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    GORGworld conspiracy // 911 // new world order ... part 2
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    Elektronické mýto má vydělat šestkrát více než známky

    7:39 - 30.7.

    PRAHA 30. července (ČTK) - Zamýšlené elektronické mýto vybírané z kamionů má vydělat šestkrát více než dálniční známky. Ministerstvo dopravy plánuje, že by stát měl v prvních letech zavedení mýta získat ročně okolo šesti miliard korun. Náklady na provoz se přitom budou pohybovat do dvou miliard korun za rok. Píše to Mladá fronta DNES.

    "Dnes se od kamionů nad 12 tun za dálniční známky vybere asi 650 milionů korun," řekl listu šéf fondu dopravy Pavel Švagr. Po několika letech od zavedení mýta, s nímž se u kamionů počítá v roce 2005, by výnosy fondu mohly vyrůst až na osm miliard korun ročně.

    Od roku 2005 by měly být zpoplatněny asi tři tisíce kilometrů dálnic a hlavních tahů silnic první třídy. Podle analýz fondu dopravy nehrozí, že by kamiony po zavedení mýta začaly ucpávat okresní silnice. Zvýšila by se jejich spotřeba a prodloužila doba cestování. Fond dopravy jako předpokládaný správce systému s výběrem elektronického mýta od osobních automobilů nepočítá stejně jako v Evropě dříve než v roce 2010.

    Podle dnešního vydání deníku Právo se záměr ministerstva dopravy nelíbí Autoklubu České republiky, který chce mýtné jen na dálnicích. "Pokud se okruh mýtným zpoplatněných komunikací rozšíří tak výrazně, jak uvedl (ministr) Šimonovský, bude se spousta řidičů snažit placení vyhnout jízdou po silnicích druhé a třetí třídy. To bude mít za následek vzestup nehodovosti," řekl Právu mluvčí Autoklubu Václav Špička.

    Jak ale Právo dodává, Autoklub se ztotožňuje s argumentem ministerstva, že zpoplatnění komunikací prostřednictvím mýtného je spravedlivější než dnešní systém dálničních známek. Platit se totiž bude za skutečný počet ujetých kilometrů.

    http://www.financninoviny.cz/view-id.php4?id=20030730E00050&tbl=zpravy&kostra=m%FDtn%E9

    *****************************

    Šimonovský: V ČR bude zavedeno mýtné nejen na dálnicích
    8:13 - 28.7.

    PRAHA 28. července (ČTK) - Ministerstvo dopravy hodlá zavést elektronické mýto nejen na dálnicích, ale také na rychlostních komunikacích a některých silnicích první třídy. V rozhovoru pro dnešní Právo to řekl ministr dopravy Milan Šimonovský. Podle něj by rozsah zpoplatněné sítě představoval asi tři tisíce kilometrů, dálniční síť přitom čítá 520 kilometrů.

    Ministr rovněž připustil, že vláda je připravena jednat o úpravách silniční daně, aby dopravci měli po zavedení mýtného určité přechodové období a náraz nebyl tak prudký.

    Elektronické mýto by podle Šimonovského mohlo být zavedeno v roce 2005. Zásadní rozhodnutí by měla vláda učinit do konce příštího roku. V prvních letech by se poplatek týkal pouze nákladních automobilů.


    "Začít hned i s osobními auty by bylo velmi nerozumné vzhledem k tomu, jaké množství jich u nás je. Systém si je třeba nejprve osvojit na menším vzorku, a tím jsou nákladní vozidla," vysvětlil Šimonovský.

    Jak ministr doplnil, stát chce zpoplatnit zejména tranzitující mezinárodní dopravu, aby k ní už nebyl příliš vstřícný. "Tomuto tlaku se musí přizpůsobit i vnitrozemská doprava," dodal. I při třech tisících kilometrech podle ministra zůstane řidičům možnost zpoplatněné úseky objet. "Je ale fakt, že tím ztratí mnoho času," poznamenal.

    O společném postupu v zavádění elektronického mýtného bude ČR jednat s Polskem, Maďarskem a Slovenskem. Několik expertních schůzek se má uskutečnit na podzim a rozhodnutí by mělo padnout koncem roku.

    http://www.financninoviny.cz/view-id.php4?id=20030728E00073&tbl=zpravy&kostra=m%FDtn%E9

    **********************

    Black box in car to trap speed drivers

    Juliette Jowit, transport editor
    Sunday August 3, 2003
    The Observer

    Drivers face automatic speeding fines without being caught by the police or roadside cameras under a proposal being studied by the Government to fit all cars with satellite tracking devices for road tolls.

    Under the anti-congestion tolling plan being examined by the Department for Transport, all vehicles would be fitted with a 'black box' to charge drivers according to the type of road they are using and when they are driving.

    But transport experts believe the equipment will pave the way for 24-hour monitoring of drivers to see if they break the speed limit. It could also be used to determine whether drivers were speeding before an accident.

    The Government is backing trials of an advanced system which would tell the black box when it entered a speed limit and prevent the vehicle going faster. The equipment could also find drivers who have not paid vehicle duty or insurance.

    The system would use global positioning systems and computer technology. It would be easy to catch speeders and there are no legal obstacles - tachographs in lorries, which record speed and length of time behind the wheel, are already examined after accidents.

    'It [the equipment] probably will be used for speeding,' said Tony Grayling, associate director of the centre-left Institute for Public Policy Research think-tank. 'It's an offence to break the limit and it's appropriate that evidence is generated to demonstrate the law has been broken.'

    Much of the technology that would be used for the tolling devices is already in lorry tachographs, and in commercial satellite navigation devices. The prototype planned for UK car drivers should be introduced for lorries in Germany this year and in the UK in 2006. However, a compulsory extension to every vehicle would be a big political risk.

    Leading German motoring journalist Wolfgang K
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---




    In February and March, posters with the above image of Rotterdam Mayor Ivo Opstelten and the councillor of the Buro Programma Veilig, Mevrouw Faria, populated the infoboards around the city. “Oog van Rotterdam”. What the hell is this? Inspecting the brochure “The Eye of Rotterdam” pamphlet we promptly collected from the City Information Center, we came to understand that the local government was giving an award, specifically a black pyramid with a gold eye within, for a Rotterdammer who served his community by calling the cops at the right time (ie. so they can arrest some junkies or artists) or someone who ratted on a neighbour or someone who in general consistently employs Stasi techniques to make Rotterdam a better place.

    http://innbetween.noneto.com/WHY/EVIDENCE/oog.html

    ***************

    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    JAXXE
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    Documentary Prohibited in USA Now Showing in Russia

    http://english.pravda.ru/science/19/95/381/10321_castro.html
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---


    \"Military men are dumb, stupid animals to be used as pawns for foreign policy\"

    Henry Kissinger
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    Al-Qaeda \'plans summer attacks\'

    The US Department of Homeland Security, set up after the 11 September attacks in 2001, also warned that US interests in countries such as the UK, Italy and Australia could be targeted.

    The alert sent out to US airlines and law enforcement agencies warns that al-Qaeda has considered suicide hijackings and bombings as the best way to destroy planes as well as strike ground targets.

    The BBC\'s Ian Pannell, in Washington, said the warning was in stark and unusually blunt language.

    \"Al-Qaeda planners have primarily considered suicide hijackings and bombings as the most promising method to destroy aircraft in flight as well as to strike ground targets,\" the advisory said.

    \"Attack venues may include the United Kingdom, Italy, Australia or the East Coast of the United States due to the relatively high concentration of government, military and economic targets.\"

    ...

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/3109117.stm
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    Human ID at a Distance (HumanID)

    Graphic depicting human recognition from a distance

    Program Objective:

    The goal of the Human Identification at a Distance (HumanID) program is to develop automated biometric identification technologies to detect, recognize and identify humans at great distances. These technologies will provide critical early warning support for force protection and homeland defense against terrorist, criminal, and other human-based threats, and will prevent or decrease the success rate of such attacks against DoD operational facilities and installations. Methods for fusing biometric technologies into advanced human identification systems will be developed to enable faster, more accurate and unconstrained identification of humans at significant standoff distances.

    Program Strategy:

    HumanID program has developed a pilot force protection system for standoff human identification in outdoor operational DoD settings, and has performed preliminary assessments of current and future technologies. HumanID will determine the critical factors that affect performance of biometric components, and identify the limits of range, accuracy, and reliability. The program will also conduct multi-modal fusion experiments and performance evaluations, and will demonstrate advanced human recognition capabilities in multiple force protection and/or homeland defense environments.

    Planned Accomplishments:

    FY 02 Accomplishments:

    * Designed and administered the Face Recognition Vendor Test 2002. Results will be used to direct face recognition research and provide input to the design of the United States Border Entry/Exit System.
    * Performed an operational evaluation of a long range (25-150 feet) face recognition system developed under the HumanID Program.
    * Developed a multi-spectral infrared and visible face recognition system.
    *

    Developed a low power millimeter wave radar system for wide field of view detection and narrow field of view gait classification.
    * Characterized gait performance from video for human identification at a distance.

    FY 03 Plans:

    * Develop multi-model fusion algorithms for human identification.
    *

    Develop algorithms for locating and acquiring subjects out to 150 meters (500 ft) in range.
    *

    Continue the development of the most promising biometric technologies based upon experimental evaluation performance.

    FY 04 Plans:

    * Develop and demonstrate a human identification system that operates out to 150 meters (500 ft.) using visible imagery.
    *

    Fuse face and gait recognition into a 24/7 human identification system.
    *

    Perform an operational evaluation of a multi-model human identification system.

    http://www.darpa.mil/iao/HID.htm

    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    Japan yens for RFID chips

    By John Leyden
    Posted: 30/07/2003 at 10:01 GMT

    As Europe mulls the idea of implanting radio chips into euro notes, Japan has gone a step further with plans to incorporoate the controversial technology in currency that will enter circulation next year.

    New 10,000 Yen bills (worth about £51) currently entering production are to be implanted with IC chips from Hitachi in a bid to combat counterfeiters and money launderers, according to Japanese reports relayed to us by Osaka-based Reg Reader D. Michael Ramirez.

    Notes will come with Hitachi\'s 0.3mm \"mew-chip\" which responds to radio signals by sending out a 128-bit number. This information could include a serial number with the date and place of origin of a note. Each chip costs around 50 Yen (26p).


    Yesterday the Japanese programme World Business Satellite, ran a story about the new bills, Ramirez tells us.

    \"They placed about 50 or so in a bottle and then took pictures of the bottle, live, on air, with the announcer holding the bottle spotted with IC chips for all the viewers to see,\" he said.

    Already, privacy activists and some technologists are already voicing their concern over the privacy implications of RFID tags attached supermarket goods. Such fears can only be magnified when this technology is included in the money in our pockets.

    http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/55/32061.html
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    An Islamic conference in the Spanish city of Granada has called on Muslims around the world to help bring about the end of the capitalist system.

    The call came at a conference titled \'Islam in Europe\' attended by about 2,000 Muslims.

    Earlier this week Granada saw the first official opening of a mosque in Spain for more than 500 years.

    The keynote speaker at the conference was Umar Ibrahim Vadillo, leader of the worldwide Muslim group known as Murabitun.

    The group is strongly opposed to capitalism.

    Mr Vadillo said America\'s economic interests had become the religion of the world and that people slavishly adjusted their lifestyles to suit the capitalist model.

    But he said capitalism cannot sustain itself and is bound to collapse.

    Disapproval of terror

    Mr Vadillo, a Spanish Muslim, called on all followers of Islam to stop using western currencies such as the dollar, the pound and the euro and instead to return to the use of the gold dinar.

    He said the introduction of the gold dinar to the world\'s economies would be the single most unifying event for Muslims in the modern era.

    Shortly afterwards, he said, the capitalist structure would quickly fall and it would make the Wall Street crash of 1929 seem minor by comparison.


    The conference also heard from Abu Bakr Rieger, a German Muslim.

    He said Islam could only be practised in Europe in a traditional way, not in one adapted to European values and structures.

    He also said private terrorism would find no approval among European Muslims.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/europe/3061833.stm
    CURLYLOCK
    CURLYLOCK --- ---
    Prosím vás, pošlete mi do pošty ten obrázek vojáků vztyčujících McDonald..
    Když jsem si jej chtěl stáhnout, už tu byl Bush..
    Jinak díky všem, kdo sem posílají seriozní informace, přicházím o iluze..
    JAXXE
    JAXXE --- ---
    clanek od clena US army... deli svet na CORE a GAP
    core spolupracuje s globalizaci, je clenem new orderu, gap je treba zacelit a zaclenit do \"noveho sveta\"... silou

    THE PENTAGON’S NEW MAP

    IT EXPLAINS WHY WE’RE GOING TO WAR,
    AND WHY WE’LL KEEP GOING TO WAR.

    BY

    THOMAS P.M. BARNETT, U.S. NAVAL WAR COLLEGE

    [MAPS BY WILLIAM MCNULTY]


    Esquire, March 2003 issue


    Since the end of the cold war, the United States has been trying to come up with an operating theory of the world—and a military strategy to accompany it. Now there’s a leading contender. It involves identifying the problem parts of the world and aggressively shrinking them. Since September 11, 2001, the author, a professor of warfare analysis, has been advising the Office of the Secretary of Defense and giving this briefing continually at the Pentagon and in the intelligence community. Now he gives it to you.

    ...

    That is why the public debate about this war has been so important: It forces Americans to come to terms with I believe is the new security paradigm that shapes this age, namely, Disconnectedness defines danger. Saddam Hussein’s outlaw regime is dangerously disconnected from the globalizing world, from its rule sets, its norms, and all the ties that bind countries together in mutually assured dependence.



    The problem with most discussion of globalization is that too many experts treat it as a binary outcome: Either it is great and sweeping the planet, or it is horrid and failing humanity everywhere. Neither view really works, because globalization as a historical process is simply too big and too complex for such summary judgments. Instead, this new world must be defined by where globalization has truly taken root and where it has not.



    Show me where globalization is thick with network connectivity, financial transactions, liberal media flows, and collective security, and I will show you regions featuring stable governments, rising standards of living, and more deaths by suicide than murder. These parts of the world I call the Functioning Core, or Core. But show me where globalization is thinning or just plain absent, and I will show you regions plagued by politically repressive regimes, widespread poverty and disease, routine mass murder, and—most important—the chronic conflicts that incubate the next generation of global terrorists. These parts of the world I call the Non-Integrating Gap, or Gap.



    Globalization’s “ozone hole” may have been out of sight and out of mind prior to September 11, 2001, but it has been hard to miss ever since. And measuring the reach of globalization is not an academic exercise to an eighteen-year-old marine sinking tent poles on its far side. So where do we schedule the U.S. military’s next round of away games? The pattern that has emerged since the end of the cold war suggests a simple answer: in the Gap.



    The reason I support going to war in Iraq is not simply that Saddam is a cutthroat Stalinist willing to kill anyone to stay in power, nor because that regime has clearly supported terrorist networks over the years. The real reason I support a war like this is that the resulting long-term military commitment will finally force America to deal with the entire Gap as a strategic threat environment.





    FOR MOST COUNTRIES, accommodating the emerging global rule set of democracy, transparency, and free trade is no mean feat, which is something most Americans find hard to understand. We tend to forget just how hard it has been to keep the United States together all these years, harmonizing our own, competing internal rule sets along the way—through a Civil War, a Great Depression, and the long struggles for racial and sexual equality that continue to this day. As far as most states are concerned, we are quite unrealistic in our expectation that they should adapt themselves quickly to globalization’s very American-looking rule set.



    But you have to be careful with that Darwinian pessimism, because it is a short jump from apologizing for globalization-as-forced-Americanization to insinuating—along racial or civilization lines—that “those people will simply never be like us.” Just ten years ago, most experts were willing to write off poor Russia, declaring Slavs, in effect, genetically unfit for democracy and capitalism. Similar arguments resonated in most China-bashing during the 1990’s, and you hear them today in the debates about the feasibility of imposing democracy on a post-Saddam Iraq—a sort of Muslims-are-from-Mars argument.



    So how do we distinguish between who is really making it in globalization’s Core and who remains trapped in the Gap? And how permanent is this dividing line?



    Understanding that the line between the Core and Gap is constantly shifting, let me suggest that the direction of change is more critical than the degree. So, yes, Beijing is still ruled by a “Communist party” whose ideological formula is 30 percent Marxist-Leninist and 70 percent Sopranos, but China just signed on to the World Trade Organization, and over the long run, that is far more important in securing the country’s permanent Core status. Why? Because it forces China to harmonize its internal rule set with that of globalization—banking, tariffs, copyright protection, environmental standards. Of course, working to adjust your internal rule sets to globalization’s evolving rule set offers no guarantee of success. As Argentina and Brazil have recently found out, following the rules (in Argentina’s case, sort of following) does not mean you are panicproof, or bubbleproof, or even recessionproof. Trying to adapt to globalization does not mean bad things will never happen to you. Nor does it mean all your poor will immediately morph into stable middle class. It just means your standard of living gets better over time.



    In sum, it is always possible to fall off this bandwagon called globalization. And when you do, bloodshed will follow. If you are lucky, so will American troops.





    Map by William McNulty

    DISCONNECTEDNESS DEFINES DANGER Problem areas requiring American attention (outlined) are, in the author\'s analysis, called the Gap. Shrinking the Gap is possible only by stopping the ability of terrorist networks to access the Core via the \"seam states\" that lie along the Gap\'s bloody boundaries. In this war on terrorism, the U.S. will place a special emphasis on cooperation with these states. What are the classic seam states? Mexico, Brazil, South Africa, Morocco, Algeria, Greece, Turkey, Pakistan, Thailand, Malaysia, the Phillipines, Indonesia.





    SO WHAT PARTS OF THE WORLD can be considered functioning right now? North America, much of South America, the European Union, Putin’s Russia, Japan and Asia’s emerging economies (most notably China and India), Australia and New Zealand, and South Africa, which accounts for roughly four billion out of a global population of six billion.



    Whom does that leave in the Gap? It would be easy to say “everyone else,” but I want to offer you more proof than that and, by doing so, argue why I think the Gap is a long-term threat to more than just your pocketbook or conscience.



    If we map out U.S. military responses since the end of the cold war, (see below), we find an overwhelming concentration of activity in the regions of the world that are excluded from globalization’s growing Core—namely the Caribbean Rim, virtually all of Africa, the Balkans, the Caucasus, Central Asia, the Middle East and Southwest Asia, and much of Southeast Asia. That is roughly the remaining two billion of the world’s population. Most have demographics skewed very young, and most are labeled, “low income” or “low middle income” by the World Bank (i.e., less than $3,000 annual per capita).



    If we draw a line around the majority of those military interventions, we have basically mapped the Non-Integrating Gap. Obviously, there are outliers excluded geographically by this simple approach, such as an Israel isolated in the Gap, a North Korea adrift within the Core, or a Philippines straddling the line. But looking at the data, it is hard to deny the essential logic of the picture: If a country is either losing out to globalization or rejecting much of the content flows associated with its advance, there is a far greater chance that the U.S. will end up sending forces at some point. Conversely, if a country is largely functioning within globalization, we tend not to have to send our forces there to restore order to eradicate threats.



    Now, that may seem like a tautology—in effect defining any place that has not attracted U.S. military intervention in the last decade or so as “functioning within globalization” (and vice versa). But think about this larger point: Ever since the end of World War II, this country has assumed that the real threats to its security resided in countries of roughly similar size, development, and wealth—in other words, other great powers like ourselves. During the cold war, that other great power was the Soviet Union. When the big Red machine evaporated in the early 1990’s, we flirted with concerns about a united Europe, a powerhouse Japan, and—most recently—a rising China.



    What was interesting about all those scenarios is the assumption that only an advanced state can truly threaten us. The rest of the world? Those less-developed parts of the world have long been referred to in military plans as the “Lesser Includeds,” meaning that if we built a military capable of handling a great power’s military threat, it would always be sufficient for any minor scenarios we might have to engage in the less advanced world.



    That assumption was shattered by September 11. After all, we were not attacked by a nation or even an army but by a group of—in Thomas Friedman’s vernacular—Super Empowered Individuals willing to die for their cause. September 11 triggered a system perturbation that continues to reshape our government (the new Department of Homeland Security), our economy (the de facto security tax we all pay), and even our society (Wave to the camera!). Moreover, it launched the global war on terrorism, the prism through which our government now views every bilateral security relationship we have across the world.



    In many ways, the September 11 attacks did the U.S. national-security establishment a huge favor by pulling us back from the abstract planning of future high-tech wars against “near peers” into the here-and-now threats to global order. By doing so, the dividing lines between Core and Gap were highlighted, and more important, the nature of the threat environment was thrown into stark relief.



    Think about it: Bin Laden and Al Qaeda are pure products of the Gap—in effect, its most violent feedback to the Core. They tell us how we are doing in exporting security to these lawless areas (not very well) and which states they would like to take “off line” from globalization and return to some seventh-century definition of the good life (any Gap state with a sizable Muslim population, especially Saudi Arabia).



    If you take this message from Osama and combine it with our military-intervention record of the last decade, a simple security rule set emerges: A country’s potential to warrant a U.S. military response is inversely related to its globalization connectivity. There is a good reason why Al Qaeda was based first in Sudan and then later in Afghanistan: These are two of the most disconnected countries in the world. Look at the other places U.S. Special Operations Forces have recently zeroed in on: northwestern Pakistan, Somalia, Yemen. We are talking about the ends of the earth as far as globalization is concerned.



    But just as important as “getting them where they live” is stopping the ability of these terrorist networks to access the Core via the “seam states” that lie along the Gap’s bloody boundaries. It is along this seam that the Core will seek to suppress bad things coming out of the Gap. Which are some of these classic seam states? Mexico, Brazil, South Africa, Morocco, Algeria, Greece, Turkey, Pakistan, Thailand, Malaysia, the Philippines, and Indonesia come readily to mind. But the U.S. will not be the only Core state working this issue. For example, Russia has its own war on terrorism in the Caucasus, China is working its western border with more vigor, and Australia was recently energized (or was it cowed?) by the Bali bombing.





    IF WE STEP BACK for a minute and consider the broader implications of this new global map, then U.S. national-security strategy would seem to be: 1) Increase the Core’s immune system capabilities for responding to September 11-like system perturbations; 2) Work the seam states to firewall the Core from the Gap’s worst exports, such as terror, drugs, and pandemics; and, most important, 3) Shrink the Gap. Notice I did not just say Mind the Gap. The knee-jerk reaction of many Americans to September 11 is to say, “Let’s get off our dependency on foreign oil, and then we won’t have to deal with those people.” The most naïve assumption underlying that dream is that reducing what little connectivity the Gap has with the Core will render it less dangerous to us over the long haul. Turning the Middle East into Central Africa will not build a better world for my kids. We cannot simply will those people away.



    The Middle East is the perfect place to start. Diplomacy cannot work in a region where the biggest sources of insecurity lie not between states but within them. What is most wrong about the Middle East is the lack of personal freedom and how that translates into dead-end lives for most of the population—especially for the young. Some states like Qatar and Jordan are ripe for perestroika-like leaps into better political futures, thanks to younger leaders who see the inevitability of such change. Iran is likewise waiting for the right Gorbachev to come along—if he has not already.



    What stands in the path of this change? Fear. Fear of tradition unraveling. Fear of the mullah’s disapproval. Fear of being labeled a “bad” or “traitorous” Muslim state. Fear of becoming a target of radical groups and terrorist networks. But most of all, fear of being attacked from all sides for being different—the fear of becoming Israel.



    The Middle East has long been a neighborhood of bullies eager to pick on the weak. Israel is still around because it has become—sadly—one of the toughest bullies on the block. The only thing that will change that nasty environment and open the floodgates for change is if some external power steps in and plays Leviathan full-time. Taking down Saddam, the region’s bully-in-chief, will force the U.S. into playing that role far more fully than it has over the past several decades, primarily because Iraq is the Yugoslavia of the Middle East—a crossroads of civilizations that has historically required a dictatorship to keep the peace. As baby-sitting jobs go, this one will be a doozy, making our lengthy efforts in postwar Germany and Japan look simple in retrospect.



    But it is the right thing to do, and now is the right time to do it, and we are the only country that can. Freedom cannot blossom in the Middle East without security, and security is this country’s most influential public-sector export. By that I do not mean arms exports, but basically the attention paid by our military forces to any region’s potential for mass violence. We are the only nation on earth capable of exporting security in a sustained fashion, and we have a very good track record of doing it.



    Show me a part of the world that is secure in its peace and I will show you a strong or growing ties between local militaries and the U.S. military. Show me regions where major war is inconceivable and I will show you permanent U.S. military bases and long-term security alliances. Show me the strongest investment relationships in the global economy and I will show you two postwar military occupations that remade Europe and Japan following World War II.



    This country has successfully exported security to globalization’s Old Core (Western Europe, Northeast Asia) for half a century and to its emerging New Core (Developing Asia) for a solid quarter century following our mishandling of Vietnam. But our efforts in the Middle Ease have been inconsistent—in Africa, almost nonexistent. Until we begin the systematic, long-term export of security to the Gap, it will increasingly export its pain to the Core in the form of terrorism and other instabilities.



    Naturally, it will take a whole lot more than the U.S. exporting security to shrink the Gap. Africa, for example, will need far more aid than the Core has offered in the past, and the integration of the Gap will ultimately depend more on private investment than anything the Core’s public sector can offer. But it all has to begin with security, because free markets and democracy cannot flourish amid chronic conflict.



    Making this effort means reshaping our military establishment to mirror-image the challenge that we face. Think about it. Global war is not in the offing, primarily because our huge nuclear stockpile renders such war unthinkable—for anyone. Meanwhile, classic state-on-state wars are becoming fairly rare. So if the United States is in the process of “transforming” its military to meet the threats of tomorrow, what should it end up looking like? In my mind, we fight fire with fire. If we live in a world increasingly populated by Super-Empowered Individuals, we field a military of Super-Empowered-Individuals.



    This may sound like additional responsibility for an already overburdened military, but that is the wrong way of looking at it, for what we are dealing with here are problems of success—not failure. It is America’s continued success in deterring global war and obsolescing state-on-state war that allows us to stick our noses into the far more difficult subnational conflicts and the dangerous transnational actors they spawn. I know most Americans do not want to hear this, but the real battlegrounds in the global war on terrorism are still over there. If gated communities and rent-a-cops were enough, September 11 never would have happened.



    History is full of turning points like that terrible day, but no turning-back-points. We ignore the Gap’s existence at our own peril, because it will not go away until we as a nation respond to the challenge of making globalization truly global.



    Map by William McNultyWestern Hemisphere Map (click to enlarge)

    Click here for PDF file of same map (more manageable)

    Map by William McNultyEastern Hemisphere Map (click to enlarge)

    Click here for PDF file of same map (more manageable)

    HANDICAPPING THE GAP


    My list of real trouble for the world in the 1990s, today,
    and tomorrow, starting in our own backyard:

    1) HAITI Efforts to build a nation in 1990s were disappointing • We have been going into Haiti for about a century, and we will go back when boat people start flowing in during the next crisis—without fail.

    2) COLOMBIA Country is broken into several lawless chunks, with private armies, rebels, narcos, and legit government all working the place over. • Drugs still flow. • Ties between drug cartels and rebels grew over decade, and now we know of links to international terror, too. • We get involved, keep promising more, and keep getting nowhere. Piecemeal, incremental approach is clearly not working.

    3) BRAZIL AND ARGENTINA Both on the bubble between the Gap and the Functioning Core. Both played the globalization game to hilt in nineties and both feel abused now. The danger of falling off the wagon and going self-destructively leftist or rightist is very real. • No military threats to speak of, except against their own democracies (the return of the generals). • South American alliance MERCOSUR tries to carve out its own reality while Washington pushes Free Trade of Americas, but we may have to settle for agreements with Chile or for pulling only Chile into bigger NAFTA. Will Brazil and Argentina force themselves to be left out and then resent it? • Amazon a large ungovernable area for Brazil, plus all that environmental damage continues to pile up. Will the world eventually care enough to step in?

    4) FORMER YUGOSLAVIA For most of the past decade, served as shorthand for Europe\'s inability to get its act together even in its own backyard. • Will be long-term baby-sitting job for the West.

    5) CONGO AND RWANDA/BURUNDI Two to three million dead in central Africa from all the fighting across the decade. How much worse can it get before we try to do something, anything? Three million more dead? • Congo is a carrion state—not quite dead or alive, and everyone is feeding off it. • And then there\'s AIDS.

    6) ANGOLA Never really has solved its ongoing civil war (1.5 million dead in past quarter century). • Basically at conflict with self since mid-seventies, when Portuguese \"empire\" fell. • Life expectancy right now is under forty!

    7) SOUTH AFRICA The only functioning Core country in Africa, but it\'s on the bubble. Lots of concerns that South Africa is a gateway country for terror networks trying to access Core through back door. • Endemic crime is biggest security threat. • And then there\'s AIDS.

    8) ISRAEL-PALESTINE Terror will not abate—there is no next generation in the West Bank that wants anything but more violence. • Wall going up right now will be the Berlin Wall of twenty-first century. Eventually, outside powers will end up providing security to keep the two sides apart (this divorce is going to be very painful). • There is always the chance of somebody (Saddam in desperation?) trying to light up Israel with weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and triggering the counterpunch we all fear Israel is capable of.

    9) SAUDI ARABIA The let-them-eat-cake mentality of royal mafia will eventually trigger violent instability from within. • Paying terrorists protection money to stay away will likewise eventually fail, so danger will come from outside, too. • Huge young population with little prospects for future, and a ruling elite whose main source of income is a declining long-term asset. And yet the oil will matter to enough of the world far enough into the future that the United States will never let this place really tank, no matter what it takes.

    10) IRAQ Question of when and how, not if. • Then there\'s the huge rehab job. We will have to build a security regime for the whole region.

    11) SOMALIA Chronic lack of governance. • Chronic food problems. • Chronic problem of terrorist-network infiltration. • We went in with Marines and Special Forces and left disillusioned—a poor man\'s Vietnam for the 1990s. Will be hard-pressed not to return.

    12) IRAN Counterrevolution has already begun: This time the students want to throw the mullahs out. • Iran wants to be friends with U.S., but resurgence of fundamentalists may be the price we pay to invade Iraq. • The mullahs support terror, and their push for WMD is real: Does this make them inevitable target once Iraq and North Korea are settled?

    13) AFGHANISTAN Lawless, violent place even before the Taliban stepped onstage and started pulling it back toward seventh century (short trip) • Government sold to Al Qaeda for pennies on the dollar. • Big source of narcotics (heroin). • Now U.S. stuck there for long haul, rooting out hardcore terrorists/rebels who\'ve chosen to stay.

    14) PAKISTAN There is always the real danger of their having the bomb and using it out of weakness in conflict with India (very close call with December 13, 2001, New Delhi bombing). • Out of fear that Pakistan may fall to radical Muslims, we end up backing hard-line military types we don\'t really trust. • Clearly infested with Al Qaeda. • Was on its way to being declared a rogue state by U.S. until September 11 forced us to cooperate again. Simply put, Pakistan doesn\'t seem to control much of its own territory.

    15) NORTH KOREA Marching toward WMD. • Bizarre recent behavior of Pyongyang (admitting kidnappings, breaking promises on nukes, shipping weapons to places we disapprove of and getting caught, signing agreements with Japan that seem to signal new era, talking up new economic zone next to China) suggests it is intent (like some mental patient) on provoking crises. • We live in fear of Kim\'s G
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    RFID and the end of civilisation

    By Simon Aronowitz simon at thoughtcrimenews dot com

    28th July 2003

    Imagine a supermarket where there were no check-outs and no floor staff. Sounds far fetched? Not for much longer. Walmart (ASDA in the UK) is leading the charge towards Radio Frequency ID (RFID) tags, small radio chips that allow stores to identify and monitor every item carried off the shelves. With a full implementation of the technology, customers can be trusted to just walk out of the store with their purchases in their bag. It won’t be theft because the store will also know who you are to debit your account by a combination of CCTV cameras and credit cards with RFID technology.

    Photo credit: Steve Campbell - Houston Chronicle


    To some this may be bliss – no more waiting at the checkout. No more difficult staff. No more problems swiping your credit card. But just how wonderful would this apparent utopia be?

    RFID is the latest technology to be used in the ever-growing control grid that dictates the way we live our lives. Walmart has recently suffered flak in the USA for their RFID trials, even though they claim it is only to monitor possible theft of Gillette products. The reason for outcry? Walmart customers saw the RFID tags as the start of a new slippery slope in surveillance.

    RFID has the potential for firms to know who their customers are as soon as they walk in the door, to know which branch the customer’s underwear was purchased from and to monitor how fast each customer walks round the outlet. It can offer many more items of information if the hardware is in place. The advent of the Homeland Security and USA PATRIOT Acts could provide for the US federal government to access all this privately held data and then track citizens’ movements in town. Many Americans have understandably protested the inception of the technology, having already seen their constitutional rights threatened with the above Acts.

    The official reasoning for placing the chips in products or their packaging sounds fair at first glance; the technology allows for constant tracking of products on the production-line all the way to delivery. Admirable objectives served by new technology. However customers are concerned about the `creep’ that the technology will provide for and already is. The trial with Gillette, monitoring possible theft, was run in a low-income area and can only tenuously be considered monitoring of the supply chain.

    The industry lobby group for RFID, the Auto-ID Center at MIT was recently embarrassed when a consumer group, Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion and Numbering (CASPIAN), successfully downloaded confidential documents from their website. The documents themselves provided further embarrassment when they revealed plans to `pacify’ the public over RFID technology. The security breach also set a terrible example for the future of the technology.

    Why they need to pacify us

    RFID is not only the harbinger of heavy personal surveillance. It may bring an end to civilisation as we know it. Forgive the author for using such profound terms, but having considered the potential impact of the technology, this is what I foresee. The end of supermarket check-outs and their staff may seem ideal for some, but for me it sounds like hell on earth. One of the joys of being a human being with an active mind is the ability to engage others in conversation. An environment which encourages customers to shop quickly and avoid interaction with others further atomises society. We already spend a great deal of our time `entertained’ by television or video games, avoiding contact with the real world. An end to supermarket staff would only increase our hermit-like status, acclimatising us to a world where real people are not important. For me, the highlight of a trip to the supermarket is the conversation at the check-out. After all, who really enjoys grocery shopping?

    My fears are not purely based on whether or not I get to talk to anyone, however. I have also taken the economic implications of the technology into account. If chain stores started to invest in this technology to process purchases, sidelining human check-out operators, then those employees may find themselves out of jobs.

    Thanks to globalisation and international competition, jobs that were previously safe are now being exported to developing countries. Many who lost their jobs in the decline of western industry were advised to re-train and find a job in a call-centre. At the time, call-centres were a growing market, particularly in the north of England where they provided welcome employment. Today call centre workers are seeing their jobs exported to India and elsewhere with cost savings are cited as the reason. Of course cost savings are the reason. Why pay someone £16,000 when you can pay someone in India £1,500 for the same job after a little dialect training? With a crash course on the soap operas and weather of the customer’s market, callers are none-the-wiser as to the fact that their call has been routed half-way around the world.

    I am frequently told that I should consider the benefit that this brings to the Indian economy. I point out in return that the people employed in India will ultimately lose their jobs just as surely as they did in England. With a higher income and an active role in the information society, the call-centre workers in India are rapidly having their aspirations raised so that they begin to demand the latest hi-tech gadgets and other consumer `must-haves’. What will happen when they decide that they want more money to pay for the next generation recordable DVD player? Simple. They’ll get the sack and their jobs will be exported.

    Globalisation is about one loyalty. Money. Firms have no loyalty to the countries they invest in, they have a commitment only to their shareholders to provide maximum return. If this means firing the people who buy your product, well it seems that’s just too bad. Some of the jobs have to go to India? That’s just competition. When they move from India to China, that’s just international competition again. Sounds simple, but try explaining it to those people who lose their jobs as a result of this competition.

    Walmart is no small organisation – it employs tens of thousands of people. If a large section of those people lose their jobs due to international competition and RFID, how are they expected to provide for their families? An economy is based on the re-circulation of money. If these employees become unemployed, they won’t have any money to re-circulate. At a stroke, Walmart’s former employees become former customers. It doesn’t stop at Walmart though. The former employees would become former customers of other firms, both small and large, and there the downward spiral accelerates. A drop in the velocity or quantity of money circulating around an economy usually goes by another, more common name. Recession. I don’t need to explain what happens next. History has taught us what this brings.

    The first production line was not in the Ford factory, as many people believe. It was actually in gun manufacture some time before the Model T was even on the design board. RFID could simply be the next advance in production techniques utilising more `efficient’ methods, but every advance in efficiency has meant fewer people producing the same level of output. Unfortunately I don’t see a balance provided by the RFID factories – they’ll be so efficient they won’t be hiring many people, and they’ll probably be based in China anyway.

    Again I ask that you forgive the author for painting a bleak picture of this brave new world, but also ask that serious consideration be given to the issues raised here, devoid of corporate spin and voodoo economics. The enslavement of the masses to consumption, mass production and media bombardment has led to a way of life where very little is ever questioned, so long as things are going well. By the time the masses realise that competition and the latest technology may have repercussions for all of us, it could well be too late.

    Consumers Against Supermarket Privacy Invasion And Numbering (CASPIAN)

    MIT Auto-ID Center

    http://www.thoughtcrimenews.com/rfid.htm
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    Big Brother on the Highway

    No more free ride for trucks on German autobahns. No more free ride for trucks on German autobahns.

    A new toll system goes in effect on German highways for heavy commercial vehicles next month. The system is the world\'s first to use satellite technology to record trucks\' highway mileage and automatically charge tolls.



    The control bridges are already in place and on-board computers are being frantically installed in trucks throughout Germany and beyond.
    Trucking companies and traffic experts are carefully counting down the days until August 31, when trucks weighing over 12 tons will be required to pay a per-kilometer charge when they drive on Germany\'s autobahns.



    Tolls based on distance traveled have long been considered for heavy trucks, since the income could be used to fund rising highway maintenance costs. The sticking point has been how to institute a workable system without having to construct legions of toll booths along Germany\'s highways.



    Riding to the rescue is satellite technology, which will work in tandem with small on-board computers installed in heavy trucks that function as drive-along toll station attendants, registering how far the truck has driven along a toll road, calculating the cost and sending it back to a central computer for later billing.



    Satellite Positioning



    Under the new system, before starting off, drivers will turn on computers called on-board units (OBU) which have been provided to them by the toll company. The activation establishes a linkup with a global positioning satellite in Earth\'s orbit. The continuous satellite connection enables the OBU to know at all times where the truck is.



    With the help of street atlas programmed into its memory, the OBU begins charging between nine and fourteen cents for every kilometer the truck drives on the highway, depending on the vehicle\'s number of axles and emission class. As soon as the vehicle leaves the highway, the on-board computer automatically stops calculating toll charges.



    Every 100 kilometers, the computer sends an electronic message to a calculation center and vehicle owners are invoiced every month based on the data received.



    Catching the cheaters



    The 300 \"control bridges\" (photo) now in place along German highways have been equipped with lasers which scan heavy vehicles that pass under them. The lasers recognize vehicles that are obligated to pay tolls by scanning their outlines. If the bridge sensors don\'t receive a signal from the on-board computer, either because it is not turned on or the driver hasn\'t installed one, a camera takes a picture of the vehicle\'s license plate.



    In addition to the bridges, some 300 cars equipped with the same sensor technology will prowl the highways looking for trucks not following the rules. Toll violators can be charged up to €20,000 ($23,000).

    ...

    http://www.dw-world.de/english/0,3367,1446_A_935602_1_A,00.html
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    STRANGER THAN FICTION

    AN INDEPENDENT INVESTIGATION OF 9-11 AND THE WAR ON TERRORISM

    By: Dr. Albert D. Pastore Phd.

    http://www.voxfux.com/features/stranger_than_fiction.htm
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    Police must reveal secret society links

    Henry McDonald, Ireland editor
    Sunday July 27, 2003
    The Observer

    The police service of Northern Ireland is to become the first in the Western world to make officers register their membership of secret societies such as the Masons.

    A Register of Interest will become mandatory for all policemen and women up to and including Chief Constable Hugh Orde within the next three weeks.

    And the register, which will reveal how many officers hold membership of the Orange Order, will also be handed over to Northern Ireland\'s Police Ombudsman, Nuala O\'Loan. She will have the right to refer during investigations into alleged bias, maltreatment of suspects or the mishandling of police inquiries to any officer\'s membership of secret societies.

    The Observer has learnt that the Northern Ireland Policing Board will endorse the Register of Interest at its next meeting in September.

    The move to force police officers to disclose membership of the Masons, Orange Order, Apprentice Boys of Derry, the Royal Black Institution, as well as secretive Catholic sects such as Opus Dei, is seen as a key component of Chris Patten\'s reforms into policing in the Province. The Patten Report led to the transformation of the Royal Ulster Constabulary into the PSNI.

    Assistant Chief Constable Sam Kincaid, who heads the PSNI\'s Values and Human Rights Group, is overseeing policing reforms. The group was set up to imbue \'human rights values\' in the service. All recruits have to swear an oath of allegiance declaring their commitment to upholding human rights.

    ...

    http://observer.guardian.co.uk/uk_news/story/0,6903,1006741,00.html
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    Ošklivá americká pravda - tábor Cropper Ostudný případ americké spravedlnosti

    24.7.2003/ Robert Fisk

    A máme tady příběh, za který bychom se měli stydět všichni. Týká se ostudného amerického vězeňského tábora Cropper v Iráku. Vůči vězňům tam používají fyzické násilí.

    Pojem \"zdroj\" v novinářské praxi může v současné době budit pochybnosti, ale v tomto případě je zdrojem člověk dokonale bezúhonný. A tento příběh je také o zastřelení tří vězňů v Bagdádu, dva byli na útěku. Ale především je to příběh o člověku jménem Qais Mohamed al-Salman. Qais Mohamed al-Salman je typ muže, jakého Bremer a jeho bezmocní asistenti právě teď velmi potřebují. Nenáviděl Saddama. Uprchl z Iráku v roce 1976, vrátil se po \"osvobození\" s diplomatkou doslova nabitou plány na pomoc své zemi, na znovuvybudování infrastruktury a čističek vody.

    Jako inženýr pracoval v Africe, Asii a Evropě. Má dánské občanství. Hovoří plynně anglicky. Dokonce má rád Ameriku. Alespoň měl do 6. června tohoto roku.

    Toho dne cestoval vozem. Na ulici Abu Nawas po něm bez varování začali Američané střílet. Říká, že si nikde nevšiml, že by přejel kontrolní stanoviště. Projektily zasáhly pneumatiky vozu. Řidič a další spolujezdec stačili uprchnout. Qais al-Salman vystoupil a trpělivě čekal. Měl u sebe dánský cestovní pas, dánský řidičský průkaz a zdravotní kartu - rovněž dánskou.

    Ale dejme mu slovo: \"Přiblížilo se civilní vozidlo. Uvnitř seděli američtí vojáci. Pak se objevilo více vojáků ve vojenských vozidlech. Řekl jsem jim, že nechápu, co se stalo. Že jsem vědecký výzkumník. Přinutili mne, abych si lehl na vozovku. Spoutali mi ruce za zády plastikovými pouty vyztuženými ocelí. Spoutali mi také nohy a strčili mne do jednoho z vozidel.\"

    Další část příběhu se týká naší vlastní novinářské profese. \"Po deseti minutách jízdy jsme zastavili. Byl jsem vytažen z vozu. Stáli tam novináři s kamerami. Američané mne rozvázali. Novináři spustili kamery. Vojáci mne před objektivy kamer přinutili lehnout si na cestu. Znovu mi spoutali ruce i nohy a strčili mě zpět do auta.\"

    Příběh Qaise al-Salmana by nebyl tak důležitý, nebýt toho, že bezpráví vůči obyčejným Iráčanům a týrání v amerických vězeňských táborech se stalo v těchto dnech normou.

    Organizace Amnesty International se včera objevila v Bagdádě. Mimo vyšetřování Saddamových monstrózních zločinů se rovněž pokoušela navštívit velký vězeňský tábor provozovaný Američany na bagdádském mezinárodním letišti. Američané tam internují asi 2000 vězňů. Drží je v rozpálených stanech s nedýchatelným vzduchem. Tábor se jmenuje Cropper.

    Už dvakrát se pokusili vězni odtamtud uprchnout. Ani nemusíme říkat, že oba pokusy byly neúspěšné. \"Zastřeleni na útěku,\" napsali vojáci v hlášení. Amnesty International se snažila o návštěvu tábora marně. A v tomto táboře skončil 6.června také Qais Al-Salman.

    Umístili ho do velkého stanu B. Spolu s ním tam bylo drženo 130 vězňů všech společenských tříd. \"Byli tam lidé velmi kulturní - doktoři, lidé z univerzit, ale byla tam také spodina společnosti: nejšpinavější lidé: zloději, kriminálnici a jim podobní. Takové jsem nikdy předtím neviděl. Chovali se jako zvěř,\" říká Qais Al-Salman.

    \"Následující ráno mne přivedli před amerického vyšetřovatele. Ukázal jsem mu dopis, ze kterého vyplývalo, že spolupracuji na projektech americké pomoci. Připíchl mi na košili štítek s nápisem podezřelý vrah.\"

    V táboře pravděpodobně nějací vrahové byli. Dobří, špatní a nejhorší byli drženi pohromadě: členové strany Baath, možná její vyšetřovatelé i mučitelé, drancující lůza a skoro každý, kdo se nějak připletl Američanům do cesty. V průběhu vyšetřování bili jen \"vybrané\" vězně. Znovu připomínám, že zdrojem těchto informací je bezúhonný člověk ze Západu.

    Bachaři neumožnili Al-Salmanovi se ani umýt. Když se ani po druhém výslechu před americkým vyšetřovatelem nic nezměnilo, začal Al-Salman hladovku.

    \"Po 33 dnech v táboře mě nějací vojáci naložili do auta a odvezli do Bagdádu. Na ulici Rashid mi vrátili dánský cestovní pas a všechny dokumenty a nechali mne jít. Než odjeli, řekli sorry. \"

    Qais al-Salman se vrátil domů ke své vyděšené matce, která už dávno věřila, že je její syn mrtev. Žádný Američan ji nekontaktoval, aby ji informoval o osudu jejího syna, a to ani tehdy, kdyř ona sama zoufale žádala americké orgány o pomoc. Nikdo z Američanů se rovněž nenamáhal informovat dánskou vládu, že drží ve vězení jednoho jejich občana. Přesně jako za Saddama: Člověk se prostě jednoho dne \"ztratí\" přímo z ulice Bagdádu.

    Článek The ugly truth of America\'s Camp Cropper, a story to shame us all byl uveřejněn 22.7. v Independent.

    http://www.zvedavec.org/zpravySQL.php?clanek_id=650
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    Dekonspirovaná nezávislost

    ...každodenní glosátor české společnosti Ivan Hoffman z ČRo 1 - Radiožurnálu svou \"závislou nezávislost\" na sebe prozradil sám. Stal se členem poradního orgánu Asociace public relations agentur. Práskla to ČTK, aniž o tom věděla....

    http://www.blisty.cz/txt.php?id=14861&iid=1345
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