Saturday, January 15, 2011

WikiLeaks: Julian Assange files on Rupert Murdoch?

Julian Assange it is time for you to act meaning be active if you have said information release it. you need to reclaim your own ideals and lead this cyber war on injustice and lies. Stand up Jules remember your roots

Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, claimed today he was in possession of "insurance" files on Rupert Murdoch and his global media company, News Corporation.

Assange also claimed that WikiLeaks holds more than 500 confidential US diplomatic cables on one broadcasting organisation.

Speaking to journalist John Pilger for an interview to be published tomorrow in the latest edition of the New Statesman, Assange said: "There are 504 US embassy cables on one broadcasting organisation and there are cables on Murdoch and News Corp."

Assange refers to these specific cables as "insurance files" that will be released "if something happens to me or to WikiLeaks".
  • Source


  • Exclusive interview: Julian Assange on Murdoch, Manning and the threat from China
    The WikiLeaks founder talks to John Pilger.
  • Source
  • Thursday, January 13, 2011

    INSPIRING compilation of speeches

    The following video is an INSPIRING compilation of speeches and responses by Jack Kennedy, Martin Luther King and Texan Libertarian, Ron Paul. As always for your information

    Wednesday, January 12, 2011

    Kennedy points finger at Palin

    I have refrained from posting about the shooting in Tucson but the more I read the more I see the hate that is inside people incited by dropkick politicians. Open your eyes people please

    By: Brett Coughlin
    January 10, 2011 10:03 PM EST

    Patrick Kennedy, who lost two uncles to assassins’ bullets, says there’s an obvious connection between the violent rhetoric of today’s politics and the massacre in Tucson.

    “When Sarah Palin puts targets on people’s districts? Or you have 10,000 signs on the mall during the healthcare battle saying ‘Bury Obamacare with Kennedy’? When the vitriol and the rhetoric is so violent, we have to connect consequences to that.” said Kennedy, who left congress two weeks ago after serving eight terms representing Rhode Island.

    Saturday’s tragedy touches on both elements of Kennedy’s new mission in life — helping someone after they’ve been afflicted by a brain injury and ensuring universal access to mental health services, which might have prevented Jared Lee Loughner’s apparent paroxysm of madness.

    In lengthy interviews with POLITICO, Kennedy talked about both Giffords and Loughner.

    He called Giffords a “very compassionate person, with a generous spirit. She was always asking about me and how I was doing,” in the time just after his father’s death.

    After the final vote on health care reform, Kennedy volunteered his services to raise money for Giffords and other Democrats who had voted yes and were facing a tough reelection fight. Kennedy was able to raise about $65,000 for Giffords “virtually overnight,” he said. “She was happily surprised.”

    In Loughner, Kennedy sees an object lesson for the media and others. “When I hear terms about the alleged shooter in this case, perjorative terms like psycho, lunatic, or they say ‘He’s crazy.’ These are terms we use to describe someone’s mental health?” he asked, his voice booming over the telephone.

    “This is a rare opportunity to take all the stigma and stereotyping, and take the terms like crazy and psycho, that are being bandied about by reputable people who should know better, and use this as an opportunity to have some enlightened debate about better public policy that can help respond to the real need amongst many families whose family members are part of that very small subset of individuals who suffer from violent, paranoid schizophrenia.”

    (Loughner has not been diagnosed with schizophrenia; he faces federal charges in the deaths of six people and the wounding of 14.)

    Out of Congress for just two weeks, the former Rhode Island representative already has his new nonprofit The Next Frontier underway.

    Kennedy will present the first major research of the nonprofit on May 25, 2011, the 50th anniversary of John F. Kennedy’s famous speech about sending a man to the moon. He sees the new effort as trying to coordinate all the brain research that is being done by an army of scientists around the globe.

    “You have umpteen different groups all trying to do their own research: bipolar [disorder], Alzheimer’s, autism, Parkinson’s, epilepsy,” Kennedy said. “They file all these things as if they are individual disorders when they all have one organ in common, the brain. We know a fraction of 1 percent of what we need to know, unless we are working on the big picture about what’s common to all.”

    Kennedy says scientists have been inspired by the metaphor of everyone working together to achieve something that seemed impossible.

    “They call brain research the last medical frontier,” said Kennedy. “Instead of going to outer space, we’re going to inner space.”

    As in the 1960s when Sputnik spurred the United States to action, Kennedy says there is a national security interest at stake: “Our race to space is the suicide rate among soldiers and veterans. All that research — Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s — that’s all going to accrue to the soldiers’ benefit.”

    The totality of the effort taps into very personal issues for the 43-year-old, eight term congressman. His father succumbed to brain cancer, his aunt Rosemary was lobotomized. Kennedy himself has struggled with addiction and remains in recovery.

    A few weeks after his father – “Lion of the Senate” Edward Kennedy — died, Kennedy was sitting on a bench outside of the Cannon Office Building talking. Asked if he intended to take up the mantle and continue his father’s lifelong work in health care, Kennedy said “I don’t know.”

    Not long after that, Kennedy announced he would be retiring from Congress.

    Later in the year, as the Tea Party and anti “Obamacare” protests exploded all over the country, Kennedy saw a sign outside of the Congress. It said “Bury Obamacare With Kennedy.” He was later told that thousands had been handed out.

    The event lead Kennedy to say that he feared for the future, and pointed to his family’s well-known tragic story.

    “My family’s seen it up close too much with assassinations and violence in political life. It’s a terrible thing when people think that in order to get their point across they have to go to the edge of violent rhetoric and attack people personally,” Kennedy said during a speech before healthcare providers and union officials in downtown Providence in September 2009, according to the Providence Journal.

    “It’s fine for people to debate the issue and attack the issue, but when they go and stoop to the level of the vitriolic rhetoric that we’ve seen this debate turn up, it’s very, I think, dangerous to the fabric of our country,” he said at the time.

    “There are consequences to violent rhetoric,” he said. “Some people can see through TV ratings and right-wing talk show hosts that just try to create some theater, but unfortunately, there are some that can’t see through it. And that’s the danger in it. There is definitely freedom of speech, but freedom of speech does not allow yelling ‘fire’ in the middle of a crowded movie theater.”

    Kennedy remains optimistic about the future, however, and said he is courting some major corporations to help raise money for veterans returning home with traumatic brain injury.

    Last fall, in San Diego, Kennedy gave a speech before the National Foundation for Neuroscience, lamenting that there hasn’t been a “galvanizing moment” to spur the coordination of research of the brain.

    What happened in Tucson may now be the moment.

    “We’ve had a war on cancer, but never a war on Alzheimer’s. We’ve had a war on poverty, but never a war on Parkinson’s. As a result, progress has been painfully slow,” Kennedy told the researchers in San Diego. “To develop and gain approval for new treatment takes about 18 years, and the number of FDA approvals of new molecular entities has actually declined. Recently, pharmaceutical-company investment has declined with it. I suppose it’s possible to look at these facts and say, ‘The pace of discovery is uneven. That’s just the way it is.’

    “But I say it’s time – it’s long past time – to redouble our efforts. To refocus our work. To marshal the American spirit toward this great challenge,” he said. “So when people ask me, after more than two decades in politics, what’s next? I’m proud to tell them. This is next.”
  • Source

  • © 2011 Capitol News Company, LLC

    Monday, January 10, 2011

    WikiLeaks Twitter accounts subpoenaed by US

    Oh Boy this is an update from yesterday, the US seems oh you know
    update from the land of the blind, one-eyed hypocrites .....by John Richardson
    We are entering an age where the complicity of internet companies in censorship is becoming clear to many. We have allowed them to become too powerful and now they can act like this. By the way, so much for the Obama administration being any different to the Bushies over human rights, secrets and intimidation:

    WikiLeaks said on Saturday the Twitter accounts of four supporters have been subpoenaed in connection with an espionage investigation into the whistleblowing website led by a secret US grand jury.

    "Today, the existence of a secret US government grand jury espionage investigation into Wikileaks was confirmed for the first time as a subpoena was brought into the public domain," WikiLeaks said in a statement.

    WikiLeaks said legal action taken by micro-blogging website Twitter "revealed that the US State Department has requested the private messages, contact information, IP addresses, and personal details of Julian Assange and three other individuals associated with Wikileaks, in addition to Wikileaks? own account, which has 634,071 followers."

    It did not name the three other people, but Icelandic lawmaker Birgitta Jonsdottir tweeted overnight: "just got this: Twitter has received legal process requesting information regarding your Twitter account in (relation to wikileaks)".

    She later posted "usa government wants to know about all my tweets and more since november 1st 2009. do they realize I am a member of parliament in iceland?"

    In another message she said "just got the request via twitter from a court in the usa".

    WikiLeaks said it also had "reason to believe Facebook and Google, among other organisations, have received similar court orders, and calls on them to unseal any subpoenas they have received".

    "WikiLeaks is opposing the subpoena order and is currently taking action to instruct US lawyers," it said, urging Twitter to protect its users' private information.

    Here's the hypocrisy. If Iran demanded Twitter release direct messages of a user, the US government would be outraged. But of course double-standards are the name of the game here:

    A member of parliament in Iceland who is also a former WikiLeaks volunteer says the US justice department has ordered Twitter to hand over her private messages.

    Birgitta Jonsdottir, an MP for the Movement in Iceland, said last night on Twitter that the "USA government wants to know about all my tweets and more since november 1st 2009. Do they realize I am a member of parliament in Iceland?"

    She said she was starting a legal fight to stop the US getting hold of her messages, after being told by Twitter that a subpoena had been issued. She wrote: "department of justice are requesting twitter to provide the info - I got 10 days to stop it via legal process before twitter hands it over."

    She said the justice department was "just sending a message and of course they are asking for a lot more than just my tweets."

    Jonsdottir said she was demanding a meeting with the US ambassador to Iceland. "The justice department has gone completely over the top." She added that the US authorities had requested personal information from Twitter as well as her private messages and that she was now assessing her legal position.

    "It's not just about my information. It's a warning for anyone who had anything to do with WikiLeaks. It is completely unacceptable for the US justice department to flex its muscles like this. I am lucky, I'm a representative in parliament. But what of other people? It's my duty to do whatever I can to stop this abuse."

    Twitter would not comment on the case. In a statement, the company said: "We're not going to comment on specific requests, but, to help users protect their rights, it's our policy to notify users about law enforcement and governmental requests for their information, unless we are prevented by law from doing so."

    Most of Twitter's messages are public, but users can also send private messages on the service.

    Marc Rotenberg, president of the online watchdog the Electronic Privacy Information Centre (EPIC) in Washington, said it appeared the US justice department was looking at building a case against WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange, over its publication of secret US documents.

    Of course, Washington doesn't care much a bout certain leaks .....

    So I presume Donald Rumsfeld will be prosecuted for releasing classified documents

    Details of Donald Rumsfeld's forthcoming book tour are out, as the former defense secretary plans to sit for a series of interviews with ABC News in early February, the network announced Thursday.

    Rumsfeld - who served as defense secretary in two administrations - will make his first TV appearance since his November 2006 resignation on "World News with Diane Sawyer" on Feb. 7. "Good Morning America" anchor George Stephanopoulos will conduct a live chat with him Feb. 8, ABC said.

    Rumsfeld's book, " Known and Unknown," is set for release the same week. It is set to draw upon hundreds of never-before-seen government documents, guaranteeing that the 832-page tome will make news. He reportedly bypassed traditional FOIA channels to secure access to many of the documents.

    lessons in diplomacy .....

    The American ambassador to Reykjavik has been summoned to explain why U.S. investigators are trying to access the private details of an Icelandic lawmaker's online activity as they try to build a criminal case against WikiLeaks.

    Revelations that the U.S. Justice Department obtained a court order to examine data held by Twitter Inc. on Birgitta Jonsdottir, an Icelandic parliamentarian who sits on the country's Foreign Affairs Committee, immediately caused consternation in the tiny North Atlantic nation.

    "(It is) very serious that a foreign state, the United States, demands such personal information of an Icelandic person, an elected official," Interior Minister Ogmundur Jonasson told Icelandic broadcaster RUV.

    "This is even more serious when put (in) perspective and concerns freedom of speech and people's freedom in general," he added.

    Jonsdottir is a one-time WikiLeaks collaborator also known for her work on Iceland's media initiative, which aims to turn the island nation into a free speech haven.

    Jonsdottir told The Associated Press she was too overwhelmed to comment Sunday, but in a recent post to Twitter, she said she was talking with American lawyers about how to beat the order - and was drumming up support in Iceland as well.

    Iceland summons US envoy over WikiLeaks probe
  • Source with external links
  • Sunday, January 09, 2011

    WikiLeaks US gov subpoenaed Twitter

    Opps looks like we are all in trouble, did you twitter? I did :-)

    US wants Twitter details of Wikileaks activists.
    The US government has subpoenaed the social networking site Twitter for personal details of people connected to Wikileaks, court documents show.
    The US District Court in Virginia said it wanted information including user names, addresses, connection records, telephone numbers and payment details.

    Those named include Wikileaks founder Julian Assange and an Icelandic MP.

    The US is examining possible charges against Mr Assange over the leaking of 250,000 classified diplomatic cables.

    Reports indicate the Department of Justice may seek to indict him on charges of conspiring to steal documents with Private First Class Bradley Manning, a US Army intelligence analyst.

    Mr Manning is facing a court martial and up to 52 years in prison for allegedly sending Wikileaks the diplomatic cables, as well military logs about incidents in Afghanistan and Iraq and a classified military video.
    'Given a message'
    According to the court order issued on 14 December by the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, the US Attorney's Office has provided evidence to show that the information held by Twitter is "relevant and material to an ongoing criminal investigation".

    As the Wikileaks saga has unfolded, Twitter has been one of the main forums where supporters and opponents of the whistle-blowing site have debated the issues. Now the social network has been dragged into the affair, as the US authorities pursue a case against Wikileaks.

    This leaves Twitter executives in a very difficult position. Like all social networks, they have been keen to stress that they comply with local laws, especially when it comes to tracking down criminals. But they have also been eager to promote Twitter's role as a forum for free expression in countries like Iran.

    If confidential details of overseas Twitter users are disclosed to the US authorities, how keen will an international audience be to trust this or other American social networks in future?

    The San Francisco-based website was given three days to respond was also told not to disclose that it had been served the subpoena, or the existence of the investigation.

    However, the same court removed those restrictions on Wednesday and authorised Twitter to disclose the order to its customers.

    The subpoena requested the details of Mr Assange, Pfc Manning and Icelandic MP Birgitta Jonsdottir, as well as Dutch hacker Rop Gonggrijp and US programmer Jacob Appelbaum, both of whom have previously worked with Wikileaks.

    The information sought includes mailing addresses and billing information, connection records and session times, IP addresses used to access Twitter, email accounts, as well as the "means and source of payment".

    Mr Assange condemned the court order on Saturday, saying it amounted to harassment.

    "If the Iranian government was to attempt to coercively obtain this information from journalists and activists of foreign nations, human rights groups around the world would speak out," he said in a statement.

    The order was unsealed "thanks to legal action by Twitter", he added.
    “Start Quote
    Twitter may have to disclose information which its originators and its members probably thought was strictly confidential? Doesn't this go to prove how gullible people can be when using social networks?”

    End Quote Alfred Penderel Bright

    And Mr Assange's lawyer, Mark Stephens, said the US government was attempting to intimidate people.

    "It's a great disappointment that the department of justice has stopped playing lawyers and started playing politics," he told BBC News.

    Twitter has declined to comment on the claim, saying only: "To help users protect their rights, it's our policy to notify users about law enforcement and governmental requests for their information, unless we are prevented by law from doing so."

    Ms Jonsdottir, who until recently was a vocal supporter of Wikileaks, revealed on Friday that the department of justice had asked Twitter for her personal details and all of her tweets since November 2009.

    She said she had 10 days to appeal against the subpoena.

    Ms Jonsdottir wrote on her Twitter feed: "USA government wants to know about all my tweets and more since 1 November 2009. Do they realise I am a member of parliament in Iceland?"

    She said that she would call Iceland's justice minister to discuss the request.

    "I think I am being given a message, almost like someone breathing in a phone," she said.

    Ms Jonsdottir was the chief sponsor of the Icelandic Modern Media Initiative (IMMI) law, which made Iceland an international haven for investigative journalism and free speech.

    She has said she helped to produce a video for Wikileaks showing a US Apache helicopter shooting civilians in Iraq in 2007.
    Birgitta Jonsdottir Birgitta Jonsdottir says she helped produce a controversial Wikileaks video

    The classified video, released by Wikileaks last April, brought the whistle-blowing website to the world's attention.

    The website's founder, Julian Assange, is currently fighting extradition from the UK to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning as part of an inquiry into alleged sex offences.

    Ms Jonsdottir reportedly left Wikileaks late last year after she argued unsuccessfully that Mr Assange should take a low-profile role until his legal troubles were resolved.
  • Source
  • Saturday, January 08, 2011

    Portugal is making a private placement of bonds, buyer China?

    Raising of the dragon head again?
    Portugal Goes 144A, Is Goldman Underwriter? By Tyler Durden

    Reuters reports that Portugal is in the process of making a private placement of bonds, without announcing details on size or the buyer. Our guess: buyer is China, and size is about €1 billion (recall that recently China told Spain it would buy about €6 billion [1]from the three PIIGieS each). We will keep you updated, but this is a revolutionary change in the way bonds are sold to investors as it bypasses the traditional dutch approach entirely. As such, we would not be at all surprised if Goldman is the underwriter. After all this is basically a 144A transaction (although unlike in facebook there is no need for an SPV), and since there is no noise associated with a public offering, the buyer and seller can both pretend things are great until everything collapses in the inevitable post house of cards rubble.

  • Source


  • Rule 144A A Securities & Exchange Commission rule modifying a two-year holding period requirement on privately placed securities to permit.

    UNDERSTANDING WIKILEAKS

    Dr Joseph Fitsanakis
    (Department of History and Political Science, King College, USA and Senior Editor at intelNews.org.)

    Copyright: www.rieas.gr

    Note: Dr. Joseph Fitsanakis has written this original article specifically for RIEAS.

    The WikiLeaks cablegate revelations appear to be subsiding in the new year, and so is the public debate about their meaning and consequences.
    And yet, as calmer moods prevail, now is the appropriate time to probe the WikiLeaks phenomenon. To do so constructively, it is necessary to move beyond a mere political assessment of WikiLeaks. The question of whether the website, its founder, and its hundreds of volunteers, are criminals, heroes, terrorists, or dissidents, cannot even begin to be answered until WikiLeaks is understood, first and foremost. By ‘understood’, I don’t mean empathize. I mean comprehending WikiLeaks as an ideological paradigm, a technological vehicle reflective of the personal philosophies of its members, but also representative of a much wider sociotechnical trend.

    According to its mission statement, WikiLeaks was founded in 2006 as a whistleblower clearing house with a “primary interest in exposing oppressive regimes”, by publishing documents of “of political, diplomatic, historical or ethical interest [that are] not already publicly available” elsewhere. By 2007, it had already received a million documents of various classifications, from sources located in over a dozen countries. What enabled WikiLeaks from the very start to stand out from other similar online ventures has been its sophisticated communication formula that protects the identity of sources.

    It would be futile to attempt to paint with a single ideological brushstroke the complex and loose network of political advocates, computer hackers, mathematicians and technologists that is WikiLeaks. The WikiLeaks community is undoubtedly an amalgamation of the varied —often competing— philosophical viewpoints of its members. But it would be reasonable to suggest that the broader operational principles of the website fit within the conceptual framework of crypto-anarchism. Crypto-anarchists espouse the use of strong encryption to enhance individual privacy, while at the same time opposing its use by state and corporate entities, which they consider inherently oppressive and conspiratorial.

    The personal philosophy of Julian Assange, the self-proclaimed “heart and soul” of WikiLeaks, is characteristic of crypto-anarchism, but with a strong focus on activist realism, rather than the theoretical idealism that typifies many crypto-anarchist doctrines. Having studied physics and mathematics, as well as cognitive neuroscience and philosophy at the university level, Assange’s activist beliefs combine both technical and political concepts. His main concern is with the notion of conspiracy, which he uses in a strict technical sense. He views conspiracies as closed systems of decision-making and executive action that operate in isolation from outside input, thus negating the structural interconnectedness that ensures political transparency. According to this quasi-cybernetic institutional analysis, state and corporate structures have a natural propensity to authoritarianism, which they largely achieve by employing conspiratorial modes of political deliberation. The mission of WikiLeaks, therefore, is to dismantle the inherent conspiratorial nature of political decision-making, by undermining the secretive character of what are seen as authoritarian institutions. According to Assange’s weltanschauung, this can be achieved through the systematic disclosure of classified data, which has the tendency to introduce a mathematical sense of justice to a previously isolated system of controlled information.

    There is nothing particularly novel in this view of information control. Assange’s thinking rests on conceptual themes that date back to the ancient Greeks. What makes the difference in the case of WikiLeaks is that there are growing numbers of individuals within state structures who are willing to supply the whistleblower website with sensitive information. Moreover, the mode of information control exercised by these state structures is too antiquated and too bungled to seriously prevent such unauthorized disclosures. This certainly applies to the US Department of Defense, one of America’s most mismanaged government agencies, which suffered the largest document leak in its history when WikiLeaks released the Iraq and Afghanistan War documents, in the second half 2010. It has since emerged that close to three million (!) US government employees had routine access to the leaked documents, and that audit logs to monitor access to these documents were nonexistent.

    Another important element that renders WikiLeaks so powerful is the medium of information sharing, namely digitization. The onset of the digital environment has revolutionized the speed, efficiency and convenience with which information —both open and restricted— can be accessed, replicated, and shared. As information security expert Bruce Schneier stated in December, the United States “government is learning what the music and movie industries were forced to learn years ago: it's easy to copy and distribute digital files”. Therefore, “just as the music and movie industries are going to have to change their business models for the Internet era, governments are going to have to change their secrecy models”. Essentially, these new models of information control will have to be built around a new reality, in which secrecy can be undermined by small networks of decentralized, transnational actors commanding limited technical resources.

    In light of the above, it is important to understand WikiLeaks, not as an individual venture, but as part of a new reality. In this new reality, the figure of Julian Assange is primarily symbolic, rather than instrumental. No matter his fate, whether he is extradited to the United States, imprisoned, or even assassinated, as several pundits in Washington have proposed, it will not affect the wider trend that WikiLeaks represents. Nor will it impact the continual distribution of the leaked information that is in the hands of WikiLeaks volunteers. The information will continue to be shared even if WikiLeaks is completely wiped out, mostly through the dozens of mirror sites around the Internet, copycat websites, or even the hundreds of BitTorrents circulating online, which contain the entire WikiLeaks document archive.

    Julian Assange or WikiLeaks are therefore not the issue here. The issue is the wider destabilization of traditional modes of information control, of which both Assange and WikiLeaks are part. Therefore, as state officials the world over deal with the aftermath of cablegate, the relevant debate should steer away from individuals or websites, and focus instead on the broad picture: there is too much classified information being shared in a digitized format with too many individuals, at a time when digital data is becoming progressively easier to replicate and share.
  • Source
  • Friday, January 07, 2011

    Iran’s Oily Revenge on US

    I totally agree with the closing sentence - hum!
    Iran’s Oily Revenge on US Drivers, US Troops - Posted on 01/06/2011 by Juan

    They’re baaaack. The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) is being chaired by Iran at the moment. And Iran thinks the run-up of the price of crude to over $90 a barrel is just dandy and requires no new OPEC meetings or adjustment of production quotas among members.

    Meanwhile, the US is back to using 20 million barrels a day of petroleum, an increase of 4.4 percent over last year this time. The US, the superhog of gas hogs, uses nearly a fourth the world’s daily petroleum production despite having only a twentieth of the world’s population. Increased US demand, along with rapidly growing demand in Asia, helps account for the relatively high petroleum prices. Some analysts think you could see another big run-up in oil prices in 2011 reminiscent of 2008, with gasoline prices going to $4 a gallon by this summer and then ultimately going on up to $5 a gallon.

    Depending on how high demand is in Asia, the higher prices could be offset a bit if Saudi Arabia decided to pump, say, an extra million barrels a day for a while. They are among the few producers with that sort of excess capacity. That development seems unlikely, however, until at least the summer. Iraq hopes to add production capacity, but it may be years before it is enough to affect prices in the face of spiking demand. (1.2 billion Indians are thinking seriously about driving automobiles instead of riding their bikes).

    Since US sanctions on Iran exempt petroleum sales, Iran’s government is positioned to reap a windfall from the price run-up, perhaps offsetting some of the pain inflicted by restrictions on Iranian banks. President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad must enjoy sticking the West with this winter’s high prices, as a little revenge for the sanctions.

    Another petty act of revenge has to do with his blockage of petroleum trucks from entering into Afghanistan. Afghanistan warns that a crisis is brewing as a result of the virtual blockade. Fuel trucks from Afghanistan have been targeted by the Taliban, so Iran was the other major import route. Iran seems to suspect that some of the petroleum imports into Afghanistan go to US military vehicles, and this is possibly Tehran’s way of repaying the US for its economic sanctions.

    So, to sum up, Iran won’t let OPEC meet to revise production quotas upward. That refusal leads to high gasoline prices for the American consumer this winter and possibly longer. The extra billions in petroleum profits will lard the Iranian government’s coffers, insulating the regime from the worst effects of US and UN sanctions. And, Iran is in a position to bring the pain to Afghanistan, US troops, and NATO by blocking fuel exports across its borders.
    Yeah, we’ve got them right where they want us.
  • Source
  • When Will Gold and Silver Go Down?

    Will the bubble burst?
    By James West
    MidasLetter.com
    January 6, 2010

    Gold and silver are in a bubble, if the bulk of economists and financial pundits are to be believed. With no dictionary definition of what exactly a financial bubble is, we are left to our own devices to interpret the significance of such a proclamation according to our own experiences.

    Lets say we consider a bubble the phenomenon whereby the prices paid for a given commodity, be it homes, coffee, copper, rubies or tulips, rises rapidly relative to an average market history timeline as a result of sudden and irrational investor demand, and then shortly thereafter sees a price collapse to a point lower than when the bubble started.

    Consistent with all commodities that can have been categorized as recipients of bubble phases over the last 200 years is that at that onset of the bubble formation phase, the utile value of the commodity in question becomes the subject of elevated speculation in anticipation of an increase in demand as a result of a predicted rise in utile consumption.

    In the bubble phase price curve, the steepness in the growth phase is exacerbated when the predicted increase in utile demand materializes, or is exceeded, which in turn fuels speculative demand for the commodity and its derivatives (ETFs, Futures, Options, etc).

    Without exception, when speculation combined with enhanced utile demand take prices for the commodity to such high levels that they start to negatively impact utile demand (as replacements are sought and/or fresh momentum forms in supply to capture the advantage of elevated prices and margins), the demand curve weakens, which generally triggers a massive bolt for the exits of the specs who are most on top of that data, which in turn starts a chain reaction whereby successively more distant speculators from the negative data source panic and sell as the price drop accelerates, precipitating the proverbial popping of the bubble.

    That, in essence, is the bubble life cycle as it applies to commodities.

    Bubbles were once more or less the result of natural market forces, the cyclical essence of markets driven by supply and demand. With the advent of Massive Capital Concentrations (multi-billion dollar investment funds, mutual funds, hedge funds, sovereign wealth funds, private wealth trusts etc), the effect on commodity prices from these speculative positions far exceeds, in many cases the potential effect from fluctuations in utile demand.

    Now banks, and their very close and incestuous relative, hedge funds, are generally in a position to occupy two distinct advantage points over Joe Blow investor on the street. A), they have greater access to capital, and B) they have superior access to data. In speculation, information is everything.

    Up until the age of computers and internet, which changed data and information transfer, as well as data and information analysis and strategy extraction, from long timeline processes to near instant timeline processes, MCC’s used their large capital positions to clumsily influence bubbles great and small by distributing data selectively and manipulating market volumes and price movements sloppily.

    Now in the era of instant data flow and algorithmic decision processing, not only can MCC’s encourage bubbles with surgical precision, they can very deftly manage the curves associated with the bubble phases. Profit is maximized when you can buy your entire position at the low, and then sell all or as much as possible at the high. Then, if you are in a position to control markets, you go massively short at the high, knowing that your influence and your capital resources will both drive the bubble pop phase into a nosedive, but you will be able to suck up all the shares all the way down, or at least half way down, covering your short when all the Joe Blow suckers sell you all their stock in utter desolation, not understanding that they’ve been played like a tiny little fiddle.

    The two commodities on the planet that are the exception to qualification for this scheme now, is gold and silver. And that’s because they have an intrinsic monetary value that all other commodities lack.

    A thing can only be said to have monetary value if it is universally (globally), or nearly universally, accepted as a medium of exchange for goods and services. There are very few people on the earth who would not take gold or silver as payment for a service or good they were interested in selling. But only very specialized traders will take a barrel of oil off your hands or a skid of copper cathodes or a house or equities as a form of immediate payment for anything they might want to sell. This is the primary fallacy in the mainstream financial media’s categorization of gold and silver as mere commodities. They are not. They are disqualified from that definition because of their intrinsic monetary value.

    And it is precisely that monetary value that prevents MCC’s from participating any longer in the precious metals markets. The transactional volume in the physical gold and silver markets is puny. ETF’s generally preclude manipulation because they need to take delivery of the physical gold and silver, unless they are ETF’s based on derivatives, which are intrinsically worthless and most likely to collapse if they incorporate any kind of short/hedge strategy.

    The prices of both gold and silver have long been subject to price manipulation for various reasons.

    Most recently, silver has been the target of ebb and flow bubble manipulation schemes that have more or less been caught red-handed by serious market analysts who scream and shout from their hilltop epicenter embodied in the Gold Anti-trust Action Committee. Gata has been stridently screaming to anyone who would listen (which was mostly no one for the last decade) since 2000 that gold was being methodically price suppressed to impart the perception to the market by the largest criminal enterprise on earth, the U.S. Federal Reserve and the United States Treasury, that the U.S. dollar was a well managed and healthy currency.

    As we now almost universally know, that is not the case.

    One must be diligent not to buy the pure propaganda that emanates from the top universities on down to the Wall Street Journal that the Fed is an independent private enterprise. It is only private and independent in that it is not subject to the oversight and laws governing Federal Financial Institutions. Its influence, abuse, and fraudulent manipulation of markets and global economic public perception while using the public coffers of the United States citizenry makes these two institutions unequivocally a single criminal enterprise operating as public institutions.

    The now famous manipulation of silver prices in an effort to “corner the market” by the Hunt Brothers in the 80’s, and JP Morgan’s incrementally growing infamy as perpetrators of the latest fraudulent silver market manipulation, share as their motive only profit.

    Gold, on the other hand, whose motive for participation in a scheme perpetrated by the Fed, the U.S. Treasury, certain banks, and possible a certain major gold producer, were in the past initiated for profit, and I suspect that the value of the enterprise in orchestrating confidence in the U.S. dollar throughout the past decade was initially a serendipitous discovery that was promptly deployed as a weapon.

    In any case, the CFTC’s increasing metamorphosis into a serious regulator from a puppet facilitator of such schemes has resulted in JP Morgan exiting the scheme largely as credible class action lawsuits from fleeced investors are empowered by the CFTC’s own statements and findings. The outcome of that is decreasing macro and micro volatility (week to week) in both markets, and increasingly steady incremental price increases – especially in the macro view of the last decade). The ability to influence supply remains fixed at substantially less than 5% per year, thanks to the unavoidable difficulty in sourcing and extracting new supply. Therefore, the possible market, and potential bubble, cannot reach a sufficient size in terms of volume to accommodate the requirements of MCC’s. They need massive volume of the physical commodity, and more importantly, an exponentially larger derivative market, that they can control and influence by virtue of the fact that they own the clearing houses and up until recently, the regulators who helped these markets stay ‘dark” or non-reporting.

    The one downside as far as MCC’s are concerned with the new instant world is that with comes increased transparency, whether they want it or not. The bigger an organization becomes, the more it must cannibalize itself to continuously evolve efficiently. People get fired, bumped, overlooked for promotion, shut out of deals, not invited to parties – all these things have the effect of originating new competing MCC’s as resentment causes former members of MCCs to take their contacts with them and form new MCC’s. The seeds of destruction of MCC’s are thereby built into them in the form of egos. The one time the ruthless efficieny required from within MCC’s gets trumped is when somebody’s ego gets bruised. Thus Wikileaks. Thus Black Swans. Thus Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers.

    Wending our way back to the gold and silver issue, the underlying commodity markets for gold and silver are limited, and now, thanks to the whole idea of position limits and transparency and reporting for derivatives markets, the size of any given derivative market must needs be directly proportional to the possible size of the underlying commodities market.

    Gold and silver exempt themselves from that manipulation because of their monetary aspect. They are complicated by their dual function designations. They are each money, and an industrial ingredient that is consumed. Because they are in growing demand as monetary stores of value as a direct result in the appropriately crumbling confidence in the U.S. dollar, the pound sterling, the Euro, the yuan, and the yen, which collectively constitute the 5 major currencies of global trade, they are sought increasingly (and somewhat ironically) by MCC’s whose primary mandate is value preservation (Sovereign wealth, private wealth) as opposed to more speculative MCC’s (private equity buyout funds, hedge funds, investment funds) whose continued existence depends more on their ability to generate profit in some risk/reward ratio configuration that attracts their investors.

    What is happening then, is gold and silver have left behind the human evolution point where they could be easily manipulated, and are increasingly resuming their primary roles as the primary medium of exchange for global trade. MCC’s are holding gold, silver and their derivatives, bought only as cash equivalents because they are now the lowest risk currencies to hold out of all the global currencies. ETFs are, in essentially, a return to the original form of banking, whereby a certificate was issued to the bearer on whose behalf the bank was storing a quantity of gold equal to that stipulated on the certificate.

    Gold and silver are re-asserting themselves, in fact, as the only real money,(in terms of the definition of a globally accepted medium of trade) whose supply cannot be arbitrarily influenced by any single government, MCC, or special interest group. The more this awareness permeates the global general consciousness, the more that awareness will drive demand. Fringe pundits are absolutely right when they predict an exponential explosion in the prices for gold and silver. Never mind $2,000 an ounce, or $5,000 an ounce. I’m increasingly convinced that $30,000 to $50,000 per ounce for gold will be seen in this lifetime, especially as fiat currencies based on nothing are abandoned for mediums that more directly represent a real monetary asset, like gold and silver bullion.
  • Source
  • Thursday, January 06, 2011

    Colloidal Silver

    Time to pass on my good health tip - yep "cs" I have used this for years and highly recommend its use for many different ailments as well as just plain old good health
    Colloidal silver appears to be a powerful, natural antibiotic and preventative against infections.
    The presence of colloidal silver near a virus, fungus, bacterium or any other single celled pathogen disables its oxygen metabolism enzyme, its chemical lung, so to say. Within a few minutes, the pathogen suffocates and dies, and is cleared out of the body by the immune, lymphatic and elimination systems. Unlike pharmaceutical antibiotics, which destroy beneficial enzymes, colloidal silver leaves these tissue-cell enzymes intact, as they are radically different from the enzymes of primitive single-celled life. Thus colloidal silver is absolutely safe for humans, reptiles, plants and all multi-celled living matter.
  • Much More Here
  • World Bank issues first yuan-denominated bond

    Slowly and finally this is starting, the dragon is raising its head
    5 Jan, 2011 1242hrs IST AFP

    BEIJING: The World Bank has issued its first yuan-denominated bond in a move that will help China as it tries to increase the use of its currency in global markets.
    The Washington-based lender said Tuesday it would raise 500 million yuan (76 million dollars) from the two-year bond issue on Hong Kong's yuan-denominated bond market.
    The move will "further deepen the market and permit investors to diversify their currency holdings and expand renminbi exposure", the World Bank said in a statement, using the official name for the Chinese unit.
    Last month, China said its second yuan-denominated bond issue in Hong Kong had initially raised five billion yuan, with plans for another three billion yuan to be sold.
    The move followed Beijing's first yuan-denominated bond issue in Hong Kong in September last year, worth about six billion yuan.
    It also comes after heavy equipment maker Caterpillar and fast-food giant McDonald's each issued yuan-denominated bonds in Hong Kong, the first such sales by non-financial foreign firms in the city.
    The semi-autonomous Chinese territory is acting as a test bed for the internationalisation of China's currency.
    Beijing is seeking to broaden the use of the yuan in the financial hub after approving its use to settle cross-border trade in 2009.
    Despite the global success of Chinese exporters, the yuan plays only a minor international role because it cannot be freely exchanged for other currencies. And official controls make it difficult to move the yuan in and out of China.
    Top leaders in Beijing want to see the yuan adopted as a global reserve currency to reflect China's growing economic and political clout.
    Allowing the yuan to be used more widely overseas also helps China reduce the amount of dollars flowing into the country, which is adding to its already world-beating foreign exchange stockpile and fanning inflation.
  • Source
  • US Justice On Trial

    By Yvonne Ridley
    "Information Clearing House" --America’s international standing as a fair and just country does not match its superpower status as the world's greatest democracy.
    When it comes to basic human rights it is there in the gutter alongside some of the world's most toxic, tinpot dictatorships and authoritarian regimes.
    So there's little surprise that Wikileaks founder Julian Assange fears being extradited to The States where some politicians and Pentagon officials have already called for his execution and Attorney General Eric Holder admits his government may invoke the US Espionage Act.
    But it's not just the persecution and the prosecution Assange should fear, either - the wheels of justice can be agonisingly slow in a process which could take years. And in the case of the Guantanamo detainees there is no end in sight - the majority of them have not been charged but simply forgotten.
    Having stepped inside US prisons – both military and civilian – I can tell you there is nothing civilised about the penal institutions in the United States.
    Four days of filming inside Guantanamo and half a day at one of California’s largest young offenders prisons provided me with enough material to reach this conclusion, bearing in mind as a journalist I was just shown “the good bits”!
    Having also viewed CCTV footage of detainees in US institutions being strip and cavity searched was equally traumatic and for those who showed the slightest resistance a procedure would follow which in my view is tantamount to gang rape.
    Frankly, I was appalled by what I saw inside American jails and the interviews and research which followed did not make easy reading.
    I wondered how the US could really describe itself as a civilised, mature democracy.
    And if you doubt my judgment here are a few statistics to play with in a prison system where 70 per cent of the inmates are non-whites.
    * The US has a higher percentage of its citizenry in prison than any other country in history.
    * 25 percent of the world’s prison population - around 2.3 million – are caged in America.
    * More than a quarter of US inmates are black males between the ages of 20 and 39 and over the course of a lifetime, 28 percent of all black American men will have spent some time behind bars in what can only be described as a racist-driven judicial system.
    As 2011 dawns the British Prime Minister David Cameron is faced with some hard choices this year, none more difficult than probably deciding whether or not to scrap our extradition treaty with the US and refuse to hand over a group of British citizens to Barak Obama’s America.
    And make no mistake, if he wanted to, he could tell the Obama Administration to “get stuffed”. His coalition government is stronger than the previous Labour governments … under both Tony Blair and Gordon Brown human rights, civil liberties and freedoms were diminished both at home and abroad.
    It was Blair’s government that introduced the one-sided 2003 Extradition Treaty to please and appease the Bush Administration. Legislation drawn up in panic and haste is never a good idea nor was it wise to allow America to extend its jurisdiction in to the UK for that is exactly what has happened. And I wonder if the legislation was really drawn up by UK lawyers since a close inspection of the original documents reveal the liberal use of American English.
    I would urge Cameron to resist all of the existing US Extradition requests just as he would if the same demands were being made by some Banana Republic.
    This has nothing to do with innocence or guilt, by the way, but everything to do with the just treatment of human beings – justice should be meted out equally, without fear or favour but in America the accused are often judged by the colour of their skin, religion and class.
    The evidence is there for all to see – America’s human rights record is appalling, the prison system is a disgrace and the way it treats its own convicted citizens, let alone foreigners, is primitive.
    Gareth Peirce, an internationally acclaimed and respected solicitor based in London explains in her book Dispatches from the Dark Side: “Guilty pleas resolve 97% of US trials, an extraordinary statistic inevitably achieved by the defendant's apprehension of what lies ahead - not just for the 'worst of the worst' - and a desire to avoid, at any cost, the US law's most extreme application.”
    A number of her clients including Syed Talha Ahsan, Babar Ahmad, Adel Abdel Bary and Khalid al-Fawwaz have been held in British prisons for a record amount of years fighting extradition to the US.
    All of these men protest their innocence and would welcome their day in court – a British court. However the evidence against them is either so flimsy or non existent that police in the UK have no intention of wasting public money on trials which will end up being laughed out of court.
    Which takes us back to the 2003 US Extradition agreement in which the Blair government tied the hands of the UK judiciary beyond sound judgment. Now any slight allegation made by the US should be regarded in British courts as solid proof.
    By the way it’s not a two-way system. Should the UK ever wish to extradite a US citizen the evidence supplied must be well documented, concrete and factual and able to withstand the scrutiny of a US judge.
    Britain’s legal system became the basis for most others in the world. It is based on presumed innocence and a trial by a jury of one’s peers which emanates from our rights as set out in the Magna Carta of 1215, a noble document which has stood the test of time.
    The 2003 extradition treaty is a complete betrayal of those basic rights. A victim of the treaty faces being locked up without evidence and has no right to a trial by jury and gone is the presumption of innocence.
    We cannot allow anyone in UK custody or under 'house arrest' like Julian Assange to be extradited to the US. You just have to look at the treatment of its own citizens to realise this.
    Bradley Manning, the 22-year-old US Army Private accused of leaking classified documents to WikiLeaks, has been held in solitary confinement for the last seven months, despite not having been convicted of any crime.
    Manning has been kept alone in a cell for 23 hours a day, barred from exercising in that cell, deprived of sleep, and denied even a pillow or sheets for his bed. Unsurprisingly he now relies on anti-depressants to cope with the effects of isolation. No date for a court hearing has been set.
    Make no mistake, this sort of treatment is torture and we, as a civilised nation can not send anyone in to the hands of the US judicial system which openly tortures its own citizens as well as others.
    By the time his brains are completely scrambled and he’s addicted to his medication I'm sure some sleazy, government prosecutor will offer him a plea bargain which is another disgraceful and routine feature of US justice. In exchange for dishing the dirt, real or imagine, on Julian Assange, Manning will be pressurised to cut a deal.
    I would urge the British Prime Minister to tear up the 2003 extradition treaty now, tell Obama to get stuffed and instruct the Foreign Office to issue a travel warning advisory for any UK citizens contemplating a trip to America.
    British journalist Yvonne Ridley is also a patron of the London-based NGO Cageprisoners.
  • Source and Comments
  • Obama's Halliburton

    Worth a read
    Owning GE is a No-Brainer - By Christian A. DeHaemer

    There have been volumes written about the George W. Bush/Dick Cheney presidency and its connection with energy company Halliburton.
    You may know Halliburton from such events as laying the bad cement which may have caused the BP oil well blowout that sent record amounts of crude oil into the Gulf of Mexico.
    It is no secret that former Vice President Dick Chaney was the CEO of Halliburton Co. from 1996 to 1998, and again in 2000. During that time, Halliburton moved from number 73 to 18 on the list of the Pentagon's top contractors.
    Nor is it news that people with connections in government peddle influence and make deals.
    Quid pro quo is the Washington way.
    Never bring a knife to a gunfight when you can bring a subcontractor...
  • Read More
  • Wednesday, January 05, 2011

    WW3 Or Peace...Time Is About Up

    By Dr. Ilya Sandra Perlingieri / 1-3-11
    Over the past year, I have had the great pleasure of meeting with numerous scientists, physicians, and those concerned about the enormous degradation of our environment (and with it our wrecked health) in order to get some broader perspective about our planetary environmental chaos.
    As I write this in the last week of December, our global weather is in crisis: London has had heavy snow; there's flooding in San Diego County; there have been temperature swings in New England of 40 degrees in a matter of 36 hours, causing rivers to thaw and swell.
    Then, New England just had a two-day Nor-Easter storm, with weird-looking white stuff falling from the sky. It didn't look like any snow I remembered from my childhood; and the air smelled like sewer chemicals. It's all ominous. Yes, the weather is often unpredictable, that goes without saying. Yes, we do have significant climate change. But it is not Global Warming.
    What has changed dramatically over the past 12-15 years, is the deliberate modification and manipulation of our weather by US military, with the assistance of commercial and private jets. What started out just in the US now encompasses all NATO nations who are spraying us from these jets a lethal brew of aerosolized chemicals, mycotoxins, biologically manipulated fungi, nano-particles of fiber-coated aluminum, barium, and ethylene dibromide and manipulated fungal species to wreck our collective health and destroy our planet's entire web of life. Due to these aerosol crimes, (as Clifford Carnicom cogently calls them), there has been a dramatic increase in upper respiratory and cardiac illnesses and cancers.
    Thousands of concerned citizens who look up at the toxic Chemtrails blanketing our skies get no answers from anyone in charge. It makes no difference to them, because the plan is to wreck everything, and we do not count except as consumers. Collectively, we have forgotten that shoppers are not citizens. Citizenship requires an educated populace. Citizens must be well-informed; and then they can act in beneficial ways both within their families, as well as the country at large. This is all greatly missing.
    All those in charge, in all three branches of the US government and all of its agencies, have sped up their criminal activities of destruction to bring great harm to all of us. We can see it above us in the toxicity of Chemtrails and EMF clouds, in the enormous poisoning of our soil and water; and in the recent bills rushed through a compromised, corporate-controlled Congress where we will have no medical care and no safe food supply. This is all about harm. It is inhuman behavior focused on greed. These people have no humanity, no caring, no compassion. They are not working for us: "we, the people." In a time of real leadership, we have none. Instead we are fed a pablum [baby food] of Orwellian doublespeak by leaders [sic] and in all the mainstream media outlets as well as many scientific journals.
    We are in the midst of a holiday season. For many, this is synonymous with Peace. It is the message of the season. Peace must be a real message for all seasons. But now, it is an empty one, if people can pray in church, synagogue, or mosque and then go out the next day to harm and kill. Tragically, prayer can be a sham (or relieve guilt), if the larger picture is to invade countries illegally, cause irreparable loss (as in Iraq and Gaza), in the name of what? Oil and other natural resources. No society or civilization has ever survived (Ancient Egypt, Greece, Rome, Renaissance Spain, or the "British Empire." There is no longer any foundation of ethics or any adherence to any laws. These are basics to any society. When war becomes the only part of an economy that thrives (as is happening right now), a society is doomed. This is where we are.
    At a meeting on Nov. 10, 1979, Hans Morganthau the late scholar of international relations told Prof. Francis Boyle (one of our great international law attorneys and his former student): "Future, what future? I am extremely pessimistic.
    In my opinion the world is moving ineluctably towards a third world war -a strategic nuclear war. I do not believe that anything can be done to prevent it. The international system is simply too unstable to survive for long. The SALT II Treaty is important for the present, but over the long haul it cannot stop the momentum.
    Fortunately, I do not believe that I will live to see that day. But I am afraid you might."(1)
    If there are to be any real peaceful prospects for all of humanity, we must become engaged citizens and make PEACE our priority for 2011. This cannot be left to anyone in charge.
    Peace is not shopping till you drop (although with our deliberately wrecked economy, millions of people now don't have the money to do so). It would be a huge and healing environmental step for Americans if, instead of massive consumerism, we began to change our behavior, not be so dependent on oil-based and other toxic products, and seriously thought about what we can do to create peace in our hearts and peace for our beleaguered planet. Cap-and-trade and UN initiatives are scams to make the elite and insiders richer. These have nothing to do with sustainability or more careful actions to help each other.
    However, we have enormous and untapped collective grassroots power as citizens: we must not support killing and the war machine. Peace is the vital direction to achieve this. It is the only way. When we do not harm anyone; when the military stops dropping bombs (often with depleted uranium, even on US citizens! In the name of "tests"); when we collective understand that a violently-based society can never recover either financially or socially; when we truly grasp (as did Albert Schweitzer, and Gandhi, and Martin Luther King) that we must hold peace and tranquility in our own hearts and within our own families and how we raise our children, it is ONLY THEN that we can pick up our country out of its morass of chaos and misdirected goals of domination and subjugation of everyone.
    Tragically, this has had a very long and obscene history. Can we rise above our own self-centeredness, stupor, and denial? Can we rise and DEMAND a STOP to the horrific chemical assault we get daily? In this time of great crisis, can we rise to the fullest potential of who we truly are as humans? Can this come from the deepest part of our hearts?
    Peace requires tranquility in our own hearts, where we can connect with the deepest part of who we are. When anyone is stressed, or when an entire society is assaulted on many fronts, there is no peace. For those who choose to find tranquility, meditation and listening to music are great ways to find internal peace. Research has demonstrated that "peace gives one a sense of comfort."
    Here are some thoughts from others whose lives focus on peace.
    "I do believe that you can never have enough mindfulness. I try to cultivatemore compassion, wisdom." Aung San Suu Kyi, 1991.
    "if we all take just that small view, and enlarge it as we are doing something helpful, then we won't get fatigued. If you do nothing, you'll feel meaningless. It's very important for some people to see the individual that they are helping, to see a picture of a child they're helping. You should do it as a human being, because we have evolved to a state where we have to know about our feelings of compassion, and therefore we should act on them. I can feel peaceful almost anywhere, if I can get some bit of greenery, some trees, and get away from all this noise." Jane Goodall
    "Of all nature's masterpieces, the newborn whether fish, bird, mammal, or human, is surely the most exquisite. This wondrous creature is testimony to the peace and harmony that existed in the womb, or the egg, prior to its entering the world.
    "Peace begins in the womb. The newborn reflects this truth. Order is transferred from cell to tissue, to organs, to organisms, to families. Unfortunately, when development is violated in the womb by man-made chemicals, the newborn is compromised. No longer is the offspring secure in the womb.
    "Humans in their race to space have diverted attention and limited resources, from learning about the inner world from which life evolves. As we have searched outer space, we seem to have forgotten the inner space from which all humankind evolves.
    "When society takes heed and spends more on infrastructures for prevention than on remediation and healing, stability and integrity can be restored in the womb. Nations of the world must unite with a single purpose to restore peace in the inner-world, assuring that every newborn the opportunity to reach his or her fullest potential." Dr. Theo Colburn. From her essay "Peace." "Wise Traditions." Fall 2002. Author (with others): "Our Stolen Future" 1996.
    As citizens, we MUST JOIN TOGETHER in harmony and speak out for peaceful and safe directions for all of us. This means NOW, if we are to have any future for humanity. PEACE is our only viable alternative as citizens. It is our collective responsibility to make this happen; and it must be done PEACEFULLY.
    And special thanks to Jeff Rense for his courage and tenacity in continuing to post real news.
    **********
    1. Prof. Francis Boyle. "2011: Prospects for Humanity? The First and Second World Wars currently hover like the Sword of Damocles over the heads of all humanity." Dec. 24, 2010: www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=22500
  • Source
  • Prospects for Humanity?

    If you read this please make sure to read the Post titled"WW3 Or Peace...Time Is About Up"
    The First and Second World Wars currently hover like the Sword of Damocles over the heads of all humanity. by prof. Francis Boyle
    During the 1950s I grew up in a family who rooted for the success of African Americans in their just struggle for civil rights and full legal equality. Then in 1962 it was the terror of my own personal imminent nuclear annihilation during the Cuban Missile Crisis that first sparked my interest in studying international relations and U.S. foreign policy as a young boy of 12: “I can do a better job than this!”
    With the escalation of the Vietnam War in 1964 and the military draft staring me right in the face, I undertook a detailed examination of it. Eventually I concluded that unlike World War II when my Father had fought and defeated the Japanese Imperial Army as a young Marine in the Pacific, this new war was illegal, immoral, unethical, and the United States was bound to lose it. America was just picking up where France had left off at Dien Bien Phu. So I resolved to do what little I could to oppose the Vietnam War.
    In 1965 President Lyndon Johnson gratuitously invaded the Dominican Republic, which prompted me to commence a detailed examination of U.S. military interventions into Latin America from the Spanish-American War of 1898 up to President Franklin Roosevelt’s so-called “good neighbor” policy. At the end of this study, I concluded that the Vietnam War was not episodic, but rather systemic: Aggression, warfare, bloodshed, and violence were just the way the United States Power Elite had historically conducted their business around the world. Hence, as I saw it as a young man of 17, there would be more Vietnams in the future and perhaps someday I could do something about it as well as about promoting civil rights for African Americans. These twins concerns of my youth would gradually ripen into a career devoted to international law and human rights.
    So I commenced my formal study of International Relations with the late, great Hans Morgenthau in the first week of January 1970 as a 19 year old college sophomore at the University of Chicago by taking his basic introductory course on that subject. At the time, Morgenthau was leading the academic forces of opposition to the detested Vietnam War, which is precisely why I chose to study with him. During ten years of higher education at the University of Chicago and Harvard, I refused to study with openly pro-Vietnam-War professors as a matter of principle and also on the quite pragmatic ground that they had nothing to teach me.
    In the summer of 1975, it was Morgenthau who emphatically encouraged me to become a professor instead of doing some other promising things with my life: “If Morgenthau thinks I should become a professor, then I will become a professor!” After almost a decade of working personally with him, Morgenthau provided me with enough inspiration, guidance, and knowledge to last now almost half a lifetime.
    Historically, this latest eruption of American militarism at the start of the 21st Century is akin to that of America opening the 20th Century by means of the U.S.-instigated Spanish-American War in 1898. Then the Republican administration of President William McKinley stole their colonial empire from Spain in Cuba, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Philippines; inflicted a near genocidal war against the Filipino people; while at the same time illegally annexing the Kingdom of Hawaii and subjecting the Native Hawaiian people (who call themselves the Kanaka Maoli) to near genocidal conditions. Additionally, McKinley’s military and colonial expansion into the Pacific was also designed to secure America’s economic exploitation of China pursuant to the euphemistic rubric of the “open door” policy. But over the next four decades America’s aggressive presence, policies, and practices in the “Pacific” would ineluctably pave the way for Japan’s attack at Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 194l, and thus America’s precipitation into the ongoing Second World War. Today a century later the serial imperial aggressions launched and menaced by the Republican Bush Jr. administration and now the Democratic Obama administration are threatening to set off World War III.
    By shamelessly exploiting the terrible tragedy of 11 September 2001, the Bush Jr. administration set forth to steal a hydrocarbon empire from the Muslim states and peoples living in Central Asia and the Persian Gulf under the bogus pretexts of (1) fighting a war against international terrorism; and/or (2) eliminating weapons of mass destruction; and/or (3) the promotion of democracy; and/or (4) self-styled “humanitarian intervention.” Only this time the geopolitical stakes are infinitely greater than they were a century ago: control and domination of two-thirds of the world’s hydrocarbon resources and thus the very fundament and energizer of the global economic system – oil and gas. The Bush Jr./ Obama administrations have already targeted the remaining hydrocarbon reserves of Africa, Latin America, and Southeast Asia for further conquest or domination, together with the strategic choke-points at sea and on land required for their transportation. In this regard, the Bush Jr. administration announced the establishment of the U.S. Pentagon’s Africa Command (AFRICOM) in order to better control, dominate, and exploit both the natural resources and the variegated peoples of the continent of Africa, the very cradle of our human species.
    This current bout of U.S. imperialism is what Hans Morgenthau denominated “unlimited imperialism” in his seminal work Politics Among Nations (4th ed. 1968, at 52-53):
    The outstanding historic examples of unlimited imperialism are the expansionist policies of Alexander the Great, Rome, the Arabs in the seventh and eighth centuries, Napoleon I, and Hitler. They all have in common an urge toward expansion which knows no rational limits, feeds on its own successes and, if not stopped by a superior force, will go on to the confines of the political world. This urge will not be satisfied so long as there remains anywhere a possible object of domination--a politically organized group of men which by its very independence challenges the conqueror’s lust for power. It is, as we shall see, exactly the lack of moderation, the aspiration to conquer all that lends itself to conquest, characteristic of unlimited imperialism, which in the past has been the undoing of the imperialistic policies of this kind….
    On 10 November 1979 I visited with Hans Morgenthau at his home in Manhattan. It proved to be our last conversation before he died on 19 July 1980. Given his weakened physical but not mental condition and his serious heart problem, at the end of our necessarily abbreviated one-hour meeting I purposefully asked him what he thought about the future of international relations. This revered scholar, whom international relations experts generally consider to be the founder of modern international political science in the post World War II era, responded:
    Future, what future? I am extremely pessimistic. In my opinion the world is moving ineluctably towards a third world war—a strategic nuclear war. I do not believe that anything can be done to prevent it. The international system is simply too unstable to survive for long. The SALT II Treaty is important for the present, but over the long haul it cannot stop the momentum. Fortunately, I do not believe that I will live to see that day. But I am afraid you might.
    The factual circumstances surrounding the outbreaks of both the First World War and the Second World War currently hover like the Sword of Damocles over the heads of all humanity. It is imperative that we undertake a committed and concerted effort to head-off Hans Morgenthau’s final prediction on the cataclysmic demise of the human race.
    Francis Boyle is a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global Research Articles by Francis Boyle
    © Copyright Francis Boyle, Global Research, 2010
  • Source
  • US Must Stop Resisting The Decline Of The Dollar

    George Soros: The United States Must Stop Resisting The Orderly Decline Of The Dollar, The Coming Global Currency And The New World Order
    In the video you are about to see, George Soros talks about "the creation of a New World Order", he discusses the need for a "managed decline" of the U.S. dollar and he talks at length of the global need for a true world currency. So just who is George Soros? Well, he is a billionaire "philanthropist" who came to be known as "the Man Who Broke the Bank of England" when he raked in a staggering one billion dollars during the 1992 "Black Wednesday" currency crisis. These days Soros is most famous for being perhaps the most "politically active" (at least openly) billionaire in the world. His Open Society Institute is in more than 60 countries and it spends approximately $600 million a year promoting the ideals that Soros wants promoted. Soros and his pet organizations have played a key role in quite a few "revolutions" around the globe over the last several decades, but these days the main goal of George Soros is to bring political change to the United States.
    So exactly what is it that George Soros is trying to accomplish? Well, in a nutshell, what he wants is a Big Brother-style one world government based on extreme European-style socialism, strict population control and the radical green agenda. It would be a world where the state tightly regulates everything that we do for the greater benefit of the environment and of society as a whole.
    However, Soros is not the "mastermind of the New World Order" that some have tried to make him out to be. The truth is that to those in the international banking elite, Soros is considered to be something of a "black sheep" and an "outsider". Much of what Soros is trying to accomplish lines up with the goals of the international banking elite, but what they don't like is that Soros won't stop publicly talking about a global currency and a "New World Order". Of course the international banking elite very much want a global currency and a "New World Order", but what they don't need is a "squeaky wheel" like Soros running around drawing unneeded attention to those goals.
    Also, Soros does not seem to understand that both sides of the political spectrum in the United States are deeply influenced by the international banking elite. Sadly, the truth is that the same handful of elitist organizations has dominated the cabinets of every single president that we have had since World War II. If you doubt this, just check out how many members of each presidential administration over the last 40 years have belonged to either the Council on Foreign Relations, the Trilateral Commission or the Bilderberg Group. If you have never looked into this before, you will be absolutely shocked. No matter what president we elect, it is always the exact same organizations that always dominate their cabinets.
    But Soros still seems very much trapped within the left/right paradigm and he seems absolutely obsessed with destroying the Republican Party. For example, Soros spent an insane amount of money attempting to defeat George W. Bush back in 2004. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, George Soros donated $23,581,000 during that election cycle to political organizations that were trying to keep Bush from being reelected.
    Soros has also been a tremendous backer of Barack Obama, although lately Soros seems a bit disenchanted with him. Through organizations such as the Center for American Progress and MoveOn.org, Soros is constantly trying to influence the state of American politics.
    So what is George Soros thinking about these days? Well, in the video posted below you will see Soros discussing "an orderly decline" of the U.S. dollar, the coming global currency and the importance of the New World Order....
  • ReadMore - Watch Video
  • Tuesday, January 04, 2011

    Goldman Sachs and Al Gore

    Will Obama’s Goldman Sachs Attack Expose Al Gore? Or Other Dems?
    The SEC civil charges against Goldman Sachs challenge a firm with ties to many Democrats, including Al Gore and the entire carbon trading establishment. by Richard Pollock
    Whether Wall Street colossus Goldman Sachs has committed a crime remains to be seen, but the investigation may well uncover the environmental lobby and its public figurehead. For nearly a decade, Goldman Sachs has been a quiet but major investor in cap and trade. And Goldman’s main investment partner has been Al Gore.
    About a decade ago, Goldman executives recognized that personal fortunes could be made with the invention of a carbon trading system through the passage of a U.S. cap-and-trade bill. This area was well suited to Goldman Sachs, the architects behind the complex world of futures trading and exotic derivatives.
    Goldman joined Al Gore in 2004 and capitalized his investment company, Generation Investment Management. Strangely for a man who was a heartbeat away from the presidency, Gore decided to register his company in London — not the United States.
    In November 2004, Gore unveiled GIM. Standing at his side was David Blood, the CEO of Goldman Asset Management. Blood was to become his co-founder (the new company was quickly nicknamed “Blood & Gore”). It was established with the initial capital of $206 million, much of it from Blood clients at Goldman Sachs.
    Gore also turned to Goldman Sachs guru (and later Bush Treasury Secretary) Henry Paulson to help him establish GIM. At the time, Paulson himself was an eco-warrior of sorts, serving as chairman of the board of the Nature Conservancy.
    Today, seven of Gore’s GIM chief partners are from Goldman Sachs. The company is now valued at $2.2 billion.
    It doesn’t stop there. The Goldman Sachs/Gore team then established the Chicago Climate Exchange (CCX), a new cap-and-trade carbon trading platform, and partnered with the UK-based Climate Exchange, Plc (CLE), a holding company listed on the London Stock Exchange. CLE does carbon trading in Europe. In late 2004, they also created the Chicago Climate Futures Exchange (CCFX).
  • Read More
  • Monday, January 03, 2011

    Recipe for a Nation

    For your consideration
    If you want to change the world for the better , just how much empathy and determination do you have available ? …
  • Source
  • Sunday, January 02, 2011

    Capital Hills war against WikiLeaks

    Can the leak phenonomen sustain the continued assault by the corporate sector to prevail in the first ever cyber-war? by Mark LeVine
    When your Swiss banker throws you overboard, you know you've made some very powerful enemies.
    Long famed for hiding money for everyone from Nazis and drug lords to spies and dictators, the Swiss government's banking arm has decided that WikiLeaks and Julian Assange are just too hot even for it to handle.
    And so the PostFinance, which runs the country's banks, declared in early December that it had "ended its business relationship with WikiLeaks founder Julian Paul Assange" after accusing Mr. Assange of - gasp! - providing false information about his place of residence.
    This move followed similar moves by credit card companies MasterCard and Visa, as well as PayPal and Amazon.com, to no longer process WikiLeaks payments and, in Amazon.com's case, to cease hosting its data.
    As I write this, Bank of America has joined the crescendo of corporations taking aim at WikiLeaks, refusing to process payments for it any longer because of "our reasonable belief that WikiLeaks may be engaged in activities that are, among other things, inconsistent with our internal policies for processing payments."
    And soon after, none other than Apple joined the chorus, pulling the plug on a WikiLeaks app only days after it went on sale on its iTunes website. Every sector of the corporate economy, it seems, is out to get WikiLeaks.
    Zeroing in on "neocorporatism"
    Should CIA agents, mafia bosses and other fellow Swiss banking customers who have likely been even less than forthright in their personal representations than Assange is alleged to have been also worry about the loyalty and discretion of their Swiss bankers?
    Probably not. And that's because the world's criminals, autocrats and spooks are very much part of the global political economic system, even if sometimes on opposite sides.
    But WikiLeaks both operates outside the system, seeking "Matrix"-style, to use technology - the internet - to "destroy" it by prying it open to public scrutiny, exposing the constant conspiracies of the powerful against the rest of society.
    This task, Assange argues, is the most important way to help free the system's millions of often complicit - if not quite willing - victims and in so doing, "change or remove... government and neocorporatist behaviour".
    As a political theorist, Assange leaves something to be desired. "Neocorporatism" describes a system in which capital and labour are enmeshed in an integrated but ultimately dependent relationship with a powerful and autonomous state apparatus - an update of the triangular relationship that enabled unprecedented economic growth and gains for the working class in the West in the decades after World War II.
    Ideologically, this kind of close working relationship between government, big business and organised labour is the antithesis of the neoliberal system WikiLeaks seeks to combat.
    But Assange is right that there is something "neo", if not exactly new, in the way the corporate sector is behaving today and its relationship with government. It lies in the embrace - or better, re-embrace - of finance capitalism and militaristic empire and the military industrial complex that sustains it.
    Whether preying on unwitting consumers in middle America or preying on suspected insurgents in the Middle East, these are two of the most secretive sectors of the American economy. They depend on the public knowing as little as possible about their inner workings to secure the greatest possible freedom of action, power and profits.
    The power of secrecy
    Assage's abandonment by the Swiss banking system and its American corporate cousins is thus not surprising. Few industries have used secrecy and lack of disclosure more effectively than the banking, financial services and credit card industries.
    Indeed, their secretive business practises are central to their constant ability to rake in enormous profits at the expense of working and middle class Americans through monopolising trading systems, charging morally usurious interest rates and fees, and engaging in other practises that would make even the most cold-hearted lone shark blush.
    If the grand bargain between workers, capitalists and governments enabled the first two post-World War II generations to move from high school right into the middle class, this road was irreparably damaged by the 1980s, when the neoliberal Right first came to power.
    As the United States entered its long and painful era of deindustrialization American foreign policy became more aggressively militaristic; and so joining the military as opposed to GM or Ford became one of the few routes to secure any kind of stable economic future (as long as you stayed in the military).
    Not surprisingly, profits from the financial sector surpassed that of manufacturing in the early 1990s and haven't dropped since. But these profits and the economic growth they generated have relied disproportionately on government and consumer debt and a hollowing out of the manufacturing sector, which together helped make the US the "sick man of the globe", as one senior corporate economist.
    For their part, GM, Ford and Chrysler simultaneously focused most of their energies on producing comparatively profitable gas-guzzlers like SUVs while establishing financial services arms that quickly became responsible for a substantial share of their profits (in some years upwards of 90 percent of profits are so derived).
    Their lending practises, it's worth noting, included the kinds of "liar" home loans, given out with little concern over the ability of borrowers to pay them, that precipitated the global economic crisis of 2007 till today.
    Financialisation and history
    None of these practises would have withstood the light of public scrutiny, and it was only the corporatisation - in good measure, financialization - of American politics that allowed them to flourish in the last thirty years. Few enterprises threaten that secrecy as much as WikiLeaks and its laser-like focus on openness, which is why its actions are viewed in Washington as "striking at the very heart of the global economy".
    The "financialisation" of the economy represents the increasing dominance of the financial industries in the overall economy, taking over "the dominant economic, cultural, and political role in a national economy".
    Crucially, this process isn't unique to the United States; it also happened to previous empires, like the Hapsburg's, Dutch and British empires, at precisely the eras they lost their dominant global position. In all cases, financialism and militarism went hand in hand, as first pointed out by the British historian John Hobson's famous 1902 book Imperialism: A Study.
    In it, Hobson argued that the monopolisation of the financial sector created a new oligarchy that linked together the large banks and industrial firms together with "war mongers and speculators" which encouraged imperialism to secure markets for the surplus products produced by corporations.
    America's rise to global dominance came after the end of the imperial era and so it couldn't blatantly conquer territory to create new markets. But at the moment of its rise policy makers called on the government to use high military spending to ensure overall robust economic growth.
    This coincided with rapid expansion of easily obtainable credit, creating two "giant black holes" (in the words of Israeli economists Shimshon Bichler and Jonathan Nitzan) whose potential for expansion was limited only by the willingness of citizens to support the policies that enabled them, despite the long term harm to the economic and political well-being of their societies.
    During the first thirty years of the Cold War era, the propensity towards militarism was balanced by the robust manufacturing economy and the tripartite business-labour-government relationship that secured it.
    This began to change in the 1970s, when the hugely expensive, and profitable, Vietnam War began to wind own.
    As Nitzan and Bichler describe in their hugely important book, The Global Political Economy of Israel, beginning in this period "there was a growing convergence of interests between the world's leading petroleum and armament corporations. The politicisation of oil, together with the parallel commercialisation of arms exports, helped shape an uneasy weapondollar-petrodollar coalition between these companies."
    What is most crucial about Nitzan and Bichler's analysis is that one of the most important ways that the arms and oil industries were able to earn a disproportionate (as they describe it, "differential") level of profits was through the regular eruption of Middle Eastern energy conflicts, which ensured both relative high oil prices and arms purchases.
    McDonald's and McDonnell Douglas
    As this process developed, the authors explain that "the lines separating state from capital, foreign policy from corporate strategy, and territorial conquest from differential profit, no longer seem very solid."
    New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman puts it more colourfully: "The hidden hand of the market will never work without the hidden fist. McDonald's cannot flourish without McDonnell Douglas - and the hidden fist that keeps the world safe for Silicon Valley's technologies to flourish is called the US Army, Air Force, Navy, and Marine Corps."
    This is the "neocorporatism" that Assange and his WikiLeaks comrades have zeroed in on, although today, more than a decade after Friedman wrote the above words, Master Card is more relevant than McDonald's.
    The problem is that WikiLeaks alone cannot turn the tide in this conflict.
    Assange might well be a "high tech terrorist," as US Vice President Joseph Biden recently called him, given how much terror his actions have struck in the heart of the American political system.
    But the US is ultimately only one of a group of powerful countries and corporations whose leaders all share a fundamental commitment to securing as much profit and power as possible for themselves, however much their methods and politics differ.
    Indeed, a sober look at the relevant data reveals that the profit share of the financial sectors outside the US has almost always been significantly higher than in the US, meaning that the rest of the world has long been more "financialised" than has the US economy.
    As always, capitalism and power have never been as conveniently centred in one country or region as people imagine.
    To really have an impact, WikiLeaks needs to inspire a whole generation of leakers in other countries and cultures, who are as willing to risk their freedom as Assange and the other people behind WikiLeaks. The leak culture has started to take root, however only time will tell if it resists the forces working against it's development.
    If this doesn't happen - if Assange and his comrades are successfully made into examples by their corporate and political enemies that scare off those who might be inspired by their example - Capital will likely win the world's first "cyber-war", much as it's won most every war before it during modernity's long, bloody and unimaginably profitable history.
    Mark Levine is a professional musician and professor of Middle Eastern history at the University of California, Irvine. He is author of half a dozen books, including Heavy Metal Islam: Rock, Religion and the Struggle for the Soul of Islam (forthcoming, Random House/Verso, companion CD to be released by EMI Records).
    The views expressed in this article are the author's own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera's editorial policy.
  • Source

  • MarkLevine
  • China preparing for armed conflict

    China preparing for armed conflict 'in every direction'
    China is preparing for conflict 'in every direction', the defence minister said on Wednesday in remarks that threaten to overshadow a visit to Beijing by his US counterpart next month.
    "In the coming five years, our military will push forward preparations for military conflict in every strategic direction," said Liang Guanglie in an interview published by several state-backed newspapers in China. "We may be living in peaceful times, but we can never forget war, never send the horses south or put the bayonets and guns away," Mr Liang added.
    China repeatedly says it is planning a "peaceful rise" but the recent pace and scale of its military modernisation has alarmed many of its neighbours in the Asia-Pacific, including Japan which described China's military build-up as a "global concern" this month.
    Mr Liang's remarks come at a time of increasingly difficult relations between the Chinese and US armed forces which a three-day visit by his counterpart Robert Gates is intended to address. A year ago China froze substantive military relations in protest at US arms sales to Taiwan and relations deteriorated further this summer when China objected to US plans to deploy one of its nuclear supercarriers, the USS George Washington, into the Yellow Sea off the Korean peninsula.
    China also announced this month that it was preparing to launch its own aircraft carrier next year in a signal that China is determined to punch its weight as a rising superpower. The news came a year earlier than many US defence analysts had predicted.
    China is also working on a "carrier-killing" ballistic missile that could sink US carriers from afar, fundamentally reordering the balance of power in a region that has been dominated by the US since the end of the Second World War.
  • Read More
  • Is Time running out?

    A Year-End Message from the OCA Director
    1800 Days: Organic Solutions to the Global Crisis
    Beyond the deliberate disinformation and gloom and doom of the daily news, we must take decisive action to save ourselves and the future generations. A growing corps of scientists and climatologists have delivered the final warning: we are within 1,800 days – or five years - of passing the atmospheric point of no return, whereby increasing greenhouse gas pollution and global warming will take us over the cliff of climate catastrophe. On the other hand, the grassroots-practical, ready-to-be-scaled-up, healthy and climate-friendly solutions that we need to move away from the precipice are everyday more evident: organic food and farming, green buildings, smart transportation, renewable energy, sustainable living. We are fortunate to have five years or 1800 days to turn things around, to put an end to business as usual, to slash fossil fuel use, to phase-out the coal industry, to retool the electrical grid, to retrofit residential and commercial buildings, and to sequester as much CO2 in the soil as possible through organic farming, ranching, and land management. We have 1800 productive days to reverse the global suicide economy and supercharge a Great Transition toward organic and sustainable ways of living, governance, and commerce. The hour is late. But the power of the people is greater than Fossil Fuel and Food Inc.'s out-of-control technology.
  • organicconsumers.org
  • The Gulf of Mexico is Dying

    A Special Report on the BP Gulf Oil Spill - by Dr. Tom Termotto
    It is with deep regret that we publish this report. We do not take this responsibility lightly, as the consequences of the following observations are of such great import and have such far-reaching ramifications for the entire planet. Truly, the fate of the oceans of the world hangs in the balance, as does the future of humankind.
    The Gulf of Mexico (GOM) does not exist in isolation and is, in fact, connected to the Seven Seas. Hence, we publish these findings in order that the world community will come together to further contemplate this dire and demanding predicament. We also do so with the hope that an appropriate global response will be formulated, and acted upon, for the sake of future generations. It is the most basic responsibility for every civilization to leave their world in a better condition than that which they inherited from their forbears.
    After conducting the Gulf Oil Spill Remediation Conference for over seven months, we can now disseminate the following information with the authority and confidence of those who have thoroughly investigated a crime scene. There are many research articles, investigative reports and penetrating exposes archived at the following website. Particularly those posted from August through November provide a unique body of evidence, many with compelling photo-documentaries, which portray the true state of affairs at the Macondo Prospect in the GOM.
  • Source


  • © Copyright Tom Termotto, Concerned citizens of Florida, 2010