|
|
View previous topic :: View next topic
|
| Author |
Message |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Thu Jan 07, 2010 10:06 pm |
|
|
| CubaLibre wrote: |
| Funny how he refers to Iraq and Afghanistan as "Muslim countries." I wonder how Mr. Greenwald would feel if I continually referred to the US as a "Christian country" in foreign policy debates. |
Outside of Kabul, Afghanistan is governed by Islamists so it's not entirely inaccurate. |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sat Jan 09, 2010 9:55 pm |
|
|
| Mr. Mechanical wrote: |
Ok I can see that.
Kind of seems like it cheapens the word's meaning though, since if you apply it to Columbine you can pretty much apply it to anything else anyone does that intentionally results in someone getting killed. Suddenly everything is terrorism. |
 |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Tue Jan 19, 2010 7:22 pm |
|
|
| The Guardian wrote: |
Cruise ships still find a Haitian berth
Luxury liners are still docking at private beaches near Haiti's devastated earthquake zone for holidaymakers to enjoy the water
Latest: Cruise company to donate sun loungers to Haiti makeshift hospital |
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jan/17/cruise-ships-haiti-earthquake |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Thu Jan 21, 2010 4:18 pm |
|
|
(ð )
-_- |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2010 4:25 am |
|
|
| I have a hard time believing that it will stand as it goes against 100 years of campaign finance laws and literally nothing has changed since the court last upheld the limits in 2007(ish). |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Mon Jan 25, 2010 3:53 am |
|
|
| do you really expect anyone to watch a lecture from the Ludgwig von Mises Institute for the "Austrian Scholars Conference" ? really? |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Mon Jan 25, 2010 4:15 am |
|
|
| lol |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 7:02 pm |
|
|
| psiga wrote: |
| (I kinda don't have an opinion on von Hayek {or von Mises} versus Keynes, since all of these guys were brilliant in their own ways, and none of these guys existed in the era of high frequency globalism.) |
austrian economics is baldfaced shamanism and carries about as much influence as ayn rand. which is to say none outside of a small cabal of dsyfunctional neckbeards |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Wed Jan 27, 2010 11:58 pm |
|
|
| howard zinn is dead fuck the world |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Fri Feb 05, 2010 3:27 am |
|
|
| Texican Rude wrote: |
| One of my students became an independent carbon trader. Sounded like an interesting job. He was really uh...fidgetity though. |
| Quote: |
Conning the climate:
Inside the carbon-trading shell game
By Mark Schapiro
Mark Schapiro is the senior correspondent at the Center for Investigative Reporting in Berkeley, California, and the author of Exposed: The Toxic Chemistry of Everyday Products and What’s at Stake for American Power. His last article for Harper’s Magazine, “Toxic Inaction,” appeared in the October 2007 issue.
No, it’s not abstract, up there in the clouds!” exclaimed Talita Beck. “I can see it. I can measure it.” We were talking about carbon emissions; Beck is an emissions assessor, a profession that did not exist a decade ago. Several times a month, she leaves her office in São Paulo, Brazil, in search of greenhouse gases—or, more precisely, to visit sites that have promised to emit less of them. Such commitments, whether made by malodorous pig farms, squalid city dumps, or rural sugarcane-processing mills, can be transformed into money by companies thousands of miles away, in Britain or Germany or Japan or any other country that has ratified the Kyoto Protocols.
Carbon trading is now the fastest-growing commodities market on earth. Since 2005, when major greenhouse-gas polluters among the Kyoto signatories were issued caps on their emissions and permitted to buy credits to meet those caps, there have been more than $300 billion worth of carbon transactions. Major financial institutions such as Goldman Sachs, Barclays, and Citibank now host carbon-trading desks in London; traders who once speculated on oil and gas are betting on the most insidious side effects of our fossil fuel–based economy. Over the next decade, if President Obama and other advocates can institute a cap-and-trade system in the United States, the demand for carbon credits could explode into a $2 to $3 trillion market, according to the market-analysis firm Point Carbon.
Under the cap-and-trade system, industries regulated by it—the largest being power generation, chemicals, steel, and cement—are given limits on their total emissions, and companies can purchase emission reductions from others in lieu of reducing emissions themselves. Already, European companies buy and trade their credits frequently under parameters established by the European Union, which assigns a baseline emissions level to major industries as well as future limits they have to meet. The measurement of reductions is relatively straightforward, based on readings from meters installed at regulated power stations and manufacturing facilities.
But Kyoto also allows companies to purchase “offsets,” credits from emissions-reducing projects in developing countries. Such projects, which currently account for as much as a third of total tradable credits, are overseen not by the E.U. but by the United Nations. In this way, more than 300 million credits—each representing the equivalent of one metric ton of carbon dioxide—have been generated. (If cap-and-trade in the United States were to become reality along the lines of proposals now before Congress, up to 2 billion of the new credits would be drawn from carbon offsets, potentially increasing the worldwide supply of such credits by a factor of seven.) Whole new careers are blossoming: “carbon developers,” many of them employed by large multinational firms, travel the world in search of carbon-reduction projects to sell, while carbon accountants, such as SGS’s Talita Beck, are paid to affirm that those reductions are real.
I met Beck last May at the Brazilian offices of her employer, the SGS Group. Founded in France more than a century ago to verify the weight of grains traded across Europe, SGS (now headquartered in Switzerland) has now moved far beyond assessing the moisture levels in barley. Its core business, broadly construed, is product inspection; in the United States, for example, its sensors detect the presence of genetically engineered ingredients in food and toxic chemicals in children’s toys. But after Kyoto, the company diversified into the new field of carbon verification. SGS now employs more than one hundred validators in a dozen offices around the world. One of these is Beck, who obtained an environmental-science degree in England before returning to her native Brazil in 2008, with the dream of helping to solve the greatest global challenge of our time. “We’re like environmental police officers,” she told me. “You have the law—that’s the United Nations. And you have the police—that’s us.”
Never before has the United Nations presided over the issuing of securities, and carbon offsets—authorized through the body’s Clean Development Mechanism (CDM)—are unlike any securities ever created: because such gases emerge not just from factories and automobiles but from felled trees, animal and agricultural waste, and innumerable other sources from every corner of the earth, the supply of promises to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions is potentially infinite. And unlike traditional commodities, which sometimes during the course of their market exchange must be delivered to someone in physical form, the carbon market is based on the lack of delivery of an invisible substance to no one. In an attempt to compensate for this intangibility, the United Nations has certified twenty-six firms worldwide—in U.N. lingo, Designated Operational Entities (DOEs)—to “validate” the promises of emissions reducers and then to “verify,” often years later, that those reductions actually occurred.
SGS is one of two companies that dominate the carbon-validation business. The other is Det Norske Veritas (DNV), a Norwegian firm whose primary business is shipping inspection. Other major players include the accounting firm Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu, the transportation-safety firm Lloyd’s Register, and TÜV SÜD, a German industrial-testing company. Much as large accountancies affirm the balance sheets of corporations, the DOEs are supposed to assess the credibility of emissions reducers by verifying the truth of their statements, in which they are required to predict their own future reductions of emissions.
Not long before Beck and I met, for example, she and two colleagues had visited the site of a prospective composting project in Duque de Caxias, which sits along the western shore of Guanabara Bay just north of Rio de Janeiro. The project planned to collect fruit and vegetable waste from grocery stores and street markets and compost that waste into organic fertilizer, which could then be sold to farms. By using aerobic composting and microorganisms to break down the waste, the project would avoid creating methane, which is twenty times more effective at trapping heat than carbon. The project’s developers—which include Dublin-based EcoSecurities, the world’s largest carbon investor—had brought in SGS as validator. After their visit, Beck and her colleagues affirmed that the project would result in the equivalent of 67,000 tons of carbon dioxide that will not be produced. At the current carbon price of roughly $22 a ton, this would entitle the project’s developers, upon U.N. approval (which as of December was still pending), to credits worth nearly $1.5 million.
Multiply that decision by the nearly 2,000 CDM projects worldwide, which represent claimed emissions reductions in fifty-eight countries—hydropower dams in India, wind farms in Morocco, methane-capture projects in Brazil—and the scope of the responsibility placed upon SGS and its competitors becomes clear. Market forces created the worldwide industrial growth that has led to global warming, but the United Nations has concluded that those same forces can be used to avert climate change. By policing this huge new effort in rechanneling capital, it has deputized the validators and verifiers to measure carbon and thereby transform it into a novel commodity: one whose value resides entirely in the promise of its absence.
The approval of carbon credits is a multistage process. After investors identify a prospective project, they hire a DOE to assess the reduction of emissions. The DOE then puts together a report that includes estimates of both existing greenhouse-gas release rates and the potential for reduction given different technological approaches. That report is then submitted to the U.N. Executive Board, which audits it before passing judgment. Once approved, the project is considered “validated” and the prospective credits can be placed on the market as a sort of futures contract: the credits can be bought and sold, but buyers who need credits to meet their caps do not actually receive them yet. Delivery happens months or even years later, after a DOE is brought in again to “verify” that the promised emissions reductions have occurred. At that stage, the credits are called Certified Emission Reductions (CERs) and can be used by purchasers against their caps. During both validation and verification, the DOE is the only entity apart from the investors to visit the project site and assess it in the real world. Occasionally the verification process will lead to a re-estimation of the credits delivered or even to an outright rejection: in 2007, after a series of projects had their credit levels re-estimated, EcoSecurities was forced to write down its total portfolio by some 40 million credits, causing the company’s stock to plunge. But all in all, only 4 percent of requests for verification since 2005 have been rejected.
This whole process has two goals. One is to operate successfully as a market, with a steady supply of carbon offsets and varying prices to ensure that profits can be made. The other goal, of course, is the system’s ultimate raison d’être: to reduce greenhouse-gas emissions by channeling funds into cleaner technologies. To achieve both goals, validations are the crucial step, the threshold at which messy real-world promises are transformed into tradable abstractions. Validation is also the Achilles’ heel of the system, and this vulnerability stems in large part from the central requirement for offsets: additionality—that is, proof that one’s renewable-energy project would not happen without the capital generated by selling carbon credits. Thus the process is fraught with obstacles of definition, involving as it does a conceptual leap into the future.
In order to prove that an emissions reduction would not have happened otherwise, project developers try to demonstrate that a comparable, less emissions-intensive technology is not commonly used in the industry for which it is being considered, and also that the switch is not legally required—if everyone’s doing it, why should a company get extra money as a reward? Moreover, developers must show that the project would make no economic sense without CDM funds and that documentation exists to demonstrate that these factors were considered by the company’s board of directors in their decision to pursue CDM financing. It is left to the validators to determine that all these requirements have been met. “They are expected to determine something that is counterfactual, not an easy thing to do,” says Clare Breidenich, who worked on greenhouse-gas policy both at the U.S. State Department and, later, at the United Nations, where she led the division that monitored emissions by developed countries.
Lambert Schneider, a German environmental engineer who serves on a U.N. panel on methodologies, reviewed nearly a hundred offset projects for the peer-reviewed journal Climate Policy. He found that just 60 percent of projects actually provided evidence that the CDM funding made a difference, and that 40 percent of companies would likely have reduced emissions anyway. “You’re a project developer, and you’re telling a story about how your project is ‘additional,’” Schneider told me. “The DOEs check the story. They are relied on for their judgment, and it’s often a very selective judgment.”
It turns out that overestimating reductions is the trapdoor in the offset system. Study after study has demonstrated that CDMs have not delivered the promised amount of emissions reductions. According to a report by the U.N.’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, the margin of error in measuring emissions from the cement and fertilizer industries can be as high as 10 percent. For the oil, gas, and coal industries, the margin of error is 60 percent; and for some agricultural processes, the margin of error can actually reach 100 percent. A Berlin think tank, the Öko-Institut, conducted a review of the validation process on behalf of the World Wildlife Fund International and concluded, last May, that none of the top five validators scored higher than a D in an A-to-F grading schedule based on challenges and questions about their projects.
Axel Michaelowa, who serves on the U.N.’s CDM Registration and Issuance Team and also runs a carbon-policy consulting firm in Geneva, has come to a similar conclusion. He told me that 15 to 20 percent of offset credits should never have been issued, because the underlying projects failed to prove additionality. In the United States, the Government Accountability Office, the investigative arm of Congress, concluded that as a result of such discrepancies, the use of offsets “may not be a cost-effective model for achieving emission reductions.” The GAO issued that critique of cap-and-trade last March after being asked by Congress to study its benefits and drawbacks.
“Validations are an open flame in the system,” Michaelowa said. “The initial idea was that they would be the guarantee of legitimacy for a project. But they began rubber-stamping what developers were putting into the projects. Then once the projects are up and running—well, it’s too late.”
I witnessed such an “up and running” project firsthand when I drove north along a two-lane highway through the Brazilian state of Minas Gerais. To the west, the peaks of the Da Canastra range are scarred from the excavation of their iron ore and gold; along the savannah hugging the highway, cattle graze the pasturelands that were once forests. Passing me in the other direction, heading south, were trucks bearing timber. Minas Gerais means “General Mines,” a testament to how deeply the idea of probing the earth for its treasure is tied to the identity of this Brazilian state.
Turning off the highway down a long dirt road, I passed through a corridor of trees—to the left, remnants of the native forest, tangled and wild; to the right, rows and rows of eucalyptus, their thin pale trunks running into the distance. Finally, we arrived at a jarring scene: piles of black charcoal heaped in the middle of a broad, dusty plain. On either side the charcoal was flanked by what appeared to be mottled, rust-colored igloos but were in fact kilns.
“These are our mines!” exclaimed Rodrigo Coelho Ferreira, my traveling companion and guide, gesturing toward the heaps of charcoal. Ferreira was a carbon-projects analyst for Plantar, one of Brazil’s biggest forest-resource companies. By “mines,” he wasn’t referring to the trees, or what was left of them in the charcoal, but rather to the carbon they contained, which the company planned to sell as emissions credits. Ferreira explained that Plantar’s kilns used a new technique for controlling the 400-degree fire inside them that reduced the emission of methane from the burning eucalyptus logs. The charcoal from the kilns is then used in a nearby pig-iron factory, a shop of rolling treads where molten iron is molded into twenty-five-pound plugs for use in automobiles and appliances.
Each stage of this complicated plan had already been reviewed by a leading DOE, and each was plausible on its face. For every ton of pig iron produced using charcoal instead of coal, two tons of carbon emissions are averted, a figure affirmed by SGS. DNV validated that the kilns’ new air-flow system reduces methane emissions. And TÜV SÜD had been called in to confirm that the eucalyptus trees soak up carbon through photosynthesis at a more substantial rate than does the denuded pastureland that was there previously. From its 57,000 acres of eucalyptus, its eighty kilns, and its charcoal-fired pig-iron facility, Plantar expected to earn 12.8 million carbon credits over the next twenty-eight years, the scheduled life of the project. It had already allotted 1.5 million credits to the World Bank in return for initial financing of the project. So the company would have more than 11 million carbon credits to sell.
But the fundamental uncertainties of the CDM system were already in evidence by the time I visited. At the time the three DOEs inspected each of the elements of Plantar’s scheme, the company was fully engaged in the production process. Trees were being burned, and the charcoal being produced was fueling the pig-iron factory. By last May, however, the entire enterprise lay dormant. Stacks of eucalyptus logs ten feet high lay alongside rows of still-standing trees; the charcoal was piled alongside kilns that had not been fired up; and the pig-iron factory’s rolling machinery had been frozen in place for at least a month. The global financial crisis, Ferreira explained, had dried up the market for automobile and refrigerator doors, at least those utilizing Plantar’s pig iron. While the entire process was dormant, awaiting an economic upturn, some of the future credits were already for sale.
“Our strategy is to sell these credits to industries that need them,” Fábio Marques, the manager of carbon projects for Plantar, told me back at company headquarters in the state capital of Belo Horizonte. The company, he said, was in “active negotiations with European industries and banks” interested in buying them; he wouldn’t provide their names. Plantar’s take could amount to more than $100 million.
In this highly specialized new industry, perhaps a thousand people really understand how onsite measurement of CDM projects works, and there is a serious potential for conflicts of interest. It is not uncommon for validators and verifiers to cross over to the far more lucrative business of developing carbon projects themselves—and then requesting audits from their former colleagues. Schneider points out that young university graduates entering the field commonly spend several years learning the ropes at DOEs and then “go to work for a carbon project developer, where they make three times the salary doing more interesting work.”
These developers—which partner with local businesses and governments to set up offset projects—are by and large funded or owned outright by multinational firms, particularly financial houses such as JP Morgan Chase, which owns the biggest developer in the world, Eco-Securities; Goldman Sachs, which has a significant interest in the largest U.S.-based developer, Blue Source; and Cantor Fitzgerald, which owns CantorCO2e, another major player. Other large investors in the field are the agricultural-commodities firm Cargill, which is now one of the top developers of carbon projects, as well as BHP Billiton, the world’s largest mining firm. Sometimes, as is the case with Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan, developers’ owners also speculate in the secondary markets for credits through dedicated carbon-trading offices in London. Far from being independent third-party auditors, the DOEs get paid by these very developers and have to compete vigorously to win business. Plantar’s Fábio Marques told me the company routinely takes “various bids” of differing price from validators.
In recent years, the U.N. Executive Board has attempted to increase its oversight of the system, enlarging the CDM support staff from just twenty people in 2005 to nearly a hundred today, two thirds of them dedicated to technical reviews and assessments. They now read the DOE proposals with more scrutiny: today, more than 65 percent are sent back for more supporting documentation, compared with about 10 percent of such “requests for review” in 2005. The U.N. also has been trying to tighten the reins on validators: in the span of just nine months in 2008 and 2009, it issued temporary suspensions of both DNV and SGS, due to irregularities found in their project assessments.
At the time of DNV’s suspension, in December 2008, it was the dominant carbon accounting firm, having validated 48 percent of all offsets—almost a thousand projects, representing more than four hundred million tons of emission-reduction credits. It was one of the first two firms to be accredited under the Kyoto Protocol, and had helped establish the methodologies for measuring emissions and for predicting future emission reductions that lay at the heart of the market’s rapid expansion. The investigation began after the Executive Board rejected several of DNV’s projects. The Board then initiated a “spot check” at DNV’s offices in Oslo, where a CDM team found five “non-conformities,” including a flawed review process within the company’s auditing staff, inadequate preparation and training of field auditors, and an overall failure to assign assessors with the proper technical skills. After revising its procedures to U.N. specifications, DNV was reinstated as a Designated Operational Entity in February 2009.
The suspension of SGS was handed down last September, four months after I met Talita Beck in São Paulo. By this point, SGS had become the dominant validator, responsible for more than a third of all Certified Emission Reductions being utilized and traded. In its case, the Executive Board compared several of the company’s verification reports for a single project and found inconsistencies among them; the Board then subjected SGS to a spot check. During the investigation, the company was unable to satisfy the Board’s assessment team’s concerns about the quality of its internal reviews and the qualifications of its staff. SGS was cited for six non-conformities with DOE standards. After revising its own auditing procedures, the company was reinstated by the U.N. last December.
Together, SGS and DNV have been responsible for nearly two thirds of the emissions reductions now being utilized by industries in the developed world. Although the two firms’ temporary suspensions were a strong gesture of oversight on the part of the United Nations, they also illustrate the limits of the U.N.’s capacity to monitor those firms it has deputized. The only mechanism the U.N. has for evaluating its DOEs is the evidence they themselves create and present: the validation reports they write and the data they gather onsite. When the U.N. does spot checks, as it did with DNV and SGS, it performs them in the offices of the validators, not in the field. The increasingly complex and far-flung projects, with developers dredging up thousands of claimed reductions in remote areas all around the world, already far outstrip the U.N.’s ability to police them adequately.
An even larger quandary posed by the suspensions is the lack of retroactive removal—an issue that goes to the heart of cap-and-trade, which relies on a direct correlation between dollars spent and emissions reductions obtained. Every ton of offsets verified by a DOE can thereafter be used to compensate for excessive emissions by companies in Europe, Japan, Australia, and New Zealand. The Executive Board has no power to order the removal of credits from the market, even in the event of misconduct by a validator or verifier.
More than a decade ago, negotiators of the Kyoto treaty foresaw the potential problems with tainted credits. According to Clare Breidenich, the former State Department official who participated in the negotiations, the subject was hotly debated as early as 1997, before Kyoto was signed and long before the launch of the global carbon markets. The questions then were the same as those today: Who would be liable if credits were found to be spurious? Could emissions credits based on faulty assumptions or inadequate review be revoked? The debate highlighted the challenges of turning carbon into a commodity, with the undertaking’s simultaneous goals of imposing financial penalties on polluters, luring more investors into the market, and channeling money toward renewable energy technologies that would reduce emissions.
“If credits were revocable,” Breidenich explained, recalling the dispute, “then industries operating under caps would suddenly discover that they did not have the credits they thought they had. And they were afraid that if that were the case, there would be no market.”
The debate was resolved with a decision not to decide. The U.N. would not be given the power to revoke credits. Holding companies accountable to the degrees of uncertainty in the market—roughly comparable to the levels of risk that publicly traded companies are obligated to report to potential investors—was dropped in the interest of luring capital into the market more quickly.
Eva Halvorsen, manager of corporate communications at DNV’s Oslo office, reassured me that if there were problems with the company’s validations, they would be identified during the verification process, which on large projects is conducted by a different company. But still, even in the uncommon case where CERs are never issued, the validated credits derived from those projects are already being traded on the market.
“We’re conning the climate,” says Sanjeev Kumar, a policy officer at the WWF’s European office in Brussels. “If you’re a power company using questionable credits to meet emission targets, that’s a problem. They’re good for seven years. Then they can be renewed for another seven years. And renewed again. And suddenly you’ve got twenty-one years when nothing in effect is being done to reduce emissions—either in the developed countries or in the developing countries.”
If anyone is most responsible for the U.N.’s newly aggressive stance toward verifiers, it is José Miguez, who serves on the Executive Board and, as a top official in Brazil’s Ministry of Science and Technology, is one of the country’s key climate-policy negotiators. In cooperation with the United States during the Kyoto negotiations, he helped create the CDM system that, in climate circles, is still known as the Brazil Proposal. Miguez is fervently committed to the offset-based cap-and-trade system, he told me one afternoon in Rio de Janeiro, because it has led to a historic transfer of technology and know-how from industrialized countries to industrializing ones, channeling capital to parts of the world that otherwise would have been forgotten by major global corporations now hunting for emission credits.
But Miguez also has an abiding interest in maintaining the credibility of the system. When he took over as president of the Executive Board (a rotating position among the members) in 2006, he ordered a spot check of DNV. Until then, he said, the validators assumed that their findings would slip right by the U.N.—and, with few staff to review the validation reports, they usually did. Miguez was instrumental in the expansion of that staff, which now scrutinizes proposals far more carefully. He recognizes that the central flaw in the system is its reliance on private companies to validate emission reductions. “Think of the people who audit Microsoft’s balance sheet. You have shareholders who will complain if the audit is bad. But with the CDM, there is no figure like the shareholder to complain if the audit is bad. There is no outside, independent force to moderate them and hold them accountable.”
Miguez said there have been proposals circulating inside and around the U.N. to reform that system—notably by granting the Executive Board the authority and the funds to hire the verifiers itself. Project developers would pay a fee to the U.N., which would assign validators to a project in a random selection process—providing some level of protection from evident conflicts of interest. The proposals, though, have been rebuffed repeatedly by his colleagues on the Executive Board, which requires a three-quarters majority of eight votes to implement new rules. Just three votes can block any new major initiative. The main opposition, he said, has come from the validators themselves, who have strenuously lobbied members of the board to oppose any changes: “They want to be able to negotiate fees with the project developers. With a flat rate established by the U.N. they would not be able to do that.”
But this reform, while eliminating the conflicts of interest, would do little to address the larger pitfalls of the validation system. To maintain even the current level of monitoring would represent an undertaking of enormous scope, necessitating the coordination and management of hundreds (if not thousands) of field personnel, stationed in remote offices literally everywhere in the world. Moreover, the number of offset projects continues to climb and will skyrocket if the United States institutes cap-and-trade along the lines of the Waxman–Markey bill, passed by the House in June. Although the U.S. caps (which would cut total emissions by 3 percent in 2012, 17 percent by 2020, and 42 percent by 2030) would likely not be linked to the European system, the offsets permitted would be far broader—and more complex—than those now traded in Europe: reductions in greenhouse-gas-intensive farming practices, for example, and the preservation of living forests, and other new classes of counterfactual carbon promises, each of them with a particular set of measurement and accountability challenges.
In fact, the problems with turning carbon into a commodity begin at the very moment of conception. A one-ton carbon credit is not precisely reproducible like an ounce of gold or twenty tons of pork bellies; each credit emerges from entirely different conditions and components, whether the planting of eucalyptus trees, the capture of methane from pigs, the substitution of wind power for coal. Each represents a promise of potentially varying longevity and effectiveness, to say nothing of trustworthiness. Each involves rewarding a promise that may not be kept and whose keeping cannot even be measured reliably. On paper, cap-and-trade is seductively elegant; but in practice, making good on its promises would require an enforcement structure that is hardly less onerous than the obvious (if painful) solution to climate change that cap-and-trade was designed to avoid: that is, a carbon tax.
I ran into José Miguez again in December, on a Friday evening in Copenhagen, as I wandered a hallway inside the vast, climate-controlled complex of low-slung metal hangars where the climate-change negotiations were taking place. It was the end of the summit’s first week, and the faces I passed all had a weary aspect to them. Everything, it seemed, was in play: emissions limits, the offset structure, the roles of the United States and of the developing world in a potential post-Kyoto scheme. The previous week, the Executive Board had lifted SGS’s suspension and had also—according to observers present at the proceedings—encountered resistance from the company and from other DOEs to measures that would tighten the standards governing auditors’ qualifications. The board also declared, in a move that once again sent ripples through the market, that the credits of ten windmill projects in China, despite already having been validated, would be suspended due to suspicions about additionality.
Roadblocks aside, the offset system was charging forward into new terrain. The Executive Board was considering a proposal—pushed by the Gulf states, Norway, and Russia—to qualify carbon capture-and-sequestration technology, which involves diverting atmospheric carbon-dioxide emissions from the air deep into the earth or under the sea, as an offset available for polluting industries. Long advocated by coal and oil interests, the move was opposed by the Brazilians; the millions of new cheap credits generated by allowing the carbon-capture offset projects would “destroy the market,” Miguez had told me in Rio. (Of course, these credits would also undermine the value of Brazil’s offset projects. The battle over offsets is as much about where you come from as it is about what actually reduces emissions.) I asked him about the proposal again in Copenhagen. “Everyone has their interests,” he diplomatically replied, as he hustled off to another meeting.
That Sunday, the negotiators took the day off, and I made my way downtown to a “green business” exhibition, in order to see what a post-carbon economy might look like. There were wind producers, electric-car makers, and ethanol-based plastics manufacturers; even the U.S. Department of Commerce had a booth to promote an array of green American industries. In a booth sponsored by the government of Abu Dhabi—promoting what it claimed was the world’s first “carbon-neutral city,” which the emirate was building in the remote desert and for which it hoped to obtain CDM funds—I met Mark Trexler, the director of Climate Strategies and Markets for DNV. Trexler has been in the climate-change business in the United States for some twenty years, most recently as an executive with EcoSecurities.
We sat down over coffee, and I raised my concerns about the validation system. Trexler claimed that any problem was not with the validators—“We only enforce the rules of the U.N.,” he averred—but instead with the “interests” that devised the priorities of the system and prized volume over accuracy. He offered home-pregnancy tests as an analogy. Such tests deliver news that can be good or bad, he said, but there will always be a percentage of false readings in either direction; and if one tries to design the test to reduce false positives, “you will increase the number of false negatives, and the reverse.” A similar equation held, he believed, for measuring offsets. “If the United Nations only permits projects with airtight additionality, you’ll have a huge increase in the pool of false negatives. Some legitimate projects will be kept out.” But, he went on, the reality is that everyone—emitting businesses, carbon-project developers, entrepreneurs in the developing world, and governments—has a vested interest in validating as many projects as possible. “Striking the balance between the number of false negatives and false positives is a political decision, not a technical decision,” Trexler said.
Indeed, carbon exists as a commodity only through the decisions of politicians and bureaucrats, who determine both the demand, by setting emissions limits, and the supply, by establishing criteria for offsets. It was the United States that sculpted the cap-and-trade system during the Kyoto negotiations, before pulling out of the accord and leaving the rest of the world to implement the scheme. Since then, most of the world’s major political, financial, and environmental interests have aligned themselves with the idea, because of its potential to generate profits out of adversity and to avoid the difficult economic decisions posed by climate change. Now the Obama Administration and the Democratic Congress—along with most American companies, which see cap-and-trade as the friendliest regulation they could hope for—want to rejoin the world and multiply the market. That market is, in essence, an elaborate shell game, a disappearing act that nicely serves the immediate interests of the world’s governments but fails to meet the challenges of our looming environmental crisis. |
|
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sun Feb 07, 2010 8:41 pm |
|
|
 |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sun Feb 07, 2010 10:02 pm |
|
|
| Only if you don't know anything about anarchism. |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 12:34 am |
|
|
zoom in...enhance
 |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 7:50 am |
|
|
| manmachine plays jazz wrote: |
| Oh, I'm not saying it doesn't exist; I don't think it's possible to seperate the concepts of liberty and self-determination from the concept of private property. |
ah yes... what we need is a looking-glass French Revolution in which the peasants flood the streets agitating for more power for the elite
Last edited by Shiren the Launderer on Mon Feb 08, 2010 7:54 am; edited 1 time in total |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Mon Feb 08, 2010 8:29 am |
|
|
| Nice try Dracko. Those people are all going to be rich some day so they're just protecting their future-wealth from Obummer. |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sun Feb 14, 2010 9:19 pm |
|
|
The soft-kill solution:
New frontiers in pain compliance
By Ando Arike
Ando Arike is a writer living in Brooklyn. His last article for Harper’s Magazine, “Owning the Weather,” appeared in the January 2006 issue.
Not long ago, viewers of CBS’s 60 Minutes were treated to an intriguing bit of political theater when, in a story called “The Pentagon’s Ray Gun,” a crowd of what seemed to be angry protesters confronted a Humvee with a sinister-looking dish antenna on its roof. Waving placards that read world peace, love for all, peace not war, and, oddly, hug me, the crowd, in reality, was made up of U.S. soldiers playacting for the camera at a military base in Georgia. Shouting “Go home!” they threw what looked like tennis balls at uniformed comrades, “creating a scenario soldiers might encounter in Iraq,” explained correspondent David Martin: “angry protesters advancing on American troops, who have to choose between backing down or opening fire.” Fortunately—and this was the point of the story—there is now another option, demonstrated when the camera cut to the Humvee, where the “ray gun” operator was lining up the “protesters” in his crosshairs. Martin narrated: “He squeezes off a blast. The first shot hits them like an invisible punch. The protesters regroup, and he fires again, and again. Finally they’ve had enough. The ray gun drives them away with no harm done.” World peace would have to wait.
The story was in essence a twelve-minute Pentagon infomercial. What the “protesters” had come up against was the Active Denial System, a weapon, we were told, that “could change the rules of war and save huge numbers of lives in Iraq.” Active denial works like a giant, open-air microwave oven, using a beam of electromagnetic radiation to heat the skin of its targets to 130 degrees and force anyone in its path to flee in pain—but without injury, officials insist, making it one of the few weapons in military history to be promoted as harmless to its targets. The Pentagon claims that 11,000 tests on humans have resulted in but two cases of second-degree burns, a “safety” record that has put active denial at the forefront of an international arms-development effort involving an astonishing range of technologies: electrical weapons that shock and stun; laser weapons that cause dizziness or temporary blindness; acoustic weapons that deafen and nauseate; chemical weapons that irritate, incapacitate, or sedate; projectile weapons that knock down, bruise, and disable; and an assortment of nets, foams, and sprays that obstruct or immobilize. “Non-lethal” is the Pentagon’s approved term for these weapons, but their manufacturers also use the terms “soft kill,” “less-lethal,” “limited effects,” “low collateral damage,” and “compliance.” The weapons are intended primarily for use against unarmed or primitively armed civilians; they are designed to control crowds, clear buildings and streets, subdue and restrain individuals, and secure borders. The result is what appears to be the first arms race in which the opponent is the general population.11. In addition to such well-known non-lethal technologies as rubber bullets, pepper spray, and Tasers, researchers are investigating many other, more exotic approaches to crowd control: the LED Incapacitator, or “puke ray,” which uses pulsating multicolored lights to produce vertigo and nausea; MEDUSA (Mob Excess Deterrent Using Silent Audio), which uses a beam of microwaves to induce uncomfortable auditory sensations in the skull; and the Pulsed Energy Projectile, which uses a burst of inferred laser energy to create a “plasma pulse” around the target, overwhelming his or her nervous system.
That race began in the Sixties, when the rise of television introduced a new political dynamic to the exercise of state violence best encapsulated by the popular slogan “The whole world is watching.” As communications advances in the years since have increasingly exposed such violence, governments have realized that the public’s perception of injury and bloodshed must be carefully managed. “Even the lawful application of force can be misrepresented to or misunderstood by the public,” warns a 1997 joint report from the Pentagon and the Justice Department. “More than ever, the police and the military must be highly discreet when applying force.”
It is a need for discretion rooted in one of the oldest fears of the ruling class—the volatility of the mob—and speaks to rising anxieties about crowd control at a time when global capitalism begins to run up against long-predicted limits to growth. Each year, some 76 million people join our current 6.7 billion in a world of looming resource scarcities, ecological collapse, and glaring inequalities of wealth; and elites are preparing to defend their power and profits. In this new era of triage, as democratic institutions and social safety nets are increasingly considered dispensable luxuries, the task of governance will be to lower the political and economic expectations of the masses without inciting full-fledged revolt. Non-lethal weapons promise to enhance what military theorists call “the political utility of force,” allowing dissent to be suppressed inconspicuously.
As outlined in many documents, some of them only recently declassified, U.S. policymakers have long understood themselves to be engaged in an active arms race with protesters both at home and abroad, and have viewed the acquisition of new crowd-control technology as a significant research goal. When the leveling power of mass communications has increased the ability of protesters to achieve concrete political gains, the Pentagon and federal law-enforcement agencies have responded by developing more media-friendly systems of control. Now, under cover of the “war on terror,” the deployment of these systems on the home front has dramatically escalated, an omen of a new phase in the ongoing class conflict.
Indeed, as already deteriorating economic conditions in the United States took a sharp turn for the worse in September 2008, the Army Times reported that the 3rd Infantry Division’s 1st Brigade Combat Team was being redeployed from Iraq to the “homeland” with what one colonel called the “first ever nonlethal package that the Army has fielded,” and that “they may be called upon to help with civil unrest and crowd control.” By 2011, according to Defense Department officials, 20,000 active-duty troops will be assigned to help state and local authorities respond to domestic crises. Since the Great Panic of the 1870s, Americans have taken to the streets to demand greater democracy approximately every thirty years—during the Progressive Era, the Depression, and the Sixties. Perhaps the Pentagon feels we’re overdue.
Television’s entry into American political life coincided with the rise of the civil-rights movement in the South. The first sign that the new medium was making crowd control problematic came with growing black militancy in the early Sixties. Activists discovered that John F. Kennedy, whose election to the presidency had inspired great hope for the redress of racial inequality, would intervene to protect the rights of black people only if compelled by media exposure of white-supremacist violence, and so with a keen sense for street theater they began to use civil disobedience to bring local governments into vivid, televised conflicts with federal authority. The goal was both the moral jujitsu of Richard Gregg’s classic study, The Power of Non-Violence, which compares Gandhi’s nonviolent resistance to the deft maneuvers of the martial art, and what Chicago community organizer Saul Alinsky called “political jujitsu”—“utilizing the power of one part of the power structure against another part”—in this case, arousing the Northern public’s moral outrage to force federal action against Southern segregationists. Television’s visual immediacy and vast reach provided the leverage.
Martin Luther King Jr. and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference won the movement’s first major battle, of course, in the Birmingham, Alabama, anti-segregation campaign of 1963. Culminating in huge youth marches that Newsweek named the “Children’s Crusade,” the campaign captured unprecedented media attention when a thousand high school students took to the streets in defiance of a court injunction and Public Safety Commissioner Bull Connor ordered his men to turn high-pressure fire hoses and police dogs on them.22. Connor’s men used both fire hoses and “monitor guns,” a type of water cannon. These devices were rarely deployed in the U.S. after Birmingham. Elsewhere, however, the use of water cannons remains common. As images of Connor’s ugly methods filled television screens and front pages worldwide, the Kennedy Administration found itself facing rising anger in the North’s black ghettos, outrage from white liberals, and a Cold War public-relations debacle that escalated when Klansmen bombed King’s brother’s house and the SCLC’s headquarters. Kennedy finally dispatched 3,000 federalized National Guardsmen to help persuade white officials to negotiate. Black activists were mobilized as never before: that summer, the Justice Department counted more than 1,400 civil-rights demonstrations nationwide, including the landmark march on Washington.
Two years later, when the SCLC employed a similar strategy in Selma, the city’s sheriff, Jim Clark, showed that he had learned nothing from Bull Connor: Clark and his deputized “posse” used electric cattle prods to drive 150 young protesters on a forced march into the countryside.33. Until the practice was brought to national attention by reporters, electric cattle prods were used throughout the South against civil-rights activists, both in the streets and as torture devices in jails. Then came “Bloody Sunday,” when, with dozens of reporters and cameramen present, Clark’s mounted posse, backed by Alabama state troopers, charged into a parade of 600 marchers on Selma’s Edmund Pettus Bridge, wielding tear gas, clubs, and cattle prods against people dressed for church. That evening, in one of television’s most remarkable moments, ABC interrupted its Sunday Night Movie—Judgment at Nuremberg, appropriately—with fifteen minutes of graphic footage from the attack. A week later, as protest mounted across the United States, Lyndon Johnson introduced the Voting Rights Act, legislation that, at long last, would guarantee all Americans the vote.
But Johnson’s gesture may have come too late. Television had also changed the dynamics of the ghetto uprising; never before could riots leap so contagiously from city to city and coast to coast. Starting in 1964, when a police shooting in Harlem sparked riots that spread to Brooklyn, Newark, Philadelphia, and Rochester, each summer brought wider and more devastating outbreaks of urban unrest—in April 1968, King’s assassination sparked riots in more than a hundred cities. As King himself had once said, “Riots are the voice of the unheard,” and, increasingly, city governments began to listen to their black citizens.
At the same time, coverage of the escalating Vietnam War was also fueling unrest with evening newscasts of the fierce Tet Offensive. A young nation of potential draftees saw what was in store for them, and antiwar protest erupted on campuses across the nation. In Chicago that August, Mayor Richard Daley was taking no chances with the Democratic National Convention; he dispatched thousands of National Guardsmen to patrol with fixed bayonets and sent an Army brigade to wait in the suburbs. Police violence against antiwar groups climaxed when, in full view of television cameras, Chicago cops attacked protesters outside the Hilton Hotel, swinging nightsticks at anyone within reach. “The whole world is watching!” roared the crowd. Convention delegates denounced Daley for “Gestapo tactics,” and a commission later called the melee a “police riot,” but the mayor was unperturbed. “A policeman is not there to create disorder,” he explained in a memorable malapropism. “A policeman is there to preserve disorder.”
By April 1970, Ronald Reagan, then the governor of California, was telling reporters, “If it takes a bloodbath, let’s get it over with. No more appeasement.” Three weeks later, after Richard Nixon went on live television to announce his order to expand the war to Cambodia, the National Guard was mobilized against campus uprisings in sixteen states. At Kent State University, in Ohio, troops opened fire on protesters, killing four and wounding nine. Ten days later, police opened fire on a women’s dormitory at Jackson State College in Mississippi, killing two students and wounding nine more. In the resulting furor, Nixon, according to his secretary of state, Henry Kissinger, yielded to “public pressure” and announced a timetable for withdrawal from Cambodia.
Policymakers, recognizing the growing influence of civil disobedience and riots on the direction of the nation, had already begun turning to science for a response. Little had changed in crowd-control technology since the 1920s, when the Army Chemical Warfare Service persuaded some larger U.S. police departments to adopt the CN, or “tear gas,” used in the trenches during World War I. If technological advances had improved every other part of the U.S. system of production and control, why shouldn’t science now provide a better way to control society’s unruly elements? Among these policymakers was the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders, better known as the Kerner Commission, which noted ruefully in its 1968 report: “The police who faced the New York riot of 1863 were equipped with two weapons: a wooden stick and a gun. For the most part, the police faced with urban disorders last summer had to rely on two weapons: a wooden stick and a gun.”
Convened by Lyndon Johnson in July 1967 after devastating riots in Newark and Detroit, the Kerner Commission released its report the following March, only weeks before King’s assassination. It blamed “white racism” for creating an “explosive mixture which has been accumulating in our cities since the end of World War II” and was widely quoted for its ominous conclusion: “Our nation is moving toward two societies, one black, one white—separate and unequal.” The commission proposed vast initiatives to reduce inner-city unemployment, improve schools and housing, and end the police bias and brutality that played a major role in sparking the riots. “To many Negroes,” the commission noted, “police have come to symbolize white power, white racism, and white repression.” Especially severe were its comments on the “excessive use of force”:
The harmful effects of overreaction are incalculable. The Commission condemns moves to equip police departments with mass destruction weapons, such as automatic rifles, machine guns and tanks. Weapons which are designed to destroy, not to control, have no place in densely populated urban communities.
The commission recognized that in riot control, the dilemma facing police was “too much force or too little.” Warning that excessive force “will incite the mob to further violence, as well as kindle seeds of resentment for police that, in turn, could cause a riot to recur,” the commission identified the problem as the lack of a “middle range of physical force.” It saw the solution in “non-lethal control equipment,” and called for an urgent program of research, noting some of the possibilities:
Distinctive marking dyes or odors and the filming of rioters have been recommended both to deter and positively identify persons guilty of illegal acts. Sticky tapes, adhesive blobs, and liquid foam are advocated to immobilize or block rioters. Intensely bright lights and loud distressing sounds capable of creating temporary disability may prove to be useful. Technology will provide still other options.
Until then, police were advised to use “chemical agents” to suppress riots, particularly CS, the successor to CN, which the Army had already deployed in Vietnam—not to control riots but to flush enemy troops out of tunnels and bunkers, in violation of the Geneva Protocol. 44. Although the 1925 Geneval Protocol prohibits the production, stockpiling, and use of chemical weapons—including “tear gas”—in warfare, certain “riot-control agents” have long been used in domestic law enforcement. The United States has always claimed the prerogative to use RCAs in riot control during military operations abroad; some 15 millions pounds of CS were used during the Vietnam War. Despite widespread outrage over the military’s use of chemical weapons in Vietnam, the commission argued that Army experience proved CS was “more effective and safer” than the traditional CN, and therefore “the understandable concern of many police and public officials as to the wisdom of using massive amounts of gas in densely populated areas need no longer prove a barrier.”
Republicans denounced the commission’s spending proposals as “soft on crime,” and Johnson, too, rejected them. The commission’s riot-control recommendations, however, were quickly adopted into the Omnibus Crime Control and Safe Streets Act, a bill that funded a veritable Manhattan Project for domestic policing, creating, among other things, the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, which over the next decade released $12 billion for local police to modernize their training and hardware; police departments across the country were soon stocking up on CS and gas masks. The LEAA’s research arm, the National Institute of Law Enforcement and Criminal Justice, in turn spawned an entire cottage industry devoted to producing “non-lethal control equipment,” including hand-held dispensers of “chemical irritants,” “blunt trauma” projectiles like the rubber bullets used by the British in Northern Ireland, electrical devices like the “shock baton,” and the Taser, the first version of which appeared at this time.55. “Taser” is an acronym for the Thomas A. Swift Electric Rifle, named after the inventor-hero of the popular boys’ adventure novels, which were a childhood favorite of the weapon’s inventor, John Cover, a NASA scientist. There followed such a flurry of invention that in 1971 the National Science Foundation stepped in to provide guidance, sponsoring a study published as Nonlethal Weapons for Law Enforcement: Research Needs and Priorities, part of its project to “identify areas in which scientific research can help solve social problems”; out of this grew an Army Human Engineering Laboratory program to test weapons under scientific conditions. Soon, nearly all of today’s concepts for non-lethal weapons had either been proposed or were in some stage of development.
But as ghettos quieted and antiwar protest declined, interest in these technologies faded; the new front was the “war on drugs” declared by Richard Nixon. The LEAA spent billions of dollars to equip local police with helicopters, mobile command centers, and state-of-the-art radio systems. Los Angeles created the Special Weapons and Tactics team, and drug-war funding soon made SWAT the model for law enforcement, spreading military hardware and commando training far and wide—a trend that escalated dramatically after Ronald Reagan, now president, declared his own “war on drugs” and Congress passed the 1981 Military Cooperation with Law Enforcement Act. One result of giving domestic police advanced military capabilities was that the United States soon led the world in jailing its citizens; as of 2007, 2.3 million were incarcerated, with an additional 5.1 million under some form of correctional supervision.
In 1989, the whole world was again watching as a series of dramatic rebellions revealed the media’s new extended reach, now magnified by satellite television and the rise of twenty-four-hour news networks like CNN. Again, ruling elites found their decisions exposed to the judgment of millions (or now, in some cases, billions) of television viewers; again, protesters turned the media’s attention into a weapon of political jujitsu, now on a truly global scale—a new reality strikingly captured in the famous image from the Beijing uprising of a lone and anonymous man stopping a column of tanks.
That May, more than 1,200 journalists flocked to China for the historic summit between Mikhail Gorbachev and Deng Xiaoping; seizing the opportunity, students of the Democracy Movement called a mass hunger strike. Gorbachev, arriving to find a million protesters in Tiananmen Square, reportedly joked to his hosts, “I come to Beijing, and you are having a revolution!” It must have seemed that way to the party leaders—with Gorbachev’s departure, the People’s Liberation Army began to move in. At first, the crowds held them off, but the PLA returned two weeks later with orders to fire. This time they were able to disperse the remaining protesters, but in the process they killed hundreds or possibly thousands of civilians. Prime Minister Li Peng told an interviewer that his government had no choice but to use deadly force: its tear gas was ineffective, there were no high-pressure fire hydrants in the square, and the Chinese had no rubber bullets.
Eastern Europe, where the revolt against Soviet domination was gathering force, watched events in Tiananmen Square with particular interest. On the day of the Beijing massacre, Polish voters routed the Communists, and that autumn nonviolent uprisings toppled one Communist regime after another; the Berlin Wall fell in street celebrations televised worldwide.66. Günter Schabowski, the German Democratic Republic spokesman who had announced the opening the Berlin Wall at a press conference on November 9, 1989, told the BBC twenty years later that his premature revelation of the embargoed order was the direct result of the protests. “I wouldn’t say I was a hero who opened the border—truth be told, I acted to try to save the GDR,” he said. “I was still a committed Communist. The opening of the Wall wasn’t a humanitarian but a tactical decision taken because of popular pressure.” Only Romania’s Nicolae Ceauceşcu attempted to invoke what Eastern Europeans called the “China solution,” ordering security forces to fire on protesters, but his military mutinied and executed him and his wife on Christmas Day. By February, the Soviet Union’s Communist Party surrendered its monopoly on power, commencing the empire’s surprisingly peaceful dissolution. Only in Lithuania did the Soviets resort to troops and tanks, killing thirteen protesters and injuring a hundred others who were defending the Vilnius Television Tower in January 1991, an event Lithuanians referred to as “Bloody Sunday.”
In March of 1991, as the first made-for-TV war ended in Iraq, a new form of political jujitsu—sometimes called “sousveillance” or “inverse surveillance”—made its debut when Los Angeles resident George Holliday shot a video of three Los Angeles Police Department officers clubbing a prone black man while a dozen more officers stood by watching. The Christopher Commission, convened to investigate racism and excessive force within the LAPD, found that Rodney King was shot twice with a Taser, which apparently malfunctioned, and given fifty-six “power strokes” with metal riot batons (ironically, the LAPD had been experimenting with Tasers in an effort to reduce civil-liability suits resulting from its use of riot batons). In April 1992, when the officers charged with assaulting King were found not guilty, Los Angeles erupted in the largest civil disturbance in U.S. history.
But authorities had still not learned the power of television to promote martyrdom, and that it didn’t matter how far out on the fringe the potential martyrs might be. The following April again found U.S. law enforcement on the defensive as millions watched the fiery conclusion of the FBI’s fifty-one-day siege of Mount Carmel, home of the Branch Davidian Seventh-Day Adventists in Waco, Texas. The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms had sent a seventy-man SWAT team to raid the obscure sect’s compound, and brought along a crew from local KWTX-TV in order, according to some reports, to enhance the ATF’s image for upcoming budget hearings. A gunfight left four ATF men and six Davidians dead, and soon thereafter hundreds of FBI agents began a siege, supported by local police, National Guard, Army Delta Force rangers, and an array of armor including nine Bradley fighting vehicles and two Abrams tanks. The ensuing seven-week media spectacle ended with a dawn assault, with FBI agents in tanks punching through the walls of the compound to pump in a mix of CS and methylene chloride, and other agents shooting hundreds of CS-filled rounds through windows. CS can be lethal in enclosed areas, and many Davidians may have been unconscious or dead when Mount Carmel began to burn. Nearly eighty died in the fire, including more than two dozen children, compelling President Bill Clinton to explain, absurdly, that the assault was undertaken to prevent child abuse. FBI Assistant Director Larry Potts was more blunt, telling reporters, “These people had thumbed their noses at law enforcement.”
Several congressional investigations absolved federal authorities of blame, but many Americans who had no special sympathy for the sect’s leader, David Koresh, nonetheless began to ask unsettling questions. Citing an opinion poll in Time magazine, John Danforth, the former senator who headed an investigation of the events at Waco, lamented the loss of authority made evident by the assault on the compound. “When 61 percent of the people believe that the government not only fails to ensure ‘life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness’ but also intentionally murders people by fire,” he wrote, “the existence of public consent, the very basis of government, is imperiled.”
Clearly, better weapons were needed. Pentagon analysts were predicting that the New World Order, as George H. W. Bush called the desired arrangement, would require an increase in so-called Military Operations Other Than War, or MOOTW.77. Between 1990 and 1999, U.S. Military forces were involved in more than thirty MOOTW in missions ranging from drug interdiction in South America to enforcing “no-fly” zones over Iraq to peacekeeping in Kosovo to humanitarian assistance in Rwanda. The current U.S. involvements in Afghanistan and Iraq are technically MOOTW. In 1991, a think tank called the U.S. Global Strategy Council published Nonlethality: A Global Strategy. The report argued that non-lethal weapons offered “revolutionary” advantages, particularly in minimizing political fallout from images of innocents killed accidentally in war zones—now known as the “CNN effect.” One of the policymakers most influenced by the report was Secretary of Defense Dick Cheney, who formed the Non-Lethal Warfare Study Group. His plan was to launch an arms program on the model of Ronald Reagan’s massive Strategic Defense Initiative, which had called for creating an umbrella of missile-killing satellites that would put an end to the Cold War.
The generals who would actually implement the non-lethal weapons program remained skeptical. It gained little support until the Battle of Mogadishu in 1993, when, in the fiercest street fighting U.S. troops had seen since the Battle of Hue during the Vietnam War, Somali militiamen, aided by civilians, overran a task force of elite Army Rangers, leaving two Blackhawk gunships destroyed, eighteen American soldiers dead, and thousands of Somali civilians killed or injured in the crossfire. The episode revealed some disturbing problems with the U.S. strategy for urban combat, and when CNN aired images of a triumphant Somali mob dragging a Ranger’s body through the streets, public outcry forced the Clinton Administration to rapidly withdraw troops.88. During the course of the 1992-93 Somalia intervention, Operation Restore Hope, U.S. and U.N. helicopter gunships firing at snipers in crowded streets killed as many as 10,000 civilians, a primary reason for local hostility to U.S. forces. The House Committee on Foreign Affairs subsequently held hearings on the “Impact of Television on U.S. Foreign Policy,” during which the chairman, Lee Hamilton, asked, somewhat plaintively, “What should policymakers do, if anything, to prevent television from setting their agenda?”
More troubling to the Pentagon, however, was the prospect that many more Mogadishus lay ahead. In 1994, the Army commissioned the Rand Corporation to study “how demographic changes will affect future conflict,” and the result was a report called The Urbanization of Insurgency. Rand concluded that by the turn of the century, more than half the cities with more than a million people would be located in the developing world and that this explosive urban growth would occur “irrespective of industrial development, economic progress, or employment opportunity.” According to the report, the “slums and shantytowns that now ring the developing world’s urban centers” were providing fertile conditions for insurgency, “an expanding and increasingly restive pool of idle, frequently uneducated and unskilled young people trapped in their native lands and bereft of hope or employment.” Without huge anti-poverty efforts—and Rand, perhaps learning from the failed optimism of the Kerner Commission, assumed none would be forthcoming—the Army’s future lay in patrolling the world’s ghetto precincts, a task for which it was ill-prepared. “Neither U.S. doctrine, nor training, nor equipment is designed for urban counterinsurgency,” Rand warned.
Meanwhile, the Los Angeles riots and the Waco siege had convinced the Department of Justice to expand its own domestic “less-than-lethal” weapons program, and in April 1994, citing a “growing convergence between the technology required for military operations and the technology required for law enforcement,” the Pentagon and the Justice Department launched a joint research program. This program led, in 1997, to the Pentagon’s creation of the Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate, charged with advancing the use of these weapons by the armed services and civilian police.99. The Department of Justice uses the term “less-than-lethal” rather than “non-lethal,” presumably as protection against civil-liability suits; the Department of Defense continues to favor “non-lethal.” By the end of the decade, NATO, Israel, the United Kingdom, and Canada had begun similar programs, linked to the JNLWD through liaisons and research-sharing agreements. Outreach and training is currently under way with allies in the developing world, and both Russia and China have major research programs. The ultimate goal, it seems, is to fight “Military Operations on Urban Terrain” (MOUT), using weapons with a rheostatic capability that, like Star Trek’s “phasers,” will allow military commanders to fine-tune the amount and type of force used in a given situation, and thereby to control opponents’ behavior with the scientific precision of a well-managed global production system.
The first significant use of these new weapons, appropriately, was against the fierce anti-globalization demonstrations that began at the World Trade Organization conference in Seattle in 1999. The largest upsurge of the left since the Sixties, the anti-globalization movement mobilized thousands of separate groups in a campaign against the human and environmental costs of corporate imperialism. Protesters had a new technology of their own to exploit—the Internet, which provided an unprecedented means of organizing and sharing information. More than 40,000 protesters converged on Seattle that November with the widely announced intention of “shutting down the WTO” in order to highlight its predatory “free trade” policies. With mass civil disobedience coordinated by cell phones and laptops, teams trained in nonviolence formed human blockades at strategic locations, snarling traffic, trapping trade delegates in hotels, and barricading conference sites; many thousands more swarmed streets in a “Festival of Resistance,” paralyzing the city’s business district.
Police attacked demonstrators with nearly every non-lethal weapon available to civilian authorities: MK-46 pepper-spray “Riot Extinguishers,” CS and CN grenades, pepper-spray grenades, pepperball launchers, “stinger” rubber-ball grenades, flash-bang concussion grenades, and a variety of blunt-trauma projectiles. But the protesters held their positions, forcing WTO officials to cancel that day’s events, and although news reports distorted the events—focusing single-mindedly on the Starbucks and NikeTown vandalized by a small faction of anarchists—“Americans,” as Newsweek noted, “may never think the same way about free trade and what it costs.” More significant was the response of the developing nations’ trade delegates, who, emboldened by the spotlight on Seattle, revolted against rich nations’ attempt to push through agreements that would have permitted the patenting of genetically modified seeds and the continued “dumping” of subsidized agricultural produce in poorer nations’ markets, practices that threatened to bankrupt millions of Third World farmers. By the end of the week negotiations had collapsed, a setback from which the WTO has never really recovered.
Galvanized by their victory, protesters targeted economic summits in rapid succession, swarming meetings of the World Economic Forum, the G8, and other gatherings in a dozen major cities. But without Seattle’s advantage of surprise, they faced increasingly elaborate MOUT tactics. At the July 2001 G8 summit in Genoa, more than 100,000 protesters confronted 15,000 police and troops on streets locked down under a terrorism red alert; one protester was killed and hundreds were injured in street fighting, and scores more were hospitalized due to police beatings in midnight raids on lodgings.1010. Current MOUT doctrine is summarized in a 2001 RAND study called Corralling the Trojan Horse. As the title suggests, the general is to restrict and monitor all movement within a city: using physical barriers or other means to “sector and seal,” denying access to key areas, and isolating combatants from non-combatants.” The next big demonstration was planned for the September 2001 World Bank summit in Washington, D.C., but organizers backed away after the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. With the launch of the Global War on Terror, “the gloves were off,” as the White House put it: authorities had free rein to target protesters as potential terrorists.
On February 15, 2003, an estimated 20 million people filled the streets of the world’s cities to oppose the imminent invasion of Iraq, an expression of public opinion the New York Times called the world’s new second superpower. The administration was, of course, unmoved; “Democracy is a beautiful thing,” joked George W. Bush at a press conference. The Rand Corporation, for its part, had already anticipated the power of what it called “netwar,” in which networks of “nonstate actors” use “swarming tactics” to overwhelm police and military. As Rand analysts wrote in a 2001 study, Networks, Netwars, and the Fight for the Future, the practitioners of such tactics “are proving very hard to deal with; some are winning. What all have in common is that they operate in small dispersed units that can deploy nimbly” and “know how to swarm and disperse, penetrate and disrupt, as well as elude and evade,” all aided by the quick exchange of information over the Internet.1111. “We Must Fight the Net,” declared the Pentagon in its own October 2003 “Information Operations Roadmap,” which outlined a new strategic thrust for “dominating the information spectrum” by transforming information operations “into a core military competency on par with air, ground, maritime and special operations.”
Now new tactics were at the ready, and the antiwar movement stalled as protesters found themselves faced with fenced-off “free speech zones”; stockyard-gated “containment pens”; the denial of march permits; mass detentions; media disinformation operations; harassment and detention of legal observers and independent media; police and FBI surveillance; pre-emptive raids on lodgings and meeting places; and growing deployments of non-lethal weapons. Among the more foreboding of these was the presence at the 2004 Republican National Convention in New York City of two Long Range Acoustic Devices, or LRADs, which use highly focused beams of ear-splitting sound to, as the manufacturer says, “influence behavior.”
In Afghanistan and Iraq, however, occupation forces were having less success suppressing dissent; what details have emerged reveal that non-lethal weapons are used most prominently in controlling, punishing, and torturing detainees. We now know that the use of dogs was popular—recalling Birmingham—as were Tasers, those descendants of electric cattle prods. But the torture scandals at Baghdad’s Abu Ghraib prison and elsewhere seem to have derailed a wider deployment of non-lethal weapons that had been in the offing. According to the Associated Press, after U.S. forces fired on an April 2003 anti-occupation demonstration in Fallujah, killing eighteen and wounding seventy-eight, commanders in Iraq sent “urgent” requests to Washington for the Active Denial System, which would minimize, one brigadier general said, the CNN effect. Technical issues at first prevented fielding the system, which was part of an experimental program called “Project Sheriff,” but after the Abu Ghraib revelations, the Pentagon came to fear that the system would be viewed as a torture device. As Colonel Kirk Hymes of the JNLWD explained, “We want to just make sure that all the conditions are right, so when it is able to be deployed the system performs as predicted—that there isn’t any negative fallout.”1212. Conditions may already be improving. The Active Denial System is manufactured by Raytheon, whose chief lobbyist, William Lynn, last year was appointed Barack Obama’s deputy secretary of defense.
The next hurdle for non-lethality, as Colonel Hymes’s comments suggest, will be the introduction of so-called second-generation non-lethal weapons into everyday policing and crowd control. Although “first-generation” weapons like rubber bullets and pepper spray have gained a certain acceptance, despite their many drawbacks, exotic technologies like the Active Denial System invariably cause public alarm.1313. Rubber bullets, for example, became notorious in Northern Ireland for the number of deaths and injuries they caused, especially among children; they have become similarly notorious among Israeli Arabs and Palestinians. As a 2003 National Research Council report noted, “Control of trauma level from blunt projectiles remains a serious problem.” The evidence from Northern Ireland, in fact, is that rubber bullets often inflame, rather than disperse, crowds. Nevertheless, the trend is now away from chemical and “kinetic” weapons that rely on physical trauma and toward post-kinetic weapons that, as researchers put it, “induce behavioral modification” more discreetly.1414. The emerging paradigm is “effects-based” weapons design, a form of reverse engineering in which the desired physiological and psychological effects on targets are identified—that is, pain or lethargy or disorientation—and then a mechanism is devised to induce that effect. The goal is to be able to control individuals and groups through increasingly selective “weapons-effects.” One indication that the public may come to accept these new weapons has been the successful introduction of the Taser—apparently, even the taboo on electroshock can be overcome given the proper political climate. Indeed, the history of the device is instructive.
The Rodney King affair might have ended the use of this weapon had it not been for the foresight of the Smith brothers of Scottsdale, Arizona, whose company, Taser International, acquired rights from the original maker. In 1998 they set out to re-engineer the device so that it could deliver more dependable, higher-powered shocks. The company introduced the M26, the first of its “advanced electronic control devices,” in 2000, and turned its first profit in 2001, largely due to purchases by airlines in the wake of the September 11 attacks. Taser International soon named former New York Police Commissioner and official 9/11 hero—and, now, convicted felon—Bernard Kerik to its board of directors; with Kerik’s appointment as Iraq’s interim interior minister and his nomination to head the Department of Homeland Security, weapons sales and company stock skyrocketed. At last count, some 350,000 Tasers were deployed among 13,000 U.S. police, corrections, and military agencies, and the company estimates that its weapons are used more than 600 times each day.
Originally sold as an alternative to firearms, the Taser today has become an all-purpose tool for what police call “pain compliance.” Mounting evidence shows that the weapon is routinely used on people who pose little threat: those in handcuffs, in jail cells, in wheelchairs and hospital beds; schoolchildren, pregnant women, the mentally disturbed, the elderly; irate shoppers, obnoxious lawyers, argumentative drivers, nonviolent protesters—in fact, YouTube now has an entire category of videos in which people are Tasered for dubious reasons. In late 2007, public outrage flared briefly over the two most famous such videos—those of college student Andrew Meyer “drive-stunned” at a John Kerry speech, and of a distraught Polish immigrant, Robert Dziekanski, dying after repeated Taser jolts at Vancouver airport—but police and weapon were found blameless in both incidents.1515. According to Amnesty International, between June 2001 and September 2008, 334 people died in the United States after tasering by police—only thirty-three of those people were armed in any way, and only four with firearms—and yet in wrongful-death lawsuits, courts have consistently ruled in favor of police and Taser International.Strangely, YouTube’s videos may be promoting wider acceptance of the Taser; it appears that many viewers watch them for entertainment.
Flush with success, Taser International is now moving more directly into crowd control. Among its new offerings are a “Shockwave Area-Denial System,” which blankets the area in question with electrified darts, and a wireless Taser projectile with a 100-meter range, helpful for picking off “ringleaders” in unruly crowds. In line with the Pentagon’s growing interest in robotics, the company has also started a joint venture with the iRobot Corporation, maker of the Roomba vacuum cleaner, to develop Taser-armed robots; and in France, Taser’s distributor has announced plans for a flying drone that fires stun darts at criminal suspects or rioters.
Second-generation non-lethal weapons already appear to have been tested in the field. In a first in U.S. crowd control, protesters at last September’s G20 summit in Pittsburgh found themselves clutching their ears in pain as a vehicle mounted with an LRAD circled streets emitting a piercing “deterrent tone.” First seen (but not used) at the 2004 Republican Convention, the LRAD has since been used on Iraqi protesters and on pirates off the Somali coast; the Israeli Army has used a similar device against Palestinian protesters that it calls “the Scream,” which reportedly causes overwhelming dizziness and nausea. The 2009 Pittsburgh G20 protests also produced another U.S. first when a New York social worker was arrested for posting details of police movements to a Twitter feed; when Iranian protesters made similar use of Twitter during the contested elections last summer, U.S. elites had nothing but praise.
It may be “tactical pharmacology,” finally, that holds the most promise for quelling the unrest stirred by capitalist meltdowns, imperialist wars, and environmental collapse. As JNLWD research director Susan Levine told a reporter in 1999, “We need something besides tear gas, like calmatives, anesthetic agents, that would put people to sleep or in a good mood.” Pentagon interest in “advanced riot-control agents” has long been an open secret, but just how close we are to seeing these agents in action was revealed in 2002, when the Sunshine Project, an arms-control group based in Austin, Texas, posted on the Internet a trove of Pentagon documents uncovered through the Freedom of Information Act. Among these was a fifty-page study titled “The Advantages and Limitations of Calmatives for Use as a Non-Lethal Technique,” conducted by Penn State’s Applied Research Laboratory, home of the JNLWD-sponsored Institute for Non-Lethal Defense Technologies.
Penn State’s College of Medicine researchers agreed, contrary to accepted principles of medical ethics, that “the development and use of non-lethal calmative techniques is both achievable and desirable,” and identified a large number of promising drug candidates, including benzodiazepines like Valium, serotonin-reuptake inhibitors like Prozac, and opiate derivatives like morphine, fentanyl, and carfentanyl, the last commonly used by veterinarians to sedate large animals. The only problems they saw were in developing effective delivery vehicles and regulating dosages, but these problems could be solved readily, they recommended, through strategic partnerships with the pharmaceutical industry.1616. Russian researchers may have been thinking along similar lines. When fifty Chechen-separatist guerrillas took 800 Moscow theatergoers hostage in 2002, Russian special forces pumped an aerosolized fentanyl derivative through the theater’s ventilation system, knocking everyone inside unconscious before storming the building. The Chechens were shot on sight, reportedly, and the rescue was considered a success, but 129 hostages died from sedative-induced respiratory depression.
Following the Sunshine Project’s revelations, the JNLWD quickly issued denials, and subsequent Freedom of Information Act requests have been refused on national security grounds—and also, no doubt, because such research is prohibited by the 1993 Chemical Weapons Convention, signed by more than 180 nations and ratified by the U.S. Senate in 1997. Little more was heard about the Pentagon’s “advanced riot-control agent” program until July 2008, when the Army announced that production was scheduled for its XM1063 “non-lethal personal suppression projectile,” an artillery shell that bursts in midair over its target, scattering 152 canisters over a 100,000-square-foot area, each dispersing a chemical agent as it parachutes down. There are many indications that a calmative, such as fentanyl, is the intended payload—a literal opiate of the masses.
It may seem absurd that the eternal battle between the haves and the have-nots may devolve into a Marxist pun. But several generations of U.S. policymakers have struggled to realize this very absurdity, and they have been quite articulate about their reasons—perhaps never more so than at an April 8, 1997, Senate hearing on the Chemical Weapons Convention. Three former secretaries of defense—Donald Rumsfeld, Caspar Weinberger, and James Schlesinger—appeared together to voice their opposition to ratification, with Schlesinger reading a letter of opposition from yet another former defense secretary, Dick Cheney. All of them objected to the treaty’s prohibition against using “riot-control agents” as a “method of warfare,” and on this subject Schlesinger, who served under Richard Nixon, repeated a familiar argument. If riot-control agents were to be banned, “whether in peace or war,” he said, “we may wind up placing ourselves in the position of the Chinese government in dealing with the Tiananmen Square uprising in 1989. The failure to use tear gas meant that the government only had recourse to the massive use of firepower to disperse the crowd.”1717. _ Congress ratified the treaty, but with the addition of Condition 26, which exempts the United States from restrictions on the use of riot-control agents during military peacekeeping operations.
It is striking, of course, that a former American defense official would so publicly identify with the leaders of an authoritarian Communist regime. Perhaps even more striking, though, is that the formulators of our policy of pain compliance feel so limited in their options—confronted by citizens calling for change, their only response is to seek control or death. There are many other possible responses, most of them far better attuned to the democratic ideals they espouse in other contexts. That pain compliance seems to them the best alternative to justice is an indictment not of the dreams of the protesters but of the nightmares of those who would control them.
Last edited by Shiren the Launderer on Sat Feb 20, 2010 9:02 pm; edited 2 times in total |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sun Feb 14, 2010 9:26 pm |
|
|
| dang it >_< |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sat Feb 20, 2010 1:16 am |
|
|
presidents require security detail?  |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sat Feb 20, 2010 11:13 pm |
|
|
california is the most liberahahahhahahah
| Quote: |
Tracy Residents Now Have To Pay For 911 Calls
More Local News
TRACY, Calif. (CBS13) ―
Tracy residents will now have to pay every time they call 9-1-1 for a medical emergency.
But there are a couple of options. Residents can pay a $48 voluntary fee for the year which allows them to call 9-1-1 as many times as necessary.
Or, there's the option of not signing up for the annual fee. Instead, they will be charged $300 if they make a call for help.
"A $300 fee and you don't even want to be thinking about that when somebody is in need of assistance," said Tracy resident Greg Bidlack. |
http://cbs13.com/local/tracy.911.calls.2.1502690.html |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Wed Feb 24, 2010 6:49 pm |
|
|
| CPAC was sponsored by the John Birch Society lol |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Fri Mar 12, 2010 8:29 am |
|
|
 |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Tue Mar 23, 2010 7:23 am |
|
|
me irl
 |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Thu Mar 25, 2010 5:46 pm |
|
|
| CubaLibre wrote: |
| Quote: |
| Glenn Beck of Fox News has called President Obama a “racist” and asserted that he “has exposed himself as a guy, over and over and over again, who has a deep-seated hatred for white people or the white culture.” |
This kind of thinking is so totally bizarre to me. Whatever charges you want to level at Obama, a half-white, half-Kenyan Hawaiian who was president of the Harvard Law Review and then a member of the University of Chicago Law School faculty (UChicago for crissakes), rejecting the white culture isn't one of them. |
It was unreal to see Republicans paint Obama as an elitist when he came from a single-parent household and worked hard to achieve his success while John McCain relied on his family of Navy elites to get into the Naval Academy (and then proceeded to be one of the worst students in his class). Or the birther furor when there rumblings early in the decade about repealing the native-born requirement so that Arnold Schwarzenegger could run. Or the fact that Obama's healthcare plan closely resembles the Mitt Romney policies that Republicans love etc cap & trade etc etc The amount of cognitive dissonance is staggering. |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sat Apr 03, 2010 9:04 am |
|
|
| psiga wrote: |
| http://www.indybay.org/uploads/2009/07/14/3af0eee8_liveleak.flv |
lol @ 3:30 |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Fri Apr 09, 2010 6:11 am |
|
|
| Mr. Mechanical wrote: |
| The thing I just linked wrote: |
| The hegemonic domain legitimates oppression. Max Weber was among the first to teach us that authority functions because people believe in it. This is the cultural sphere of influence where ideology and consciousness come together. The hegemonic domain links the structural, disciplinary, and interpersonal domains. It is made up of the language we use, the images we respond to, the values we hold, and the ideas we entertain. And it is produced through school curricula and textbooks, religious teachings, mass media images and contexts, community cultures, and family histories. The black feminist priority of self-definition and critical, reflexive education are important stepping stones to deconstructing and dissuading the hegemonic domain. As Collins (2000) puts it, "Racist and sexist ideologies, if they are disbelieved, lose their impact" (p. 284) |
|
not mentioning Gramsci in a discussion of hegemony  |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Fri Apr 09, 2010 6:42 am |
|
|
| Quote: |
I don't know Gramsci yet dude, help a brother out! |
he is generally considered the main theorist of cultural hegemony
http://www.mediafire.com/?mzr43h1nzie
but i think the frankfurt school idea of culture industry should also be mentioned |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Mon Apr 19, 2010 6:58 am |
|
|
| evnvnv wrote: |
| the volcano is actually god's long overdue vengeance against man for going against nature and inventing those accursed Flying Machines |
close
|
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sat May 01, 2010 6:30 pm |
|
|
| psiga wrote: |
http://www.uq.edu.au/news/index.html?article=21034
Impressive from a Long Now perspective. Researchers have figured out how to make vaccination patches out of nanomaterials, in such a way that they use about one hundredth the amount of vaccine, obviate the need for multiple vaccinations, are painless, can be self-applied by non-professionals, don't require refrigeration, and whatever else.
This is one of those things that'll help the second and third world a hell of a lot. |
We're a few decades too late to help the second world. And speaking of vaccines, PBS recently devoted a Frontline episode to the furor over vaccines. Spoiler: new age liberal moms are insane and believe they should be allowed to endanger everyone in their communities.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/vaccines/?utm_campaign=vaccines&utm_medium=googleads&utm_source=vaccinesearch |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sat May 01, 2010 7:11 pm |
|
|
| and wtf is up with all the chinese guys slicing school kids. pith-helmeted anthropological theories welcome! |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Fri May 07, 2010 7:58 am |
|
|
| psiga wrote: |
| Shiren the Launderer wrote: |
| We're a few decades too late to help the second world. |
Mh. There practically is no second world anymore. A bunch of developing nations have crazy good medical these days. I think Taiwan has 100% social medicine with an elaborate digital recordskeeping system so all you need is your ID card, etc. |
'twas a joke about the 1st/2nd/3rd world categories being meaningless relics of the Cold War. |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Fri Jun 04, 2010 7:06 am |
|
|
| Quote: |
Myanmar 'nuclear plans' exposed
An investigation by an anti-government Myanmar broadcaster has found evidence that it says shows the country's military regime has begun a programme to develop nuclear weapons.
Journalists from the Norway-based Democratic Voice of Burma (DVB) have been gathering information about secret military projects in Myanmar for years.
But they say recent revelations from a former army officer show that the military government is pushing ahead with ambitions to become a nuclear power.
The allegations are to be shown in a special documentary produced by the DVB being aired by Al Jazeera.
On Thursday evening, shortly before the film was due to be broadcast, US Senator Jim Webb announced he was postponing his scheduled trip to Myanmar in response to allegations in the documentary.
"Until there is further clarification on these matters, I believe it would be unwise and potentially counterproductive for me to visit Burma," Webb, who is the Democratic chairman of the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee Subcommittee on East Asia and Pacific Affairs, told reporters in Bangkok.
Burma is the former name of Myanmar.
Webb had been due to fly to Myanmar late on Thursday for talks with detained pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi and senior officials in the country's reclusive military junta.
Defector speaks out
The producers of the DVB documentary say evidence of Myanmar's nuclear programme has come from top-secret material smuggled out of the country over several years, including hundreds of files and other evidence provided by Sai Thein Win, a former major in Myanmar's army.
Sai Thein Win says he was deputy commander of a highly classified military factory that was the headquarters of the army's nuclear battalion.
But he says he decided to defect and bring top-secret evidence of the project with him.
"They really want a bomb, that is their main objective," he says in the film.
"They want to have the rockets and nuclear warheads."
His smuggled files were shown to Robert Kelley, the former director of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), who told the producers they showed clear indications of a programme to build atomic weapons.
"It appears it is a nuclear weapons program because there is no conceivable use for this for nuclear power or anything like that," he says.
Suspicions
But other experts like John Isaacs, executive director of the Washington-based Centre for Arms Control and Non-Proliferation, are not ready to make a definitive conclusion yet.
"I would say there are a lot of suspicions," Adams told the DVB. "But it's hard to say there's actual proof of what Myanmar's trying to do
Sai Thein Win says he decided to defect after seeing a previous report by the DVB about the Myanmar regime's extensive network of secret underground bunkers and tunnels.
The broadcaster gathered thousands of photos and more defector testimony, claiming some of the tunnels are used as command posts, while others – some are large as two football fields – are used for storing secret weapons and equipment to protect them from aerial bombardment.
The tunnels have allegedly been built with the help of expertise from North Korea – a link that has drawn growing international attention.
A recent UN report on the sanctions against North Korea banning nuclear and ballistic missile activities, found what it called "suspicious activity in Myanmar" and experts say that might build up the case for an IAEA inspection.
"In many ways North Korea is a parallel to Burma," the Centre for Arms Control's John Isaacs says in the DVB film.
"It's a poor country with a weak economy and starvation at home, and yet they manage to gather resources to build a nuclear weapon."
The DVB investigation agrees, but also points out it was not that long ago when few people imagined that countries like North Korea, Iran and Pakistan would also become nuclear powers. |
http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2010/06/2010642542469132.html |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sun Jun 06, 2010 5:55 am |
|
|
I know racism was the focus of Blumenthal's article, but the real revelation from Polakow-Suransky's work is the concrete evidence of South African-Israeli nuclear arms wheelings/dealings. The Guardian article on this had the best line from Polakow-Suransky
| Quote: |
| The Israeli defence ministry tried to block my access to the Secment agreement on the grounds it was sensitive material, especially the signature and the date. The South Africans didn't seem to care; they blacked out a few lines and handed it over to me. The ANC government is not so worried about protecting the dirty laundry of the apartheid regime's old allies. |
also, reminder that Israel denied Ethiopian Jews (from Beta Israel) their right of return because they didn't look Jewish enough lol |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Sun Jul 04, 2010 7:35 am |
|
|
| What's up with the helmets? IDF lookin like a bunch of Venetian merchants out collecting their pound of flesh. |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Tue Jul 20, 2010 4:08 am |
|
|
| Mr. Mechanical wrote: |
Greenwald on the WaPo article: 'The Real U.S. Government'
| Quote: |
We chirp endlessly about the Congress, the White House, the Supreme Court, the Democrats and Republicans, but this is the Real U.S. Government: functioning in total darkness, beyond elections and parties, so secret, vast and powerful that it evades the control or knowledge of any one person or even any organization.
Anyone who thinks that's hyperbole should just read some of what Priest and Arkin chronicle. Consider this: "Every day, collection systems at the National Security Agency intercept and store 1.7 billion e-mails, phone calls and other types of communications." To call that an out-of-control, privacy-destroying Surveillance State is to understate the case. Equally understated is the observation that we have become a militarized nation living under an omnipotent, self-perpetuating, bankrupting National Security State. |
|
| Quote: |
| When Maj. Gen. John M. Custer was the director of intelligence at U.S. Central Command, he grew angry at how little helpful information came out of the NCTC. In 2007, he visited its director at the time, retired Vice Adm. John Scott Redd, to tell him so. “I told him that after 41/2 years, this organization had never produced one shred of information that helped me prosecute three wars!” he said loudly, leaning over the table during an interview. |
|
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Fri Jul 23, 2010 2:33 am |
|
|
There are riders in any piece of legislation this big, but this is some masterful trolling of goldbugs. |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
Shiren the Launderer

Joined: 25 Sep 2008
|
Posted: Thu Aug 05, 2010 1:50 am |
|
|
It's infuriating how many Americans don't know anything about the UN and build it up as some bogeyman shadow government. If anything, the UN is another forum the US to exert its influence over international affairs, but I don't think people can be talked down from their byzantine conspiracy theories. |
|
| Unfilter / Back to top |
|
 |
|
|
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum You cannot vote in polls in this forum
|
Powered by phpBB © 2001, 2002 phpBB Group
|