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Martial law, labor, globalization and...
#3
Beware the Torchbearers of Oligarchy -
Over the last 18 months or so most everyone I know in North America has - in some way or another - been impacted by the sudden un/under-employment of a friend, colleague or loved one. Many of those affected had been working in tech-related, specialist or professional fields with abundant credentials under them, only to be laid-off during this period of wanton corporate belt-tightening. This is, of course, a classic process of redistribution and consolidation of wealth. Although it might seem differently, everyone isn't doing badly. The consolidation of banks, for example, is a wonderful thing - if you count yourself among the oligarchs. For them, less workers working more efficiently means a return to profit.

Meanwhile, as the official unemployment numbers edge past records set two generations ago, things look less rosy for the working class.
The U.S. unemployment rate jumped to a 26-year high of 9.7% in August as nonfarm payrolls fell by 216,000, the 20th consecutive monthly decline, the Labor Department estimated Friday.

U.S. payrolls have dropped by 6.9 million to a total of 131.2 million since the recession began in December 2007, the government data showed. Unemployment has increased by 7.4 million during the recession to stand at 14.9 million. - (Market Watch[IMG]file:///C:/DOCUME%7E1/Ed/LOCALS%7E1/Temp/msoclip1/02/clip_image001.gif[/IMG])

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, payrolls shrank in construction, manufacturing, finance and wholesale trade during August.

Here's some visual context:


http://img178.imageshack.us/img178/5281/12603000.jpg[/FONT]

With 131.2 million Americans semi-employed (officially, at least), that only leaves about 170 million to fuss over, so it shouldn't be much of a shock to hear that 10% of America is on food stamps. Many un/under-employed Americans are biding their time, waiting for a utopian hiring frenzy, but they're unlikely to find relief any time soon because most of the jobs being lost are due to "broken business models" and are probably gone for good. For post-secondary institutions, 2009-10 is shaping up to be the most competitive class intake ever as more people try to shore-up their economic stability with additional credentials. Sadly, unemployment rates for college/university graduates is the highest on record and student loan delinquencies are becoming endemic. Furthermore, frivolous lawsuits aside, a university degree is no ticket to economic stability and for most Americans household debt is a serious burden:


http://i.ixnp.com/images/v6.7/t.gif



“The American consumer is like that bad guy in a zombie movie; shoot him; stab him. He keeps coming forward. But in the case of the consumer, it's more like: depress his wage, make him unemployed, ruin his confidence make no job growth, lower his savings rate -- none of it matters, he or she just keeps on racking up those charges.” - Robert Brusca

Mr. Brusca, a Ph.D. economist, "has been a Division Chief at the NY Fed, a Fed-watcher at a major NY commercial bank and Chief Economist at major international securities firm", but presently he works as "an independent voice on the economy global trends and the political scene." Obviously, as a member of the Oligarch's Fan Club™ he's not very worried about his economic stability in the face of systemic collapse, and he's even got some advice for us commoners: 'Stop bitching!'

Economist Robert Brusca said the [unemployment] trend is favorable, adding that he couldn't understand the pessimism of so many observers. "I feel like a parent locked in a car with a little kid screaming " DADDY! ARE WE THERE YET?" - (Market Watch)


You see, like many other 'Gatekeepers of Sanity', Mr. Brusca contends that the Recovery is here, and unemployment is just a "lagging indicator" of economic health. However, during the lead-up to the federal government's bailout + "stimulus", he seemed less enthusiastic:
I don't think this really changes very much. We're not sure this plan is going to be accepted. If we assume it is accepted, it is some help for the banks but it doesn't help homeowners and it doesn't help consumers and it doesn't change the fact that the unemployment rate is rising and industrial production is falling. So it's nice to patch up the financial intermediaries, but that's not a full solution. - (Channel 2)

[/FONT] Clearly, sometime between then and now Mr. Brusca drank the Kool-Aid of Orthodoxy +3. Paralleling the tendencies of other wannabe plutocrats, he has more self-interest than good will for the 'unwashed public'. Although he publicly champions the working class, he has negligible authentic insight into its motivations and concerns. Many modern authority figures have learned to embody the patriarchal strategies of anti-labour industrialists, and one of the most insidious is the projection of a commonality of experience. This was on full-display when the illustrious Speaker of the House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, suggested that middle class American households earn around $350,000 per year, but it's also operating in the background in lots of other places, too. Politicians, patriarchs, industrialists and entrepreneurs are upheld by idols in the media culture who relentlessly bludgeon the public with subversive propaganda intended to leave You feeling powerless to effect meaningful change.

So, what are you going to do about it?

http://ankh-f-n-khonsu.livejournal.com/288861.html

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FM 3-19.15
CIVIL DISTURBANCE OPERATIONS
http://fas.org/irp/doddir/army/fm3-19-15.pdf

>>>>><<<<<[/FONT]

“… the U.S. military doctrine, preparations and training for suppressing civil disturbance, military rule, martial law, domestic urban warfare and "homeland defense."


U.S. MILITARY CIVIL DISTURBANCE PLANNING:
THE WAR AT HOME

By Frank Morales

“Back in 1959, Samuel P. Huntington, cited above in Dunlap, Summers and Ricks, authored “The Soldier and the State: The Theory and Politics of Civil-Military Relations” (Cambridge University Press). By 1975, Huntington was putting his talents to good use by authoring the final report of David Rockefellers' Trilateral Commission. Titled, “The Crisis of Democracy” (New York University Press, 1975), the report is a blue-print for counter-revolution. It supplies the ultimate logic for the existence of Garden Plot. It explains a military and police in training to pre-empt democracy and defend the rule of the rich.”

* Pay special attention to the asterisk at the very bottom of the document and then go check the recent news.

http://www.911truth.org/osamas/morales.html

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Sidebar:
What the fires don't get, the bankers will.

Banks are actually tearing down brand new houses in California because they can't sell them at any price and they can't afford to pay the taxes and expenses to maintain them.

Here's what it looks like on the ground:

http://www.brasschecktv.com/page/702.html

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Saturday, September 5, 2009

Capitalizing Security: "Non-Lethal" Weapons and the Market

When the U.S. military planned to deploy Raytheon's Active Denial System (ADS) in Iraq, it set off a political firestorm. How couldn't it?

Known for its "goodbye effect," the so-called "pain ray" is a "non-lethal" directed energy weapon that repels "rioters" and other disreputable citizens by heating the outer surface of the skin to 130 degrees F. in short, directed bursts. With a range of some 550 yards, the microwave beam can penetrate clothing and its effects have been described by test subjects as nothing less than "excruciating."

The prospect that American "liberators" would soon be zapping "unruly mobs," that is, Iraqi citizens objecting to the destruction of their country and the looting of their resource-rich nation by Western (corporate) invaders proved to be a public relations nightmare for the Pentagon.

The Defense Science Board concluded that an ADS deployment was "not politically tenable," because of a "possible association with torture" if the system were used at detention centers to ensure "compliance" from recalcitrant prisoners.

Last year I reported (see: '"Non-Lethal' Weapons: Where Science and Technology Service Repression," July 8, 2008), that the Pentagon's Joint Non-Lethal Weapons Directorate (JNLWD) claimed that ADS "is helping to fill the gap between the 'shout' and 'shoot' alternatives faced by our troops." But standing up ADS in the Iraqi "theatre" was not to be.


However, as readers of Antifascist Calling are well-aware, being an imperialist empire means never to have to say you're sorry. Time for Plan B!

[/FONT] Coming Soon to the Heimat

According to a blurb on Raytheon's web site, the commercial version of ADS known as Silent Guardian "is a revolutionary less-than-lethal directed energy application that employs millimeter wave technology to repel individuals or crowds without causing injury."

Touted as providing a "zone of protection that saves lives, protects assets and minimizes collateral damage" the system is marketed as the ideal tool to "establish intent and de-escalate aggression." Commercial and military application envisaged for the system "include law enforcement, checkpoint security, facility protection, force protection and peacekeeping missions." Some "peace," eh?!

Capitalizing on the profit-rich "homeland security" market, Wired reported that Raytheon has announced an "impending direct commercial sale" of a miniature version of ADS to law enforcement agencies.
This is Active Denial in a box, a 10,000-pound containerized system that can be mounted on a ship, a truck, or a fixed installation. It's got an effective range of about 250 meters. The beam has a power of around 30 kilowatts. (David Hambling, "'Pain Ray' First Commercial Sale Looms," Wired, August 5, 2009)

While Hambling may believe it "paradoxical" that "the controversial 'pain beam' may be more acceptable in the civilian market than in the military," I'd beg to differ.

[/FONT] Given the empire's utter contempt for its citizens (witness the despicable "debate" by various grifting congressional factions over what is ludicrously described as health care "reform"--a cynical display of bellying up to the corporatist bar if ever there were one!), why would any sane person not believe that heimat securocrats wouldn't zap union malcontents during a strike, environmental activists protesting outside a polluting company's headquarters or an unruly crowd of pensioners demanding their looted savings back from any number of dodgy banks grown fat on TARP funds?

"Tough luck, suckers! Have a 'taste' of Silent Guardian!"

No. 5 on Washington Technology's 2009 "Top 100 List," of Prime Federal Contractors, Raytheon carries a lot of clout with Congress and the Pentagon. With some $5,942,575,316 in revenue from its defense portfolio, the Waltham, Mass. firm's major customers include the Departments of Defense and Homeland Security.

Not that being a behemoth isn't without its pitfalls. According to the Project on Government Oversight's Federal Contractor Misconduct Database, Raytheon clocks in at No. 5 as a company with a history of "misconduct such as contract fraud and environmental, ethics, and labor violations."


[/FONT] With some some 17 instances of what POGO characterizes as serious breeches ranging from overcharges, contractor kickbacks, False Claims Act Violations, to violations of SEC Rules, groundwater contamination and racial discrimination, Raytheon has been tagged for some $475.8 million in what the government watchdog group calls it's "total misconduct dollar amount."

Not that any of this matters in Washington. According to the Center for Responsive Politic's OpenSecrets.org database, Raytheon's Political Action Committee bestowed some $2.4 million in campaign contributions on the best politicians money can buy, with some 55% of the total going to grifting Democrats. A perusal of the recipients of Raytheon largess during the last election cycle provides insight into how the well-greased wheels really spin.


"Liberal" or "conservative," "dove" or "hawk" it doesn't matter, just keep those contracts flowing! And when it comes to "homeland security" no expense will be spared!

According to Wired, while the firm believes that Silent Guardian "might have all sorts of applications in law enforcement, prisons and protecting installations," the firm told the publication that although the system "has attracted widespread interest ... it would be premature for us to discuss any sales until contracts are signed."

Although Raytheon isn't saying what the price tag for Silent Guardian will cost cash-strapped municipalities staggering under the hammer blows of the current capitalist economic meltdown, most analysts believe the system will cost several million dollars to purchase and maintain.


[/FONT] Not everyone is thrilled however, by the prospect of local SWAT teams zapping citizens with a microwave weapon. Neil Davison, a researcher at the University of Bradford's Non-Lethal Weapons Research Project in the UK, told Wired "as the costs and size drop, expect police forces to become more and more interested. This is where function creep will become a problem. With current controversies over the misuse of the Taser, the spread of new military weapons technologies to the civilian realm does not seem like a very sensible way to go."

But "go" it must and most assuredly will.

As I reported in June (see: "Look! Up in the Sky! It's a Bird... It's a Plane... It's a Raytheon Spy Blimp!"), the spread of military technology into the homeland security market isn't limited to non-lethal weapons.

The deployment of Raytheon's Rapid Aerostat Initial Deployment spy blimp known as RAID, is kitted-out with "electro-optic infrared, radar, flash and acoustic detectors."

Perfect for spying on antiwar demonstrators from a safe perch in the clouds, the firm's use of blimps "carrying high-tech sensors to detect threats" will "enable appropriate countermeasures" from law enforcement, according to a company press release. Some 300 RAID airships have already been deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan.

More "Venom" from Our Capitalist Masters[/FONT]

Should Raytheon's "pain beam" not do the trick, Combined Systems Inc. (CSI), a subsidiary of The Carlyle Group, may have just the right product for enterprising homeland security bureaucrats and their corporate partners.

The firm, acquired by Carlyle in 2005, is described in a blurb on Carlyle's web site as a manufacturer of "branded less-lethal munitions, anti-riot products and other related products that serve the military and law enforcement markets in the United States and abroad."

Wired reported in late August that "the Marine Corps has issued an urgent request for a powerful non-lethal weapon that can fire volleys of 40mm grenades. And in parallel, the service is launching a push for a more futuristic version of the same weapon."

One might also add, such a monstrous "non-lethal" system will inevitably have homeland security applications after a bit of tweaking is done to create a scaleable version useful to those who "protect and serve."

Dubbed the Venom Non-Lethal Tube Munition System (NL/TMS) by CSI, according to the firm Venom "is a modular launching system accepting three cassettes, each loaded with ten cartridges (V-30) or the scaled-down, lightweight and portable version accepting one cassette (V-10). Both versions can be integrated into a variety of fire control systems. Each cartridge is assigned an IP address allowing individual cartridge or desired sequence firing from a fire control panel, communicating via cable or wireless device."

[/FONT] Unsurprisingly, an assigned IP address can mean only one thing: that Venom is RFID-chipped for inventory control and, as part of the "internet of things" described by researchers Katherine Albrecht and Liz McIntyre in their essential book Spychips every commodity--from breakfast cereal to weapons--have their own web page. Convenient, isn't it! According to Wired,

Venom is essentially a modern version of the old multi-barreled cannon used to fight off boarders in naval actions, but in non-lethal form. It's designed for firing at crowds, and many of the munition options contain sub-projectiles to enhance the "shotgun" effect. These include a load of 24 .60 cal hard rubber stingballs, 160 smaller stingballs, foam batons, and "multi flash bang" projectiles. Venom can also fire CS gas projectiles, but these are strictly off-limits for military operations (unless you happen to work for Blackwater). It can also be used for smoke and marker rounds. (David Hambling, "Marines Seek Crowd-Blasting 'Venom' Launcher," Wired, August 24, 2009)

Which just goes to show as I've pointed out many times, "what happens in Vegas" certainly doesn't stay there! This bitter truth is all the more compelling when you consider the tens of billions of dollars at stake as the military market literally bleeds over into the homeland security bazaar; a marketing guru's wet dream that possesses unlimited horizons.

But let's understand one inescapable fact about life in the United States, a veritable open air asylum fronting as a democratic republic: we're so much disposable chaff to be tossed aside by our masters, marginalized when the need arises or violently repressed when all other means have failed.


http://antifascist-calling.blogspot.com/...ethal.html

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The way to make money
is to buy
when blood
is running in the streets.

John D. Rockefeller
>>>>><<<<<[/FONT]

This American system of ours,
call it Americanism, call it capitalism,
call it what you like,
gives each and every one of us
a great opportunity
if we only seize it with both hands
and make the most of it.

Al Capone
>>>>><<<<<[/FONT]

"The real menace of our republic is this invisible government which, like a giant octopus, sprawls its slimy length over city, state and nation. Like the octopus of real life, it operates under cover of a self created screen....At the head of this octopus are the Rockefeller Standard interests and a small group of powerful banking houses generally referred to as international bankers.

The little coterie of powerful international bankers virtually run the United States government for their own selfish purposes. They practically control both political parties."


New York City Mayor John F. Hylan, 1922


more to come ...
"Where is the intersection between the world's deep hunger and your deep gladness?"
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Messages In This Thread
Martial law, labor, globalization and... - by Ed Jewett - 10-09-2009, 08:44 AM

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