Friday, April 25, 2014
racist: it's like a magic spell to win arguments...,
By CNu at April 25, 2014 27 comments
Labels: A Kneegrow Said It
the league of extraordinary black gentlemen
By CNu at April 25, 2014 0 comments
Labels: A Kneegrow Said It
Thursday, April 24, 2014
the truth is out: money is an iou and banks are rolling in it...,
By CNu at April 24, 2014 14 comments
Labels: banksterism , information anarchy , institutional deconstruction
dementia sufferers have a duty to die...,
By CNu at April 24, 2014 0 comments
Labels: contraction , cultural darwinism , The Hardline
i'd rather be a cow manager than a people manager...,
By CNu at April 24, 2014 0 comments
Labels: contraction , tactical evolution
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
the rise of the fatty
By CNu at April 23, 2014 0 comments
Labels: clampdown , cull-tech , cultural darwinism , not a good look
government = protection racket for the 1%?
By CNu at April 23, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Collapse Crime , global system of 1% supremacy
american middle-class no longer the world's richest
By CNu at April 23, 2014 0 comments
Labels: change , Collapse Casualties , contraction
Tuesday, April 22, 2014
there are no rights or freedoms: there is only power...,
By CNu at April 22, 2014 21 comments
Labels: The Hardline , truth
what do you call armed private militias massing to oppose federal authority?
By CNu at April 22, 2014 0 comments
Labels: civil war , quorum sensing? , states rights
cliven bundy and homeland security
By CNu at April 22, 2014 0 comments
Labels: micro-insurgencies , quorum sensing? , states rights , The Hardline
Monday, April 21, 2014
the american deep state today
This limited exposure of the nefarious use of funds generated from Saudi arms contracts has not created a desire in Washington to limit these contracts. On the contrary, in 2010, the second year of the Obama administration,
The Defense Department … notified Congress that it wants to sell $60 billion worth of advanced aircraft and weapons to Saudi Arabia. The proposed sale, which includes helicopters, fighter jets, radar equipment and satellite-guided bombs, would be the largest arms deal to another country in U.S. history if the sale goes through and all purchases are made.59The sale did go through; only a few congressmen objected.60 The deep state, it would appear, is alive and well, and impervious to exposures of it.
It is clear that for some decades the bottom-upwards processes of democracy have been increasingly supplanted by the top-downwards processes of the deep state.
But the deeper strain in history, I would like to believe, is in the opposite direction: the ultimate diminution of violent top-down forces by the bottom-up forces of an increasingly integrated civil society.61
In the last months we have had Wikileaks, then Edward Snowden, and now the fight between the CIA and its long-time champion in Congress, Dianne Feinstein. It may be time to see a systemic correction, much as we did after Daniel Ellsberg’s release of the Pentagon Papers, which was followed by Watergate and the Church Committee reforms. I believe that to achieve this correction there must be a better understanding of deep events and of the deep state.
Ultimately, however, whether we see a correction or not will depend, at least in part, on how much people care.
By CNu at April 21, 2014 30 comments
Labels: Deep State , Living Memory , What IT DO Shawty...
deep politics
- “My notion of deep politics… posits that in every culture and society there are facts which tend to be suppressed collectively, because of the social and psychological costs of not doing so. Like all other observers, I too have involuntarily suppressed facts and even memories about the drug traffic that were too provocative to be retained with equanimity.”[1]
- par a pol i tics (pa˘r É™ po˘l É™ tı˘ks), n. 1. a system or practice of politics in which accountability is consciously diminished. 2. generally, covert politics, the conduct of public affairs not by rational debate and responsible decision-making but by indirection, collusion, and deceit… 3. the political exploitation of irresponsible agencies or parastructures, such as intelligence agencies… Ex. 1. ‘The Nixon doctrine, viewed in retrospect, represented the application of parapolitics on a hitherto unprecedented scale.’ 2. ‘Democracy and parapolitics, even in foreign affairs, are ultimately incompatible.’[2]
- “…the investigation of parapolitics, which I defined (with the CIA in mind) as a ‘system or practice of politics in which accountability is consciously diminished.’ . . . I still see value in this definition and mode of analysis. But parapolitics as thus defined is itself too narrowly conscious and intentional . . . it describes at best only an intervening layer of the irrationality under our political culture’s rational surface. Thus I now refer to parapolitics as only one manifestation of deep politics, all those political practices and arrangements, deliberate or not, which are usually repressed rather than acknowledged.”[3]
- “Deep politics is a revision of Scott’s original concept of parapolitics first developed in The War Conspiracy. It responds to criticism that political conspiracies, like the murder of Kennedy, are too difficult to arrange and keep hidden…[4]
- “Scott came to see parapolitics as “too narrowly conscious and intentional to describe the deeper irrational movements which culminated collectively in the murder of the President.” In contrast deep political analysis presupposes “an open system with divergent power centers and goals” The collapse of the First Italian Republic in the mid-1990s, involving large-scale criminal influence in government, offers a telling example. It originated as an American parapolitical operation to suborn the threat of communism which parachuted prominent U.S. Mafia hoods into power in post-war Italy “[B]y the 1980s this . . . strategem had helped spawn a deep political system of corruption exceeding Tammany’s, and (as we know from the Andreotti trial of 1995) beyond the ability of anyone to call it off”. Another example… is the CIA-financed jihad against Russian occupiers in Afghanistan that flooded Europe with opium and helped create Osama bin Laden, a modern version of the Old Man of the Mountains, who’s [sic] 11th Century followers – the Assassins – “sacrificed for him in order to perpetuate his crimes”[4]
By CNu at April 21, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Deep State
at last - an honest and forthright corporate policy
By CNu at April 21, 2014 0 comments
Labels: corporatism , egregores , truth
Sunday, April 20, 2014
the global drug metagroup
Narcotics are estimated to be worth between $500 billion and $1 trillion a year, an amount, according to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan in remarks to a United Nations General Assembly session in June 2003, that is greater than the global oil and gas industry, and twice as large as the overall automobile industry.[2]
By CNu at April 20, 2014 0 comments
Labels: Deep State , Living Memory , The Great Game
the astounding conspiracy theories of mark gorton
By CNu at April 20, 2014 0 comments
Labels: information anarchy
Saturday, April 19, 2014
cultural supremacy mechanics...,
By CNu at April 19, 2014 11 comments
Labels: global system of 1% supremacy
understanding how the octupus operates...,
By CNu at April 19, 2014 0 comments
Labels: clampdown , elite , establishment , global system of 1% supremacy
Friday, April 18, 2014
why capitalists do not want recovery and what that means for america...,
Or is it?
What motivates capitalists?
The answer depends on what motivates capitalists. Conventional economic theories tell us that capitalists are hedonic creatures. Like all other economic “agents” – from busy managers and hectic workers to active criminals and idle welfare recipients – their ultimate goal is maximum utility. In order for them to achieve this goal, they need to maximize their profit and interest; and this income – like any other income – depends on economic growth. Conclusion: utility-seeking capitalists have every reason to love booms and hate crises.
But, then, are capitalists really motivated by utility? Is it realistic to believe that large American corporations are guided by the hedonic pleasure of their owners – or do we need a different starting point altogether?
So try this: in our day and age, the key goal of leading capitalists and corporations is not absolute utility but relative power. Their real purpose is not to maximize hedonic pleasure, but to “beat the average.” Their ultimate aim is not to consume more goods and services (although that happens too), but to increase their power over others. And the key measure of this power is their distributive share of income and assets.
Note that capitalists have no choice in this matter. “Beating the average” is not a subjective preference but a rigid rule, dictated and enforced by the conflictual nature of the system. Capitalism pits capitalists against other groups in society – as well as against each other. And in this multifaceted struggle for greater power, the yardstick is always relative. Capitalists – and the corporations they operate through – are compelled and conditioned to accumulate differentially; to augment not their personal utility but their relative earnings. Whether they are private owners like Warren Buffet or institutional investors like Bill Gross, they all seek not to perform but to out-perform – and outperformance means re-distribution. Capitalists who beat the average redistribute income and assets in their favor; this redistribution raises their share of the total; and a larger share of the total means greater power stacked against others. In the final analysis, capitalists accumulate not hedonic pleasure but differential power.
By CNu at April 18, 2014 4 comments
Labels: global system of 1% supremacy , hegemony , Livestock Management , What IT DO Shawty...
how diversity was killed in economics...,
By CNu at April 18, 2014 0 comments
Labels: 2parties1ideology , chess-not checkers , clampdown , institutional deconstruction , Living Memory , Pimphand Strong
Thursday, April 17, 2014
.001% have become criminally untouchable...,
By CNu at April 17, 2014 75 comments
Labels: global system of 1% supremacy
support the world economics association
By CNu at April 17, 2014 19 comments
Labels: information anarchy , institutional deconstruction , micro-insurgencies
research shows that democratic majoritarian peasants ain't isht...,
A great deal of empirical research speaks to the policy influence of one or another set of actors, but until recently it has not been possible to test these contrasting theoretical predictions against each other within a single statistical model. This paper reports on an effort to do so, using a unique data set that includes measures of the key variables for 1,779 policy issues.
Multivariate analysis indicates that economic elites and organized groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on U.S. government policy, while average citizens and mass-based interest groups have little or no independent influence. The results provide
substantial support for theories of Economic Elite Domination and for theories of Biased Pluralism, but not for theories of Majoritarian Electoral Democracy or Majoritarian Pluralism.
Who governs? Who really rules? To what extent is the broad body of U.S. citizens sovereign, semi-sovereign, or largely powerless? These questions have animated much important work in the study of American politics.
While this body of research is rich and variegated, it can loosely be divided into four families of theories: Majoritarian Electoral Democracy, Economic Elite Domination, and two types of interest group pluralism – Majoritarian Pluralism, in which the interests of all citizens are more or less equally represented, and Biased Pluralism, in which corporations, business associations, and professional groups predominate) Each of these perspectives makes different predictions about the independent influence upon U.S. policy making of four sets of actors: the Average Citizen or “median voter,” Economic Elites, and Mass-based or Business-oriented Interest Groups or industries.
Each of these theoretical traditions has given rise to a large body of literature. Each is supported by a great deal of empirical evidence – some of it quantitative, some historical, some observational – concerning the importance of various sets of actors (or, all too often, a single set of actors) in U.S. policy making. This literature has made important contributions to our understanding of how American politics works and has helped illuminate how democratic or undemocratic (in various senses) our policy making process actually is. Until very recently, however, it has been impossible to test the differing predictions of these theories against each other within a single statistical model that permits one to analyze the independent effects of each set of actors upon policy outcomes.
Here – in a tentative and preliminary way – we offer such test, bringing a unique data set to bear on the problem. Our measures are far from perfect, but we hope that this first step will help inspire further research into what we see as some of the most fundamental questions about American politics.
The central point that emerges from our research is that economic elites and organized groups representing business interests have substantial independent impacts on U.S. government policy, while mass-based interest groups and average citizens have little or no independent influence. Our results provide substantial support for theories of Economic Elite Domination and for theories of Biased Pluralism, but not for theories of Majoritarian Electoral Democracy or Majoritarian Pluralism. Fist tap Dale.
By CNu at April 17, 2014 0 comments
Labels: global system of 1% supremacy
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
michael c. ruppert - RIP
The Record is Here
Full Disclosure Part II – The Legal Record Around His 1978 LAPD Resignation
Part One
Part Two
By CNu at April 16, 2014 19 comments
Labels: People Centric Leadership , The Hardline , The Straight and Narrow , truth , unintended consequences
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