIP documents. "The secrecy of TTIP casts a shadow on the future of European democracy," said WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
SOURCE | German


Compare the EU Commission's representations in the above article
to the reality
effective denial of access
to EU member governments
[ CLICK on image to enlarge ]


COMMENT

"governments of the EU Member States have access to EU negotiating documents"
European Commission representative, Richard Kuhnel
Yeah, they have 'access' - with excessive and unreasonable restrictions placed on that access.
The reality is that this is yet another secret US trade deal, drawn in favour of corporations, at the expense of the public.
This one's been kept from European governments and the public (to prevent the public mounting opposition), while generous access and influence has been granted to:  corporations.

The European Commission promises of greater transparency amount to nothing because that's just what they were:  empty, nothing, PR / propaganda promises to pacify critics.

Instead of addressing the fact that maintenance of secrecy concerning such an important agreement, amounts to undemocratic denial of information and opportunity for debate to the public, the EU Commission mouthpiece shifts the attention to the earlier leak of TTIP information and implies that this is the justification for the secrecy.

But it is this very secrecy - this denial of transparency and denial of democracy - that would have originally led to what is therefore justifiable leak of informationFacepalm.

The reason these US trade agreements are being kept under wraps is that they're bad news.
Information which should rightfully be in the public domain, is denied the public.  This denial of information is a denial of informed public consent to terms which are irreversible:

Matt Kennard
Centre for Investigative Journalism
What is so scary about this is that corporations want to lock in their power.
So they not only want increased power, they want to make impossible for sovereign governments to reverse the changes which are going to give them power.
So, for example, with TTIP, if it passes with ISDS in it, the privatisation of the National Health Service (NHS) which is happening in the UK can never be reversed.


More on US trade agreements:

  VIDEO

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ABDiHspTJww&t=1m34s

---------------------- ꕤ  ----------------------

TRANSCRIPT

---------------------- ꕤ  ----------------------

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