Wednesday, 28 August 2013

"...Of The People, For The People and By The People."


"Without debate, without criticism, no Administration and no country can succeed-and no republic can survive. 

That is why the Athenian law-maker Solon decreed it a crime for any citizen to shrink from controversy. "

 President John F. Kennedy,
"The President and The Press"



Well, this is fairly depressing....

I have to admit, my expectations were not all that high....


But I can't honestly say this isn't rather disappointing...



It won 8 Oscars that year.

Including, Best Screenplay....


"Without debate, without criticism, no Administration and no country can succeed-and no republic can survive. That is why the Athenian law-maker Solon decreed it a crime for any citizen to shrink from controversy. 

And that is why our press was protected by the First Amendment--the only business in America specifically protected by the Constitution--not primarily to amuse and entertain, not to emphasize the trivial and the sentimental, not to simply "give the public what it wants"...

--but to inform, to arouse, to reflect, to state our dangers and our opportunities, to indicate our crises and our choices, to lead, mold, educate and sometimes even anger public opinion.

This means greater coverage and analysis of international news--for it is no longer far away and foreign but close at hand and local. It means greater attention to improved understanding of the news as well as improved transmission. 

And it means, finally, that government at all levels, must meet its obligation to provide you with the fullest possible information outside the narrowest limits of national security--and we intend to do it.

It was early in the Seventeenth Century that Francis Bacon remarked on three recent inventions already transforming the world: the compass, gunpowder and the printing press. 

Now the links between the nations first forged by the compass have made us all citizens of the world, the hopes and threats of one becoming the hopes and threats of us all. In that one world's efforts to live together, the evolution of gunpowder to its ultimate limit has warned mankind of the terrible consequences of failure.

And so it is to the printing press--to the recorder of man's deeds, the keeper of his conscience, the courier of his news--that we look for strength and assistance, confident that with your help man will be what he was born to be: 

free and independent.


John F. Kennedy
153 - Address "The President and the Press" Before the American Newspaper Publishers Association, New York City.
April 27, 1961



“I was a researcher on Friday and Saturday nights, ... but I spent a lot more time there. 

We were having a heat wave and the office was air-conditioned. 

They mistook me for a hard worker.”

Michael Hastings.


They say that those who live, spend the rest of their lives trying to forget that narrow band of hours, minutes, seconds. That energetic burst of violent emotional and physical, and psychological bandwidth, super compressed, desiccated and freeze dried for endless, gore-splattered future consumption via neurological re-runs in full HD sensuround;

Failing to forget, they try, still, instead rather not to remember.

Predictably, this ultimately comes to nothing as rule, but its the trying that makes...

Those who live remember. They do little else.

They will do little else. Open-ended engagement, with no support act.

Those who live remember.

The dead do not remember.

The dead are not there to remember.

Frankly, they have far better things to be getting on with.

Mostly they watch the living.

They gaze upon the living and they do not remember.

Do not remember how they got there.

Or how it was, that the living came to be where they are now.


What must they think....?


The last thing on his mind would be some damn white picket fence...




Last thing on her mind would be her blasted in-laws...



Last thing on their minds would be Beef.



They need never even have heard of Helter-Skelter.



There is absolutely zero reason for any form of any kind of attack on Syria other than the American, British and French media have established the conditions whereby it appears as though there is no other option.


This is how Petreaus, McCrystal and the Generals got their massive surge in Afghanistan - this is exactly what Michael Hastings died for telling the world about;

In 2009, they boxed him in, and he didn't know enough to over-rule them and just get out.


US Officials now conduct direct negotiations with the Taliban AND Mohammad Karzai, just as was the case in 1998; there is a Taliban embassy in Doha.

They conduct direct, clandestine negotiations with Iran, behind the back of  Israel and the Pentagon to secure a historic peace into the next century.

Obama is attacked daily for supporting al-Qaeda, for supporting terrorists. Whatever that means.

I admire him for it.

It's the most courageous act of statesmanship seen in generations; Isreal infected the US with the credo "We do not negotiate with terrorists".

First, you stop referring to them as terrorists.

Peace, lasting peace is achieved only ever and always only by talking to one's enemies - or total annihilation.

I prefer not to take the Nagasaki route.

That is something the public, and the people of the West (Christendom) today, in this society, devoid of all depth, context and nuance, will NEVER understand any more, and which the Corporate, alternative, mainstream media is no longer capable of telling them, even were it so inclined to do so.

You say I carry water for Obama - I judge him through the lens of history not yet written and not fully unfurled.

Jack, Bobby, Martin, Lincoln.... Zachary Taylor.... They never had the chance to duck that bullet, they never saw it coming.

This man is smart and hungry and Teflon as any I have ever seen - he sails past obstacles, he walks in between raindrops....

He read, and studied, and learned from EVERY mistake, attack, weakness or pecidillo that took down all those who came before him.

What you DO, in the moment in that job does not matter; that gone in an instant.

What you DO that echoes down the ages of enternity is the Bell Curve.

Carter, Kerry, both Clintons.... Jack, Bobby and Malcolm. And more.

I just hope he remembered to read as far as Jack, Bobby, Douglas MaxAruthur and the Summer of '62 chewing over the Guns of August....

Tuesday, 27 August 2013

How a Nation Is Exploited – The British Empire in Burma (May 1929)



Map showing the growth of British Bengal and British Burma (1907)




 
Le Progrès Civique, 4 May 1929. Translated into English by Janet Percival and Ian Willison.



Following the recent troubles in India, we have asked our contributor, Mr E. A. Blair, whose investigations on ‘The Plight of the British Worker’ have already appeared in these pages, to tell us something of the unrest which has been fermenting in the sub-continent for some years, and which is threatening to spread to English Indo-China.

Mr E. A. Blair, who lived in Burma for some years, has written the following interesting article for us, which shows the methods the British Empire uses to milk dry her Asian colonies.




Burma lies between India and China. Ethnologically it belongs to Indo-China.

It is three times the size of England and Wales, with a population of about fourteen million, of whom roughly nine million are Burmese.

The rest is made up of countless Mongol tribes who have emigrated at various periods from the steppes of Central Asia, and Indians who have arrived since the English occupation.

The Burmese are Buddhists; the tribesmen worship various pagan gods.

To be able to talk in their own language to the people of such diverse origins living in Burma, you would need to know a hundred and twenty different languages and dialects.

This country, the population of which is one-tenth as dense as that of England, is one of the richest in the world. It abounds in natural resources which are only just beginning to be exploited.

There are tin, tungsten, jade and rubies, and these are the least of its mineral materials.

At this moment it produces five per cent of the world’s petroleum, and its reserves are far from exhausted.

But the greatest source of wealth-and that which feeds between eighty and ninety per cent of the population-is the paddy fields.

Rice is grown everywhere in the basin of the Irawaddy, which flows through Burma from north to south.

In the south, in the huge delta where the Irawaddy brings down tons of alluvial mud every year, the soil is immensely fertile.

The harvests, which are remarkable in both quality and quantity, enable Burma to export rice to India, Europe, even to America.

Moreover, variations in temperature are less frequent and sharp than in India.

Thanks to abundant rainfall, especially in the south, drought is unknown, and the heat is never excessive. The climate as a whole can thus be considered one of the healthiest to be found in the tropics.

If we add that the Burmese countryside is exceptionally beautiful, with broad rivers, high mountains, eternally green forests, brightly coloured flowers, exotic fruits, the phrase ‘earthly paradise’ naturally springs to mind.

So it is hardly surprising that the English tried for a long time to gain possession of it.

In 1820 they seized a vast expanse of territory. This operation was repeated in 1852, and finally in 1882 the Union Jack flew over almost all the country.

Certain mountainous districts in the north, inhabited by small savage tribes, had until recently escaped the clutches of the British, but it is more and more likely that they will meet the same fate as the rest of the country, thanks to the process euphemistically known as ‘peaceful penetration’, which means, in plain English, ‘peaceful annexation’.

In this article I do not seek to praise or blame this manifestation of British imperialism; let us simply note it is a logical result of any imperialist policy.

It will be much more profitable to examine the good and bad sides of British administration in Burma from an economic and a political standpoint.

* * *



Let us turn first to politics.

The government of all the Indian provinces under the control of the British Empire is of necessity despotic, because only the threat of force can subdue a population of several million subjects.

But this despotism is latent. It hides behind a mask of democracy.

The great maxim of the English in governing an oriental race is ‘never get something done by a European when an Oriental can do it’. In other words, supreme power remains with the British authorities, but the minor civil servants who have to carry out day-to-day administration and who must come into contact with the people in the course of their duties are recruited locally.

In Burma, for example, the lower grade magistrates, all policemen up to the rank of inspector, members of the postal service, government employees, village elders etc. are Burmese.

Recently, to appease public opinion and put a stop to nationalist agitation which was beginning to cause concern, it was even decided to accept the candidature of educated natives for several important posts.

The system of employing natives as civil servants has three advantages.

First, natives will accept lower salaries than Europeans.

Secondly, they have a better idea of the workings of their fellow countrymen’s minds, and this helps them to settle legal disputes more easily.

Thirdly, it is to their own advantage to show their loyalty to a government which provides their livelihood.

And so peace is maintained by ensuring the close collaboration of the educated or semi-educated classes, where discontent might otherwise produce rebel leaders.

Nevertheless the British control the country. Of course, Burma, like each of the Indian provinces, has a parliament-always the show of democracy-but in reality its parliament has very little power.

Nothing of any consequence lies within its jurisdiction. Most of the members are puppets of the government, which is not above using them to nip in the bud any Bill which seems untimely.

In addition, each province has a Governor, appointed by the English, who has at his disposal a veto just as absolute as that of the President of the United States to oppose any proposal which displeases him.

Yet although the British government is, as we have shown, essentially despotic, it is by no means unpopular.

The English are building roads and canals-in their own interest, of course, but the Burmese benefit from them-they set up hospitals, open schools, and see to the maintenance of law and order.

And after all, the Burmese are mere peasants, occupied in cultivating the land.

They have not yet reached that stage of intellectual development which makes for nationalists.

Their village is their universe, and as long as they are left in peace to cultivate their fields, they do not care whether their masters are black or white.

A proof of this political apathy on the part of the people of Burma is the fact that the only British military forces in the country are two English infantry battalions and around ten battalions of Indian infantry and mounted police.


Surrender of the Burmese Army to British forces in 1885
Thus twelve thousand armed men, mostly Indians, are enough to subdue a population of fourteen million.

The most dangerous enemies of the government are the young men of the educated classes. If these classes were more numerous and were really educated, they could perhaps raise the revolutionary banner. But they are not.

The reason is firstly that, as we have seen, the majority of the Burmese are peasants.

Secondly, the British government is at pains to give the people only summary instruction, which is almost useless, merely sufficient to produce messengers, low-grade civil servants, petty lawyers’ clerks and other white-collar workers.

Care is taken to avoid technical and industrial training. This rule, observed throughout India, aims to stop India from becoming an industrial country capable of competing with England.
It is true to say that in general, any really educated Burmese was educated in England, and belongs as a result to the small class of the well-to-do.

So, because there are no educated classes, public opinion, which could press for rebellion against England, is non-existent.

* * *




Let us now consider the economic question. Here again we find the Burmese in general too ignorant to have a clear understanding of the way in which they are being treated and, as a result, too ignorant to show the least resentment.

Besides, for the moment they have not suffered much economic damage.

It is true that the British seized the mines and the oil wells. It is true that they control timber production. It is true that all sorts of middlemen, brokers, millers, exporters, have made colossal fortunes from rice without the producer-that is the peasant-getting a thing out of it.

It is also true that the get-rich-quick businessmen who made their pile from rice, petrol etc. are not contributing as they should be to the well-being of the country, and that their money, instead of swelling local revenues in the form of taxes, is sent abroad to be spent in England.

If we are honest, it is true that the British are robbing and pilfering Burma quite shamelessly.

But we must stress that the Burmese hardly notice it for the moment. Their country is so rich, their population so scattered, their needs, like those of all Orientals, so slight that they are not conscious of being exploited.

The peasant cultivating his patch of ground lives more or less as his ancestors did in Marco Polo’s day. If he wishes, he can buy virgin land for a reasonable price.

He certainly leads an arduous existence, but he is on the whole free from care.

Hunger and unemployment are for him meaningless words. There is work and food for everyone. Why worry needlessly?

But, and this is the important point, the Burmese will begin to suffer when a large part of the richness of their country has declined.

Although Burma has developed to a certain extent since the war, already the peasant there is poorer than he was twenty years ago.

He is beginning to feel the weight of land taxation, for which he is not compensated by the increased yield of his harvests.

The worker’s wages have not kept up with the cost of living.

The reason is that the British government has allowed free entry into Burma for veritable hordes of Indians, who, coming from a land where they were literally dying of hunger, work for next to nothing and are, as a result, fearsome rivals for the Burmese.

Add to this a rapid rise in population growth-at the last census the population registered an increase of ten million in ten years-it is easy to see that sooner or later, as happens in all overpopulated countries, the Burmese will be dispossessed of their lands, reduced to a state of semislavery in the service of capitalism, and will have to endure unemployment into the bargain.

They will then discover what they hardly suspect today, that the oil wells, the mines, the milling industry, the sale and cultivation of rice are all controlled by the British.

They will also realise their own industrial incompetence in a world where industry dominates.

* * *


British politics in Burma is the same as in India.

Industrially speaking, India was deliberately kept in ignorance.

She only produces basic necessities, made by hand. The Indians would be incapable, for example, of making a motor-car, a rifle, a clock, an electric-light bulb etc. They would be incapable of building or sailing an ocean-going vessel.

At the same time they have learnt in their dealings with Westerners to depend on certain machine-made articles. So the products of English factories find an important outlet in a country incapable of manufacturing them herself.

Foreign competition is prevented by an insuperable barrier of prohibitive customs tariffs. And so the English factory-owners, with nothing to fear, control the markets absolutely and reap exorbitant profits.

We said that the Burmese have not yet suffered too much, but this is because they have remained, on the whole, an agricultural nation.

Yet for them as for all Orientals, contact with Europeans has created the demand, unknown to their fathers, for the products of modern industry. As a result, the British are stealing from Burma in two ways:

In the first place, they pillage her natural resources; secondly, they grant themselves the exclusive right to sell here the manufactured products she now needs.

And the Burmese are thus drawn into the system of industrial capitalism, with any hope of becoming capitalist industrialists themselves.

Moreover the Burmese, like all the other peoples of India, remain under the rule of the British Empire for purely military considerations. For they are in effect incapable of building ships, manufacturing guns or any other arms necessary for modern warfare, and, as things now stand, if the English were to give up India, it would only result in a change of master. The country would simply be invaded and exploited by some other Power.
British domination in India rests essentially on exchanging military protection for a commercial monopoly, but, as we have tried to show, the bargain is to the advantage of the English whose control reaches into every domain.

* * *

To sum up, if Burma derives some incidental benefit from the English, she must pay dearly for it.

Up till now the English have refrained from oppressing the native people too much because there has been no need. The Burmese are still at the beginning of a period of transition which will transform them from agricultural peasants to workers in the service of the manufacturing industries.

Their situation could be compared with that of any people of eighteenth-century Europe, apart from the fact that the capital, construction materials, knowledge and power necessary for their commerce and industry belong exclusively to foreigners.

So they are under the protection of a despotism which defends them for its own ends, but which would abandon them without hesitation if they ceased to be of use.

Their relationship with the British Empire is that of slave and master.

Is the master good or bad? That is not the question; let us simply say that his control is despotic and, to put it plainly, self-interested.

Even though the Burmese have not had much cause for complaint up till now, the day will come when the riches of their country will be insufficient for a population which is constantly growing.

Then they will be able to appreciate how capitalism shows its gratitude to those to whom it owes its existence.

E.-A. BLAIR

◊ ◊ ◊ ◊ ◊

Note: Raoul Nicole wrote on 22 March 1929, while Orwell was still in the Hôpital Cochin, to say he was sorry Orwell was ill and thanking him for his article on Burma. This would, he said, be included in an early issue of Le Progrès Civique, and, indeed, would have appeared already were it not that the journal had been embarrassed by a large number of articles on foreign affairs. Orwell was paid 225 francs for the article on 11 June. This was the last article he is known to have had published in Paris.

Snowden: What is Glen Greenwald REALLY up to in Brazil...?


Glen Greenwald: La CIA y la NSA espiaron mediante satélites desde Brasil & Slides from Spike1138 on Vimeo.




"An indication that the global financial elite favored regime change in Brazil came in the form of a Financial Times article in 2010 which described José Serra, the ultra-right wing opposition candidate to Dilma Rousseff in the 2010 presidential election campaign, as “by far the better candidate”."







http://www.globalresearch.ca/brazils-vinegar-revolution-neoliberalism-and-the-economic-elites/5346938


NSA Whistleblower Russ Tice Alleges NSA Wiretapped Barack Obama as Senate Candidate from Spike1138 on Vimeo.
“We Don’t Want a Word on Your Allegations Pertaining to NSA Wiretapping of Obama, Judges & Activists”
- MSNBC

Today MSNBC aired an interview with Mr. Tice disclosing “some” of his revelations, thanks to the vigilant activists who tirelessly shared and disseminated Mr. Tice’s revelations and interview audio. Interestingly, at the last minute, MSNBC told Mr. Tice that they would NOT include his revelations on NSA’s targeting of Obama, elected officials, attorneys, judges and activists. Basically, they censored his entire testimony on these stunning allegations! In a correspondence with Boiling Frogs Post immediately following his censored interview with MSNBC Mr. Tice stated:

“When they were placing the ear-phone in my ear with less than ten minutes left till my air time, the producer in New York said that their lawyers were discussing the material, and at this time, they did not want me to mention anything about the NSA wiretaps against all the people and organizations that I mentioned. That is how it went down. I did say on the air that I know it is much worse and would like to talk about that some time.”



MOCKINGBIRD: "Ex-"CIA Agent and "Guardian Journalist" Glenn Greenwald plays Rope-a-Dope with Bill Maher over Colour Revolutions from Spike1138 on Vimeo.

No mention here of the mythical Al-Qaeda beast (thank goodness), but yet another pointless discussion of the diffuse, nebulous and amorphous Umbrella-Front-Coalition that is the rather tedious and toothless Muslim Brotherhood, as it relates to the Modified-limited-hangout Predominantly Liberal mythos of Blowback.

(Plus more banal false dialectic back and forth as to agreed myth that all Muslim societies are by their nature, angry, backward, violent, hateful, regressive, militaristic,undemocratic, disordered, Jew-hating, chaotic, ungrateful, greedy, barbarous and cruel - they merely differ in their apportioning of blame, culpability and shared responsibility for their failure to evolve and learn to eat with the right fork at table.... )

The White Man's Burden of the neoliberal Empire.

It's important always to be frequently reminded that as a petty-Borgoise constituent institution of the Eastern Establishment and the Ivy League, CIA, like State, is predominantly staffed by Liberals (or what passes for liberal in Northern Virginia) in the majority of its career agency, non-political civil service higher functionary levels of management, in particularly high dendity at the Case Officer, Department Head Level.

What in Britain, 5 and MI6 might refer to as the posh toffs layer.

Posh = P-O-S-H. = Port side Out, Starboard side Home.... A relic of the colonial Civil Service and the Liberal Empire.

Much like George Orwell, aka, Eric Blair of the Burma Police.

Burma Provincial Police Training School in Mandalay (1923)



Eric Blair is standing third from left.

Me: "Do you reckon that Bill Maher is Operation Mockingbird....?

I just saw "ex-"CIA Agent and "Guardian Journalist" Glen Greenwald slap him around verbally over blowback in the Muslim World, and it looked for all the world to me like classic Rope-a-Dope setup...

He was more-than-usually obtuse in his belittling of poor brown people of other-nations-that-happen-to-surround-Israel that happen to still actually believe in God - he did his usual condescending "People who pray are all morons" shtick, but then rounded it off with "Yeah, but do you know what they have over there that was don't have here - Theocracy", when I know for solid fact, he doesn't think and in fact knows by years of careful study, research and shoe leather that that absolutely is not true.

He's been to Utah, and as a staunch liberal and thereby de facto champion of teachers and teaching unions, he CANNOT be unaware that the appointments to the Dallas County public school board are by far and away the most important and consequential elected positions in contemporary American Society.

I also became immediately and highly suspicious upon learning that Glen Greenwald speaks perfect fluent Portuguese and was thus working the talk show circuit in Rio and Brasilia immediately prior to the Latin American leg of Snowden's Triumphant 2013 World Tour in support of Amnesty, Asylum and Neoliberal Crowdsourced Colour Revolutions....

I raised that last point to Peter Dale Scott, about the astonishingly happenstance of Greenwald just happening to be fluent in a rather insular tongue predominantly spoken in a grand total of only two nations on Earth; one of them is the largest, most populous and mineral rich nations in Latin America, where the CIA seem, now I'm looking, to have been working overtime, trying to get momentum for a coup going for the whole of the last two or three years, continually; and the other one is Portugal.

He didn't seem all that perturbed by it - "He's lived there for the last few years now, I believe", he said to me,

"So had Jim Jones", I told him...



What's an American journalist writing for the London Guardian doing living in Brazil for years, Skyping with the likes of Snowden's when they crawl out of the woodwork and seek him out...?

That's just barmy.

Monday, 26 August 2013

The Dark Tower


"Minas Maril"

Or

"Barad-Marîl"




"In letters to Rayner Unwin Tolkien considered naming the two as Orthanc and Barad-dûr, Minas Tirith and Barad-dûr, or Orthanc and the Tower of Cirith Ungol.

However, a month later he wrote a note published at the end of The Fellowship of the Ring and later drew a cover illustration which both identified the pair as Minas Morgul and Orthanc."