History will view Snowden very kindly |
medialens | Reports of Washington's anger directed at surveillance whistleblower
Edward Snowden indicate a basic truth about power. Noam Chomsky has
expressed it as the underlying problem for genuine democracy, even in
so-called 'free' societies:
'Remember, any state, any state, has a primary enemy: its own population.' (Noam Chomsky, Understanding Power, edited by Peter R. Mitchell and John Schoeffel, The New Press, 2002, p. 70.)
Anyone who steps out of line, especially if they defy authority's
attempts to apprehend them, risks severe punishment. All the more so
because it is important to publicly discipline miscreants, lest the
threat of a 'bad' example become a contagion sweeping through society.
Snowden was denounced by Dick Cheney, the warmongering former US vice-president, as a 'traitor' and a possible spy for China. Senator Dianne Feinsten, chair of the US Senate intelligence committee, told reporters that Snowden had committed an 'act of treason'. There was 'undisguised fury'
amongst many US politicians at Snowden's slipping away from Hong Kong
and arriving at Moscow airport where he continued to evade detection.
General Keith Alexander, director of the National Security Agency, complained that
Snowden 'is clearly an individual who's betrayed the trust and
confidence we had in him. This is an individual who is not acting, in my
opinion, with noble intent.'
Given the source of such accusations – largely senior officials in
the current and previous US administrations - rational observers will be
unimpressed. As Norman Solomon correctly points out:
'The state of surveillance and perpetual
war are one and the same. The U.S. government's rationale for pervasive
snooping is the "war on terror," the warfare state under whatever name.'
Solomon issues a warning:
'The central issue is our dire shortage of
democracy. How can we have real consent of the governed when the
government is entrenched with extreme secrecy, surveillance and contempt
for privacy?'
Washington and its allies, sold to the public by the media as 'the
international community', are well aware of the stakes. The general
population must be subdued and kept in its place. Obama and his
officials in the government, and the US intelligence community, need to
assert strenuously that Snowden's exposure of the massive US secret
surveillance programme aids and abets 'the enemy', and damages
international relations.
5 comments:
The 99% need to be exchanging information to play the game better.
http://www.toxicdrums.com/economic-wargames-by-dal-timgar.html
Would you take the time to break down those two papers, (including the more recent one at quantum critics) and convert them into easily digested xtranormal videos? http://www.xtranormal.com/
Break down?
How much simpler can they get?
4th graders that can't understand them should be given dunce caps.
LOL
And this attitude and response is precisely why resistance by or on behalf of the 99% is futile.
There are a great many things which will have to be spoon.fed to the developmentally arrested herd you pretend to want to help.
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