Sandra Finley

Jan 042016
 

RELATED TO:   2016-06-29 Post-Brexit results: Is governing by referendum democratic? Reply to CBC The Current. Linguistics. Corporatocracy.

 

Bernie Sanders vs. the Corporatocracy   

We are no longer a nation of self-governing people. Our democracy has been captured by American corporate enterprise, and now we confront a documented plutocracy in its place. If we intend to challenge this and contest it, we will need a President Sanders in the White House.

Only candidate Sanders has fashioned a presidential campaign around this crisis which, for thoughtful citizens, is by far the most pressing issue in contemporary public affairs. (Note the record breaking attendance at Sanders’ rallies.) He alone is speaking truth to power regarding it. Hillary Clinton and the Republican candidates are either indifferent to the issue or ignorant of it, so none of their prospective presidencies can be expected to address it.

Corporatocracy is the power to which Mr. Sanders is speaking. It is defined in the New Oxford American Dictionary as “a society…that is governed or controlled by corporations.” In such a society public policy is crafted not to advance the general well being of the people, but to protect, enhance, or create profit opportunities for hegemonic corporations.

This is America today: our democracy has been supplanted, transformed by the engines of corporate lobbying and the influence of corporate campaign contributions.

The source of the calamity is a Supreme Court case in 1886, the infamous Santa Clara County decision. It declared corporations to be legal persons—bona fide U.S. citizens with rights fully protected by the Constitution. (The precedent established by the case is technically illegal, but it has endured nevertheless.) Corporate lobbying, consequently, is an exercise of the right to petition. And the right of free speech legalizes corporate campaign contributions, because spending money is a form of speaking—which the Court affirmed most recently in Citizens United.

A document as a person and a dollar as a word are absurd equivalents, prima facie, but both are the law of the land.

Here is the truth Mr. Sanders is speaking. Except for a privileged few, the wealth and incomes of American families are systematically declining as matters of public policy, arguably for the first time in our history. Economic security is fading for nearly all of us. Standards of living are slipping.

The privileged few are the beneficiaries of corporatocracy: corporate executives and directors, major stockholders, Wall Street bankers and brokers, top-tier Washington lobbyists, holders of inherited wealth, etc. De facto plutocrats, these are the country’s richest families whose wealth and incomes, in vivid contrast, are steadily rising.

There is no doubt about this: the data supporting it is conclusive. And there is no foreseeable reversal of either trend; left unaltered they point eventually, unerringly to a polarized society of dizzying luxury and crushing squalor—a Hunger Games scenario. Some may call this hyperbole and and others may find comfort in ignoring it, but folk wisdom is unyielding here: if somethin’ don’t change, we’re gonna git where we’re headed. So something must change. A chaotic, intolerable social structure is a frightening prospect, and violence is not unthinkable: there are sobering historical precedents of angry citizens taking to the streets.

The maldistribution of wealth and incomes we suffer could not occur in a functioning democracy: self-governing people would never impoverish the many to enrich the few.

No, corporatocracy is directly and exclusively responsible here. Corporocratic governance relentlessly promotes public policies favoring corporate interests over the public good—and just as relentlessly stifles policies that might do otherwise.

We could have but we do not, for example, a national industrial policy prohibiting or restricting the export of American jobs—a policy clearly in the public interest. In its absence, American corporations over the past several decades profited immensely from labor arbitrage: shifting high paying manufacturing and white-collar professional jobs to lower-wage countries. From 1992 through 2010, some 28.7 million such jobs were exported and millions more have been since. If alternate employment could be found at all, it was typically in the lower-paid service sector. This is the greatest single cause of declining family incomes, but many other factors contribute, such as the corporocratic savaging of labor unions.

Repealing the Glass-Steagall Act during the Clinton Administration is an iconic example of enacting public policies for direct corporate benefit—even at great cost to the public. Wall Street banks, brokerages, and insurance companies sought the repeal, they were quickly accommodated, and they profited extravagantly—until the housing bubble they created collapsed, threatening their bankruptcy. Whereupon corporatocracy fashioned a bailout for them, with trillions of dollars of taxpayers’ money. The stock market and the general economy crashed, driving mortgages under water, decimating 401K’s, and forcing many who lost their jobs to liquidate their savings. The decline in family wealth was a direct consequence.

These intertwined issues, the bleak future for American families and the displacement of American democracy, form the core of Mr. Sanders’ campaign. “Enough is enough!” he insists, proposing a political revolution to address them.

Nothing less than revolution will challenge the corporate dominance of our politics and regain our working democracy once more. Among all the presidential candidates Mr. Sanders alone can undertake the task. Hillary Clinton’s handicap is her decades of comfortable experience immersed in the corporatocracy, working its levers, and the substantial corporate financing of her campaigns. She senses no need for the recapture of democracy. If elected, her presidency will offer little more than triangulated tweaking of peripheral issues, to stay within the corporocratic comfort zone. The diverging social trends would continue and so would the potential for violence.

The Republicans’ handicap is their ideology. In denying any value of any sort in any public enterprise (except the Department of Defense), they have furthered corporatocracy’s stranglehold at every turn. A Republican presidency would render our situation unthinkably worse, almost guaranteeing violence.

Will a President Sanders, can a President Sanders retrieve American democracy during his tenure? No, this will take decades, maybe a generation or more. It will require a return to sanity respecting the status and role of the corporation: finally and totally rejecting the absurdity of legal corporate personhood, ultimately by Constitutional amendment or by overturning Santa Clara County.

Corporations fundamentally are commercial organizations providing goods and services to the marketplace, which they typically do efficiently and well. But there is utterly no reason to have corporations involved in crafting public policy, much less to control the process. Absent legal personhood, they can be prohibited from doing so. And they must be: no corporate lobbying, no corporate campaign contributions, only American people—real, live, sentient ones—deciding what’s right and good for the American people.

Regaining our democracy will call for a fight as ugly as anything since the Civil War— hopefully without the bloodshed. Corporatocracy and its wealthy and powerful beneficiaries will not yield quickly or easily.

Mr. Sanders may not live to see the revolution successfully completed. But a President Sanders can and will undertake it, injecting a new set of aspirations and expectations into the public discourse, and setting a trajectory of substantive reform. He will unleash a new narrative, a revolution in awareness and creative thought about the nature of American politics and what it might become once more.

A revolution is on our radar screen. It will be peaceful and gradual or violent and abrupt.

Only by consciously choosing the first of these can we confidently preclude the other.

 

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Richard W. Behan lives in Corvallis, Oregon. He can be reached at: rwbehan@comcast.net.

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Jan 022016
 

Edward Snowden: A ‘Nation’ Interview

November 17, 2014 Issue

In a wide-ranging conversation, he discusses the surveillance state, the American political system and the price he’s paid for his understanding of patriotism.
By Katrina vanden Heuvel and Stephen F. Cohen
October 28, 2014
(All photos by Nicola Cohen)

On October 6, Nation editor and publisher Katrina vanden Heuvel and contributing editor Stephen F. Cohen (professor emeritus of Russian studies at New York University and Princeton) sat down in Moscow for a wide-ranging discussion with Edward Snowden. Throughout their nearly four-hour conversation, which lasted considerably longer than planned (see below for audio excerpts), the youthful-appearing Snowden was affable, forthcoming, thoughtful and occasionally humorous. Among other issues, he discussed the price he has paid for speaking truth to power, his definition of patriotism and accountability, and his frustration with America’s media and political system. The interview has been edited and abridged for publication, compressing lengthy conversations about technological issues that Snowden has discussed elsewhere.

The Nation: It’s very good to be here with you. We visit Moscow often for our work and to see old friends, but you didn’t choose to be in Russia. Are you able to use your time here to work and have some kind of social life? Or do you feel confined and bored?

Snowden: I describe myself as an indoor cat, because I’m a computer guy and I always have been. I don’t go out and play football and stuff—that’s not me. I want to think, I want to build, I want to talk, I want to create. So, ever since I’ve been here, my life has been consumed with work that’s actually fulfilling and satisfying.

The Nation: You have everything you need to continue your work?

Snowden: Yes. You know, I don’t spend all day running hand-on-hat from shadowy figures—I’m in exile. My government revoked my passport intentionally to leave me exiled. If they really wanted to capture me, they would’ve allowed me to travel to Latin America, because the CIA can operate with impunity down there. They did not want that; they chose to keep me in Russia.

The Nation: We understand you’re not a person who gives a high priority to social life, but do you have some here in Moscow?

Snowden: Yeah, I’ve got more than enough for my needs, let’s put it that way.

The Nation: If you feel like just getting together and chatting with people, you can?

Snowden: Yeah, I can. And I do go out. I’ve been recognized every now and then. It’s always in computer stores. It’s something like brain associations, because I’ll be in the grocery store and nobody will recognize me. Even in my glasses, looking exactly like my picture, nobody will recognize me. But I could be totally clean-shaven, hat on, looking nothing like myself in a computer store, and they’re like, “Snowden?!”

The Nation: Are they friendly? Are they generally young people?

Snowden: Yeah, yeah.

The Nation: Well, your video question at that big Putin press conference this year…

Snowden: Yeah, that was terrible! Oh, Jesus, that blew up in my face. I was hoping to catch Putin in a lie—like what happened to Director of National Intelligence James Clapper [in his congressional testimony]. So I asked Putin basically the same questions about Russian mass surveillance. I knew he’s doing the same thing, but he denied it. If a single Russian source would come forward, he would be in hot water. And in the United States, what I did appearing at that Putin press conference was not worth the price.

The Nation: So you don’t feel like a prisoner here?

Snowden: No. For example, I went to St. Petersburg—St. Petersburg is awesome.

The Nation: Do you watch television?

Snowden: I do everything on the computer. TV is obsolete technology for me.

The Nation: Do you watch any American TV?

Snowden: Yeah, I’ve been watching The Wire recently.

The Nation: So you still have an active connection with the United States through the Internet? You follow popular culture?

Snowden: [chuckles] Yeah, but I hate these questions—I don’t like talking about this stuff, because it’s so… to me, it’s so ordinary.

The Nation: But it shows you are an American watching series we’re all watching in America.

Snowden: Yeah, all that stuff—Game of Thrones and all the other series. How about House of Cards? As for Boardwalk Empire—that’s another period of government overreach, but at least they use the amendment process! In real life, the executive branch, by violating the Constitution, is using statutes in place of constitutional amendments to diminish our liberty.

The Nation: How do you do Internet interviews?

Snowden: I built my own studio. I don’t have the professional language to describe it because I’m not a videographer—but I’m a technician. So I get the camera, I get all the things that translate the camera to the computer, I set up a live session, I do the security on it, I set up a background so I can key it out, like newscasters do, and replace it with whatever I want—and I can be anywhere I need to be.

The Nation: Which leads us to ask: How did your knowledge as what you call a “technician” begin to affect your political thought?

Snowden: One concern I had while I was working actively in the intelligence community—being someone who had broad access, who was exposed to more reports than average individuals, who had a better understanding of the bigger picture—was that the post–World War II, post–Cold War directions of societies were either broadly authoritarian or [broadly] liberal or libertarian. The authoritarian one believed that an individual’s rights were basically provided by governments and were determined by states. The other society—ours—tended to believe that a large portion of our rights were inherent and couldn’t be abrogated by governments, even if this seemed necessary. And the question is: Particularly in the post-9/11 era, are societies becoming more liberal or more authoritarian? Are our competitors—for example, China, which is a deeply authoritarian nation—becoming more authoritarian or more liberal over time? Has the center of gravity shifted such that all governments have greater powers and fewer restrictions than they ever had, and are empowered by technology in a way that no government ever was in the past? How do we preserve our civil rights, our traditions as a liberal democracy, in a time when government power is expanding and is more and more difficult to check? Do we want to emulate China in the way that China emulates the West? I think, for most Americans, the answer to that question would be no.

The Nation: Your revelations sparked a debate and caused indignation across political lines. Yet we are seeing very little being done. There is something called the USA Freedom Act, which is watered down to the nth degree, but there’s very little real movement. What’s your sense of the political system, not just in the United States, but the political system needed to make the reforms commensurate with the scale of your revelations?

Snowden: There is more action in some other countries. In Germany, they’ve called for a very serious inquiry that’s discovering more and more. They’ve just discovered a significant violation of the German Constitution that had been concealed from the Parliament. In the United States, there hasn’t been much legislative change on the surveillance issue, although there are some tepid proposals.

The Nation: Jonathan Schell’s last piece for The Nation—he died in March—was about you as a dissident, as a disrupter and as a radical defender of privacy. Jonathan asked a fundamental question: What do Americans do when official channels are dysfunctional or unresponsive? Does change require truth-tellers such as yourself?

Snowden: We are a representative democracy. But how did we get there? We got there through direct action. And that’s enshrined in our Constitution and in our values. We have the right of revolution. Revolution does not always have to be weapons and warfare; it’s also about revolutionary ideas. It’s about the principles that we hold to be representative of the kind of world we want to live in. A given order may at any given time fail to represent those values, even work against those values. I think that’s the dynamic we’re seeing today. We have these traditional political parties that are less and less responsive to the needs of ordinary people, so people are in search of their own values. If the government or the parties won’t address our needs, we will. It’s about direct action, even civil disobedience. But then the state says: “Well, in order for it to be legitimate civil disobedience, you have to follow these rules.” They put us in “free-speech zones”; they say you can only do it at this time, and in this way, and you can’t interrupt the functioning of the government. They limit the impact that civil disobedience can achieve. We have to remember that civil disobedience must be disobedience if it’s to be effective. If we simply follow the rules that a state imposes upon us when that state is acting contrary to the public interest, we’re not actually improving anything. We’re not changing anything.

The Nation: When was the last time civil disobedience brought about change?

Snowden: Occupy Wall Street.

The Nation: One of us might disagree with you. Arguably, Occupy was a very important initiative, but it was soon vaporized.

Snowden: I believe strongly that Occupy Wall Street had such limits because the local authorities were able to enforce, basically in our imaginations, an image of what proper civil disobedience is—one that is simply ineffective. All those people who went out missed work, didn’t get paid. Those were individuals who were already feeling the effects of inequality, so they didn’t have a lot to lose. And then the individuals who were louder, more disruptive and, in many ways, more effective at drawing attention to their concerns were immediately castigated by authorities. They were cordoned off, pepper-sprayed, thrown in jail.

The Nation: But you think Occupy nonetheless had an impact?

Snowden: It had an impact on consciousness. It was not effective in realizing change. But too often we forget that social and political movements don’t happen overnight. They don’t bring change immediately—you have to build a critical mass of understanding of the issues. But getting inequality out there into the consciousness was important. All these political pundits now talking about the 2014 and 2016 elections are talking about inequality.

The Nation: You’ve spoken elsewhere about accountability. Are we witnessing the end of accountability in our country? The people who brought us the financial crisis are back in the saddle. The people who brought us the disaster of the Iraq War are now counseling Washington and the public about US foreign policy today. Or, as you have pointed out, James Clapper lies to Congress without even a slap on the wrist.

Snowden: The surveillance revelations are critically important because they revealed that our rights are being redefined in secret, by secret courts that were never intended to have that role—without the consent of the public, without even the awareness of the majority of our political representatives. However, as important as that is, I don’t think it is the most important thing. I think it is the fact that the director of national intelligence gave a false statement to Congress under oath, which is a felony. If we allow our officials to knowingly break the law publicly and face no consequences, we’re instituting a culture of immunity, and this is what I think historically will actually be considered the biggest disappointment of the Obama administration. I don’t think it’s going to be related to social or economic policies; it’s going to be the fact that he said let’s go forward, not backward, in regard to the violations of law that occurred under the Bush administration. There was a real choice when he became president. It was a very difficult choice—to say, “We’re not going to hold senior officials to account with the same laws that every other citizen in the country is held to,” or “This is a nation that believes in the rule of law.” And the rule of law doesn’t mean the police are in charge, but that we all answer to the same laws. You know, if Congress is going to investigate baseball players about whether or not they told the truth, how can we justify giving the most powerful intelligence official, Clapper, a pass? This is how J. Edgar Hoover ended up in charge of the FBI forever.

The Nation: Do you think people on the congressional intelligence committees knew more than other senators and representatives? That they knew they were being told falsehoods and they remained silent?

Snowden: The chairs absolutely do. They’re part of the “Gang of Eight.” They get briefed on every covert-action program and everything like that. They know where all the bodies are buried. At the same time, they get far more campaign donations than anybody else from defense contractors, from intelligence corporations, from private military companies.

The Nation: This makes us wonder whether or not the Internet actually enhances freedom of speech, and thus democracy? Maybe instead it abets invasion of privacy, reckless opinions, misinformation. What are the Internet’s pluses and minuses for the kind of society that you and The Nation seek?

Snowden: I would say the first key concept is that, in terms of technological and communication progress in human history, the Internet is basically the equivalent of electronic telepathy. We can now communicate all the time through our little magic smartphones with people who are anywhere, all the time, constantly learning what they’re thinking, talking about, exchanging messages. And this is a new capability even within the context of the Internet. When people talk about Web 2.0, they mean that when the Internet, the World Wide Web, first became popular, it was one way only. People would publish their websites; other people would read them. But there was no real back and forth other than through e-mail. Web 2.0 was what they called the collaborative web—Facebook, Twitter, the social media. What we’re seeing now, or starting to see, is an atomization of the Internet community. Before, everybody went only to a few sites; now we’ve got all these boutiques. We’ve got crazy little sites going up against established media behemoths. And increasingly we’re seeing these ultra-partisan sites getting larger and larger readerships because people are self-selecting themselves into communities. I describe it as tribalism because they’re very tightly woven communities. Lack of civility is part of it, because that’s how Internet tribes behave. We see this more and more in electoral politics, which have become increasingly poisonous.
All this is a blessing and a curse. It’s a blessing because it helps people establish what they value; they understand the sort of ideas they identify with. The curse is that they aren’t challenged in their views. The Internet becomes an echo chamber. Users don’t see the counterarguments. And I think we’re going to see a move away from that, because young people—digital natives who spend their life on the 
Internet—get saturated. It’s like a fashion trend, and becomes a sign of a lack of sophistication. On the other hand, the Internet is there to fill needs that people have for information and socialization. We get this sort of identification thing going on nowadays because it’s a very fractious time. We live in a time of troubles.
The Nation: What do you think will emerge from this time of troubles?

Snowden: Look at the reactions of liberal governments to the surveillance revelations during the last year. In the United States, we’ve got this big debate, but we’ve got official paralysis—because they’re the ones who had their hand caught most deeply in the cookie jar. And there are unquestionable violations of our Constitution. Many of our ally states don’t have these constitutional protections—in the UK, in New Zealand, in Australia. They’ve lost the right to be free from unreasonable search and seizure without probable cause. All of those countries, in the wake of these surveillance revelations, rushed through laws that were basically ghostwritten by the National Security Agency to enable mass surveillance without court oversight, without all of the standard checks and balances that one would expect. Which leads us inevitably to the question: Where are we going to reject that easy but flawed process of letting the intelligence services do whatever they want? It’s inevitable that it will happen. I think it’s going to be where Internet businesses go.
For example, Microsoft is in a court battle with the Department of Justice. The DOJ is saying, “We want information from your data center in Ireland. It’s not about a US citizen, but we want it.” Microsoft said, “OK, fine. Go to a judge in Ireland. Ask them for a warrant. We have a mutual legal-assistance treaty. They’ll do it. Give that to us, and we’ll provide the information to you in accordance with Irish laws.” The DOJ said, “No, you’re an American company, and we have access to your data everywhere. It doesn’t matter about jurisdiction. It doesn’t matter about who it’s regarding.” This is a landmark legal case that’s now going through the appeals process. And it matters because if we allow the United States to set the precedent that national borders don’t matter when it comes to the protection of people’s information, other countries are watching. They’re paying attention to our examples and what is normative behavior in terms of dealing with digital information.

The Nation: They still look to us?

Snowden: They still look to us. But just as importantly, our adversaries do as well. So the question becomes what does, for example, the government in the Democratic Republic of Congo or China do the next time they’ve got a dissident Nobel Peace Prize nominee and they want to read his e-mail, and it’s in an Irish data center? They’re going to say to Microsoft, “You handed this stuff over to the DOJ; you’re going to hand the same thing over to us.” And if Microsoft balks, they’ll say, “Look, if you’re going to apply different legal standards here than you do there, we’re going to sanction you in China. We’re going to put business penalties on you that will make you less competitive.” And Microsoft will suffer, and therefore our economy will suffer.

The Nation: Are countries rebelling against this?

 

Snowden: Yes, we see this very strongly, for example, in Brazil. They went to the UN and said, “We need new standards for this.” We need to take a look at what they’re calling “data sovereignty.” Russia recently passed a law—I think a terrible law—which says you have to store all of the data from Russian citizens on Russian soil just to prevent other countries from playing the same kind of legal games we’re playing in this Microsoft case.

 

The Nation: Why is that terrible as a form of sovereignty? What if all countries did that—wouldn’t that break the American monopoly?

 

Snowden: It would break the American monopoly, but it would also break Internet business, because you’d have to have a data center in every country. And data centers are tremendously expensive, a big capital investment.

When we talk about the assertion of basically new government privileges with weak or no justification, we don’t even have to look at international law to see the failings in them. When we look at how, constitutionally, only Congress can declare war, and that is routinely ignored. Not NATO or the UN, but Congress has to authorize these endless wars, and it isn’t.

The Bush administration marked a very serious and profoundly negative turning point—not just for the nation, but for the international order, because we started to govern on the idea of “might makes right.” And that’s a very old, toxic and infectious idea.

 

The Nation: This was a reaction to 9/11?

 

Snowden: A reaction in many ways to 9/11, but also to the Dick Cheney idea of the unitary executive. They needed a pretext for the expansion of not simply federal power, but executive power in particular.

 

The Nation: But how is this new? The White House was doing the same thing in the Watergate scandal, tapping phones and breaking in.

 

Snowden: But the arc has continued. Richard Nixon got kicked out of Washington for tapping one hotel suite. Today we’re tapping every American citizen in the country, and no one has been put on trial for it or even investigated. We don’t even have an inquiry into it.

 

The Nation: In the 1970s, the Church Senate Committee investigated and tried to rein in such things, but we’ve seen the erosion of those reforms.

 

Snowden: That’s the key—to maintain the garden of liberty, right? This is a generational thing that we must all do continuously. We only have the rights that we protect. It doesn’t matter what we say or think we have. It’s not enough to believe in something; it matters what we actually defend. So when we think in the context of the last decade’s infringements upon personal liberty and the last year’s revelations, it’s not about surveillance. It’s about liberty. When people say, “I have nothing to hide,” what they’re saying is, “My rights don’t matter.” Because you don’t need to justify your rights as a citizen—that inverts the model of responsibility. The government must justify its intrusion into your rights. If you stop defending your rights by saying, “I don’t need them in this context” or “I can’t understand this,” they are no longer rights. You have ceded the concept of your own rights. You’ve converted them into something you get as a revocable privilege from the government, something that can be abrogated at its convenience. And that has diminished the measure of liberty within a society.

 

The Nation: That’s a fundamental, conservative American idea, going back to inalienable rights.

 

Snowden: I wonder if it’s conservative or liberal, because when we think of liberal thought, when we think about the relation to liberty, we’re talking about traditional conservatism—as opposed to today’s conservatism, which no longer represents those views.

 

The Nation: Every president—and this seems to be confirmed by history—will seek to maximize his or her power, and will see modern-day surveillance as part of that power. Who is going to restrain presidential power in this regard?

 

Snowden: That’s why we have separate and co-equal branches. Maybe it will be Congress, maybe not. Might be the courts, might not. But the idea is that, over time, one of these will get the courage to do so. One of the saddest and most damaging legacies of the Bush administration is the increased assertion of the “state secrets” privilege, which kept organizations like the ACLU—which had cases of people who had actually been tortured and held in indefinite detention—from getting their day in court. The courts were afraid to challenge executive declarations of what would happen. Now, over the last year, we have seen—in almost every single court that has had this sort of national-security case—that they have become markedly more skeptical. People at civil-liberties organizations say it’s a sea change, and that it’s very clear judges have begun to question more critically assertions made by the executive. Even though it seems so obvious now, it is extraordinary in the context of the last decade, because courts had simply said they were not the best branch to adjudicate these claims—which is completely wrong, because they are the only nonpolitical branch. They are the branch that is specifically charged with deciding issues that cannot be impartially decided by politicians. The power of the presidency is important, but it is not determinative. Presidents should not be exempted from the same standards of reason and evidence and justification that any other citizen or civil movement should be held to. By the way, I must say I’m surprised by how skeptical of the Obama administration 
The Nation has been.

 

The Nation: Critics have long talked about the unwarranted power of “the deep state.”

Snowden: There’s definitely a deep state. Trust me, I’ve been there.

The Nation: About this secretive deep state, are you hopeful? Your revelations are so sweeping, people might think there’s nothing we can do. Or they could lead to actions that challenge, even dismantle, these anti-democratic forces.

 

Snowden: Well, we’ve already seen, in practically every country around the world where these issues have been covered, that the general public has recoiled at the ideology behind these programs.

 

The Nation: I’m sure you’ve heard this, but in German suburbs there are signs in the windows of homes saying “I have a bed for Ed.”

 

Snowden: It’s fascinating to see how things have changed. Basically, every time the US government gets off the soapbox of the Sunday-morning talk shows, the average American’s support for the surveillance revelations grows. People in both parties from the congressional intelligence committees—all these co-opted officials who play cheerleader for spy agencies—go on these Sunday shows and they say: “Snowden was a traitor. He works against Americans. He works for the Chinese. Oh, wait, he left Hong Kong—he works for the Russians.” And when I leave Russia, they’ll go, “Oh, he works for,” I don’t know—“Finland,” or something like that. It doesn’t matter that even the FBI has said it’s not the case and there’s no evidence for it. They’re trying to affect public opinion. But people do not like being lied to, and they do not like having their rights violated. So as soon as they stop making these arguments, you see support for me starts to rise.

 

The Nation: Say there was a national Gallup poll formulating the question like this: “Mr. Snowden has revealed gross violations of your personal liberties and rights through surveillance by the American government. The American government argues it does so to keep you safe from terrorists.” Do you think there would be a majority opinion in your favor? You’ve raised perhaps the most vital issue of our time, but for most Americans, who really are having a harder economic time than they should be having, your issue probably is not high on their list of concerns.

 

Snowden: OK, let me clarify. When I talk about the polling, I’m talking about the principles. It shows these officials are knowingly attempting to shift public opinion, even though they know what they say is not factual. It’s clear it’s public opinion, because elite opinion… I mean, The New York Times and The Guardian came out and said, “Hey, clemency for Snowden.” But for me, the key—and I’ve said this from the beginning: it’s not about me. I don’t care if I get clemency. I don’t care what happens to me. I don’t care if I end up in jail or Guantánamo or whatever, kicked out of a plane with two gunshots in the face. I did what I did because I believe it is the right thing to do, and I will continue to do that. However, when it comes to political engagement, I’m not a politician—I’m an engineer. I read these polls because civil-liberties organizations tell me I need to be aware of public opinion. The only reason I do these interviews—I hate talking about myself, I hate doing this stuff—is because incredibly well-meaning people, whom I respect and trust, tell me that this will help bring about positive changes. It’s not going to cause a sea change, but it will benefit the public.

 

From the very beginning, I said there are two tracks of reform: there’s the political and the technical. I don’t believe the political will be successful, for exactly the reasons you underlined. The issue is too abstract for average people, who have too many things going on in their lives. And we do not live in a revolutionary time. People are not prepared to contest power. We have a system of education that is really a sort of euphemism for indoctrination. It’s not designed to create critical thinkers. We have a media that goes along with the government by parroting phrases intended to provoke a certain emotional response—for example, “national security.” Everyone says “national security” to the point that we now must use the term “national security.” But it is not national security that they’re concerned with; it is state security. And that’s a key distinction. We don’t like to use the phrase “state security” in the United States because it reminds us of all the bad regimes. But it’s a key concept, because when these officials are out on TV, they’re not talking about what’s good for you. They’re not talking about what’s good for business. They’re not talking about what’s good for society. They’re talking about the protection and perpetuation of a national state system.

I’m not an anarchist. I’m not saying, “Burn it to the ground.” But I’m saying we need to be aware of it, and we need to be able to distinguish when political developments are occurring that are contrary to the public interest. And that cannot happen if we do not question the premises on which they’re founded. And that’s why I don’t think political reform is likely to succeed. [Senators] Udall and Wyden, on the intelligence committee, have been sounding the alarm, but they are a minority.

 

The Nation: Explain the technical reform you mentioned.

 

Snowden: We already see this happening. The issue I brought forward most clearly was that of mass surveillance, not of surveillance in general. It’s OK if we wiretap Osama bin Laden. I want to know what he’s planning—obviously not him nowadays, but that kind of thing. I don’t care if it’s a pope or a bin Laden. As long as investigators must go to a judge—an independent judge, a real judge, not a secret judge—and make a showing that there’s probable cause to issue a warrant, then they can do that. And that’s how it should be done. The problem is when they monitor all of us, en masse, all of the time, without any specific justification for intercepting in the first place, without any specific judicial showing that there’s a probable cause for that infringement of our rights.

Since the revelations, we have seen a massive sea change in the technological basis and makeup of the Internet. One story revealed that the NSA was unlawfully collecting data from the data centers of Google and Yahoo. They were intercepting the transactions of data centers of American companies, which should not be allowed in the first place because American companies are considered US persons, sort of, under our surveillance authorities. They say, “Well, we were doing it overseas,” but that falls under a different Reagan-era authority: EO 12333, an executive order for foreign-intelligence collection, as opposed to the ones we now use domestically. So this one isn’t even authorized by law. It’s just an old-ass piece of paper with Reagan’s signature on it, which has been updated a couple times since then. So what happened was that all of a sudden these massive, behemoth companies realized their data centers—sending hundreds of millions of people’s communications back and forth every day—were completely unprotected, electronically naked. GCHQ, the British spy agency, was listening in, and the NSA was getting the data and everything like that, because they could dodge the encryption that was typically used. Basically, the way it worked technically, you go from your phone to Facebook.com, let’s say—that link is encrypted. So if the NSA is trying to watch it here, they can’t understand it. But what these agencies discovered was, the Facebook site that your phone is connected to is just the front end of a larger corporate network—that’s not actually where the data comes from. When you ask for your Facebook page, you hit this part and it’s protected, but it has to go on this long bounce around the world to actually get what you’re asking for and go back. So what they did was just get out of the protected part and they went onto the back network. They went into the private network of these companies.

 

The Nation: The companies knew this?

 

Snowden: Companies did not know it. They said, “Well, we gave the NSA the front door; we gave you the PRISM program. You could get anything you wanted from our companies anyway—all you had to do was ask us and we’re gonna give it to you.” So the companies couldn’t have imagined that the intelligence communities would break in the back door, too—but they did, because they didn’t have to deal with the same legal process as when they went through the front door. When this was published by Barton Gellman in The Washington Post and the companies were exposed, Gellman printed a great anecdote: he showed two Google engineers a slide that showed how the NSA was doing this, and the engineers “exploded in profanity.”

Another example—one document I revealed was the classified inspector general’s report on a Bush surveillance operation, Stellar Wind, which basically showed that the authorities knew it was unlawful at the time. There was no statutory basis; it was happening basically on the president’s say-so and a secret authorization that no one was allowed to see. When the DOJ said, “We’re not gonna reauthorize this because it is not lawful,” Cheney—or one of Cheney’s advisers—went to Michael Hayden, director of the NSA, and said, “There is no lawful basis for this program. DOJ is not going to reauthorize it, and we don’t know what we’re going to do. Will you continue it anyway on the president’s say-so?” Hayden said yes, even though he knew it was unlawful and the DOJ was against it. Nobody has read this document because it’s like twenty-eight pages long, even though it’s incredibly important.

 

The Nation: Your revelations also influenced the development of the iPhone 6’s encryption technology, which the government is saying will impede rightful law enforcement.

 

Snowden: This is the key. The big tech companies understood that the government had not only damaged American principles, it had hurt their businesses. They thought, “No one trusts our products anymore.” So they decided to fix these security flaws to secure their phones. The new iPhone has encryption that protects the contents of the phone. This means if someone steals your phone—if a hacker or something images your phone—they can’t read what’s on the phone itself, they can’t look at your pictures, they can’t see the text messages you send, and so forth. But it does not stop law enforcement from tracking your movements via geolocation on the phone if they think you are involved in a kidnapping case, for example. It does not stop law enforcement from requesting copies of your texts from the providers via warrant. It does not stop them from accessing copies of your pictures or whatever that are uploaded to, for example, Apple’s cloud service, which are still legally accessible because those are not encrypted. It only protects what’s physically on the phone. This is purely a security feature that protects against the kind of abuse that can happen with all these things being out there undetected. In response, the attorney general and the FBI director jumped on a soap box and said, “You are putting our children at risk.”

 

The Nation: Is there a potential conflict between massive encryption and the lawful investigation of crimes?

 

Snowden: This is the controversy that the attorney general and the FBI director were trying to create. They were suggesting, “We have to be able to have lawful access to these devices with a warrant, but that is technically not possible on a secure device. The only way that is possible is if you compromise the security of the device by leaving a back door.” We’ve known that these back doors are not secure. I talk to cryptographers, some of the leading technologists in the world, all the time about how we can deal with these issues. It is not possible to create a back door that is only accessible, for example, to the FBI. And even if it were, you run into the same problem with international commerce: if you create a device that is famous for compromised security and it has an American back door, nobody is gonna buy it. Anyway, it’s not true that the authorities cannot access the content of the phone even if there is no back door. When I was at the NSA, we did this every single day, even on Sundays. I believe that encryption is a civic responsibility, a civic duty.

 

The Nation: For the first time, we understand it’s a civil-rights issue.

 

Snowden: It’s good for me that you’re saying this too, because my whole model, from the beginning, was not to personally publish a single document. I provided these documents to journalists because I didn’t want my biases to decide what’s in the public interest and what is not.

 

The Nation: You are suggesting you don’t want to play a political role, but that train has left the 
station.

 

Snowden: Ha, you sound like the ACLU.

 

The Nation: You have a dilemma. We’ve known or studied a lot of “holy fools,” as Russians say—
determined dissidents who gave up everything for a principle. But eventually people will want to know the next chapter of your life, and it will have to be advocacy. You can’t avoid it. You can’t say, “Well, I’m just a high-tech guy, I let you in on secrets—now leave me alone.”

 

Snowden: Aren’t you familiar with Cincinnatus? That’s the first alias I used.

 

The Nation: You really think that if you could go home tomorrow with complete immunity, there wouldn’t be irresistible pressure on you to become a spokesperson, even an activist, on behalf of our rights and liberties? Indeed, wouldn’t that now be your duty?

 

Snowden: But the idea for me now—because I’m not a politician, and I do not think I am as effective in this way as people who actually prepare for it—is to focus on technical reform, because I speak the language of technology. I spoke with Tim Berners-Lee, the guy who invented the World Wide Web. We agree on the necessity for this generation to create what he calls the Magna Carta for the Internet. We want to say what “digital rights” should be. What values should we be protecting, and how do we assert them? What I can do—because I am a technologist, and because I actually understand how this stuff works under the hood—is to help create the new systems that reflect our values. Of course I want to see political reform in the United States. But we could pass the best surveillance reforms, the best privacy protections in the history of the world, in the United States, and it would have zero impact internationally. Zero impact in China and in every other country, because of their national laws—they won’t recognize our reforms; they’ll continue doing their own thing. But if someone creates a reformed technical system today—technical standards must be identical around the world for them to function together.

 

The Nation: Creating a new system may be your transition, but it’s also a political act.

 

Snowden: In case you haven’t noticed, I have a somewhat sneaky way of effecting political change. I don’t want to directly confront great powers, which we cannot defeat on their terms. They have more money, more clout, more airtime. We cannot be effective without a mass movement, and the American people today are too comfortable to adapt to a mass movement. But as inequality grows, the basic bonds of social fraternity are fraying—as we discussed in regard to Occupy Wall Street. As tensions increase, people will become more willing to engage in protest. But that moment is not now.

 

The Nation: Some years ago, The Nation did a special issue on patriotism. We asked about a hundred people how they define it. How do you define patriotism? And related to that, you’re probably the world’s most famous whistleblower, though you don’t like that term. What characterization of your role do you prefer?

 

Snowden: What defines patriotism, for me, is the idea that one rises to act on behalf of one’s country. As I said before, that’s distinct from acting to benefit the government—a distinction that’s increasingly lost today. You’re not patriotic just because you back whoever’s in power today or their policies. You’re patriotic when you work to improve the lives of the people of your country, your community and your family. Sometimes that means making hard choices, choices that go against your personal interest. People sometimes say I broke an oath of secrecy—one of the early charges leveled against me. But it’s a fundamental misunderstanding, because there is no oath of secrecy for people who work in the intelligence community. You are asked to sign a civil agreement, called a Standard Form 312, which basically says if you disclose classified information, they can sue you; they can do this, that and the other. And you risk going to jail. But you are also asked to take an oath, and that’s the oath of service. The oath of service is not to secrecy, but to the Constitution—to protect it against all enemies, foreign and domestic. That’s the oath that I kept, that James Clapper and former NSA director Keith Alexander did not. You raise your hand and you take the oath in your class when you are on board. All government officials are made to do it who work for the intelligence agencies—at least, that’s where I took the oath.

 

As for labeling someone a whistleblower, I think it does them—it does all of us—a disservice, because it “otherizes” us. Using the language of heroism, calling Daniel Ellsberg a hero, and calling the other people who made great sacrifices heroes—even though what they have done is heroic—is to distinguish them from the civic duty they performed, and excuses the rest of us from the same civic duty to speak out when we see something wrong, when we witness our government engaging in serious crimes, abusing power, engaging in massive historic violations of the Constitution of the United States. We have to speak out or we are party to that bad action.

 

The Nation: Maybe there should be a special course early on for children about patriotic duty to the Constitution.

 

Snowden: It also comes down to parenting. It is important to know what your beliefs are, and that you have to stand up for them or you don’t really believe in them. You know, my father and mother—in fact, every member of my immediate family—have worked for the federal government. Sometimes misunderstood is that I didn’t stand up to overthrow the system. What I wanted to do was give society the information it needed to decide if it wanted to change the system.

 

The Nation: If you believe in representative government, the most direct approach would be to demand that candidates for Congress pledge, if elected, to make every effort to know what the surveillance community is doing and to limit it in the ways you’ve specified. And perhaps, in addition to peppering judicial nominees with questions about abortion, ask how they’re going to rule on surveillance issues.

 

Snowden: There’s a real danger in the way our representative government functions today. It functions properly only when paired with accountability. Candidates run for election on campaign promises, but once they’re elected they renege on those promises, which happened with President Obama on Guantánamo, the surveillance programs and investigating the crimes of the Bush administration. These were very serious campaign promises that were not fulfilled. I considered bringing forward information about these surveillance programs prior to the election, but I held off because I believed that Obama was genuine when he said he was going to change things. I wanted to give the democratic process time to work.

 

The Nation: Considering your personal experience—the risks you took, and now your fate here in Moscow—do you think other young men or women will be inspired or discouraged from doing what you did?

 

Snowden: Chelsea Manning got thirty-five years in prison, while I’m still free. I talk to people in the ACLU office in New York all the time. I’m able to participate in the debate and to campaign for reform. I’m just the first to come forward in the manner that I did and succeed. When governments go too far to punish people for actions that are dissent rather than a real threat to the nation, they risk delegitimizing not just their systems of justice, but the legitimacy of the government itself. Because when they bring political charges against people for acts that were clearly at least intended to work in the public interest, they deny them the opportunity to mount a public-interest defense. The charges they brought against me, for example, explicitly denied my ability to make a public-interest defense. There were no whistleblower protections that would’ve protected me—and that’s known to everybody in the intelligence community. There are no proper channels for making this information available when the system fails comprehensively.

The government would assert that individuals who are aware of serious wrongdoing in the intelligence community should bring their concerns to the people most responsible for that wrongdoing, and rely on those people to correct the problems that those people themselves authorized. Going all the way back to Daniel Ellsberg, it is clear that the government is not concerned with damage to national security, because in none of these cases was there damage. At the trial of Chelsea Manning, the government could point to no case of specific damage that had been caused by the massive revelation of classified information. The charges are a reaction to the government’s embarrassment more than genuine concern about these activities, or they would substantiate what harms were done. We’re now more than a year since my NSA revelations, and despite numerous hours of testimony before Congress, despite tons of off-the-record quotes from anonymous officials who have an ax to grind, not a single US official, not a single representative of the United States government, has ever pointed to a single case of individualized harm caused by these revelations. This, despite the fact that former NSA director Keith Alexander said this would cause grave and irrevocable harm to the nation. Some months after he made that statement, the new director of the NSA, Michael Rogers, said that, in fact, he doesn’t see the sky falling. It’s not so serious after all.

 

The Nation: Considering that tacit exoneration, if you were given a fair trial in the United States, it could be a historic opportunity for you to defend all the principles involved.

 

Snowden: I’ve talked to a lot of pretty good lawyers around the world. I’m non-extraditable. That’s the real reason the US government was pissed off, even when I was initially in Hong Kong. The only way I could be extradited is through the principle of what my lawyers call “politics trumps law.” If it comes to a question of law, the charges they brought against me—the Espionage Act—is called the quintessential political crime. A political crime, in legal terms, is defined as any crime against a state, as opposed to against an individual. Assassination, for example, is not a political crime because you’ve killed a person, an individual, and they’ve been harmed; their family’s been harmed. But the state itself, you can’t be extradited for harming it.

The Nation: But if you could get a guarantee of a fair trial?

Snowden: [laughs] Trust me, we’re not getting that guarantee, because the US administration does not want me to return. People forget how I ended up in Russia. They waited until I departed Hong Kong to cancel my passport in order to trap me in Russia, because it’s the most effective attack they have against me, given the political climate in the United States. If they can show I’m in Russia and pretend that I wear “I Heart Putin” shirts….

 

The Nation: Maybe this is a stretch, but you remind us a bit of the great Soviet-era dissident, Andrei Sakharov.

 

Snowden: I’m familiar with his reputation, but I don’t know his personal history at all.

 

The Nation: He was the co-creator of the Soviet hydrogen bomb, a nuclear scientist. He began to worry about what he’d created, and eventually began to protest government policies. But he didn’t prefer the word “dissident” because, like you, he said: “First, the Soviet Constitution says I have every political right to do what I am doing. And second, the Soviet government is violating its own Constitution, while the people do not know what the government is doing in its name.”

 

Snowden: [laughs] Wow, that sounds familiar. It’s interesting that you mention Sakharov’s creative axis—he had produced something for the government that he then realized was something other than he intended. That’s something [NSA whistleblower] Bill Binney and I share. Binney designed ThinThread, an NSA program that used encryption to try to make mass surveillance less objectionable. It would still have been unlawful and unconstitutional. Binney will argue with you all day about it, but his idea was that it would collect everything about everybody but be immediately encrypted so no one could read it. Only a court could give intelligence officials the key to decrypt it. The idea was to find a kind of a compromise between [privacy rights and] the assertion that if you don’t collect things as they happen, you won’t have them later—because what the NSA really wants is the capability of retrospective investigation. They want to have a perfect record of the last five years of your life, so when you come to their attention, they can know everything about you. I’m not down with that, but Binney was trying to create something like that.

 

The Nation: You also remind us of [Manhattan Project physicist] Robert Oppenheimer—what he created and then worried about.

 

Snowden: Someone recently talked about mass surveillance and the NSA revelations as being the atomic moment for computer scientists. The atomic bomb was the moral moment for physicists. Mass surveillance is the same moment for computer scientists, when they realize that the things they produce can be used to harm a tremendous number of people.

It is interesting that so many people who become disenchanted, who protest against their own organizations, are people who contributed something to them and then saw how it was misused. When I was working in Japan, I created a system for ensuring that intelligence data was globally recoverable in the event of a disaster. I was not aware of the scope of mass surveillance. I came across some legal questions when I was creating it. My superiors pushed back and were like, “Well, how are we going to deal with this data?” And I was like, “I didn’t even know it existed.” Later, when I found out that we were collecting more information on American communications than we were on Russian communications, for example, I was like, “Holy shit.” Being confronted with the realization that work you intended to benefit people is being used against them has a radicalizing effect.

 

The Nation: As we said, we come to Russia a lot. Maybe you don’t want to talk too much about Russia?

 

Snowden: [chuckles] At all.

 

The Nation: Why not? Everybody knows you ended up here by no choice of your own.

 

Snowden: You would be surprised how effective, at least for influencing low-information voters, negative propaganda about me is. Maybe boutique media, maybe people who are reading papers and talking to academics and whatnot, maybe they understand, because they’re high-information. But a lot of people are still unaware that I never intended to end up in Russia. They’re not aware that journalists were live-tweeting pictures of my seat on the flight to Latin America I wasn’t able to board because the US government revoked my passport. There are even a few who still honestly believe I sold information to Putin—like personally, in exchange for asylum. And this is after the Senate Intelligence Committee chair, who gets to read the NSA’s reporting on my activities every morning, said all of these conspiracies are delusional.

 

The Nation: We have a sense, or certainly the hope, we’ll be seeing you in America soon—perhaps sometime after this Ukrainian crisis ends.

Snowden: I would love to think that, but we’ve gone all the way up the chain at all the levels, and things like that. A political decision has been made not to irritate the intelligence community. The spy agencies are really embarrassed, they’re really sore—the revelations really hurt their mystique. The last ten years, they were getting the Zero Dark Thirty treatment—they’re the heroes. The surveillance revelations bring them back to Big Brother kind of narratives, and they don’t like that at all. The Obama administration almost appears as though it is afraid of the intelligence community. They’re afraid of death by a thousand cuts—you know, leaks and things like that.

 

The Nation: Speaking of films, we understand that in addition to Laura Poitras’s documentary Citizenfour, a couple of others will be made about you.

 

Snowden: Anything to get people talking about the issues is great. I’m not a movie guy. I don’t know all this stuff that comes with celebrity. I don’t know who the actors will be and stuff like that. But anybody who wants to talk about the issues—that’s great.

 

The Nation: You already are a celebrity.

 

Snowden: People say that, but I’ve only had to sign autographs for “civ-libs” types. And I autograph court orders.

 

The Nation: Maybe, but you need a strategy of how you’re going to use your celebrity, for better or worse. You own it. You can’t get rid of it.

 

Snowden: [laughs] Well, that’s kind of damning!

 

The Nation: And you don’t know what lies ahead. Fortune sometimes turns very suddenly, 
unexpectedly.

 

Snowden: Then let’s hope the surprises are good ones.

 

The Nation: You’ve given us a lot of time, and we are very grateful, as will be The Nation’s and other readers. But before we end, any more thoughts about your future?

 

Snowden: If I had to guess what the future’s going to look like for me—assuming it’s not an orange jumpsuit in a hole—I think I’m going to alternate between tech and policy. I think we need that. I think that’s actually what’s missing from government, for the most part. We’ve got a lot of policy people, but we have no technologists, even though technology is such a big part of our lives. It’s just amazing, because even these big Silicon Valley companies, the masters of the universe or whatever, haven’t engaged with Washington until recently. They’re still playing catch-up.

As for my personal politics, some people seem to think I’m some kind of archlibertarian, a hyper-conservative. But when it comes to social policies, I believe women have the right to make their own choices, and inequality is a really important issue. As a technologist, I see the trends, and I see that automation inevitably is going to mean fewer and fewer jobs. And if we do not find a way to provide a basic income for people who have no work, or no meaningful work, we’re going to have social unrest that could get people killed. When we have increasing production—year after year after year—some of that needs to be reinvested in society. It doesn’t need to be consistently concentrated in these venture-capital funds and things like that. I’m not a communist, a socialist or a radical. But these issues have to be 
addressed.

 

Katrina vanden Heuvel is Editor and Publisher of The Nation.

 

Stephen F. Cohen Stephen F. Cohen is a professor emeritus of Russian studies and politics at New York University and Princeton University and a contributing editor of The Nation.

Dec 202015
 

This is further to:   15-06- 06 Epigenetics & Trauma. A further consideration, cellular memory passed inter-generationally. Residential Schools. 

http://discovermagazine.com/2013/may/13-grandmas-experiences-leave-epigenetic-mark-on-your-genes

Dan Hurley  June 25, 2015

trait-1b
Alison Mackey/DISCOVER

Your ancestors’ lousy childhoods or excellent adventures might change your personality, bequeathing anxiety or resilience by altering the epigenetic expressions of genes in the brain.

[This article originally appeared in print as “Trait vs. Fate”]

Darwin and Freud walk into a bar. Two alcoholic mice — a mother and her son — sit on two bar stools, lapping gin from two thimbles.

The mother mouse looks up and says, “Hey, geniuses, tell me how my son got into this sorry state.”

“Bad inheritance,” says Darwin.

“Bad mothering,” says Freud.

For over a hundred years, those two views — nature or nurture, biology or psychology — offered opposing explanations for how behaviors develop and persist, not only within a single individual but across generations.

And then, in 1992, two young scientists following in Freud’s and Darwin’s footsteps actually did walk into a bar. And by the time they walked out, a few beers later, they had begun to forge a revolutionary new synthesis of how life experiences could directly affect your genes — and not only your own life experiences, but those of your mother’s, grandmother’s and beyond.

The bar was in Madrid, where the Cajal Institute, Spain’s oldest academic center for the study of neurobiology, was holding an international meeting. Moshe Szyf, a molecular biologist and geneticist at McGill University in Montreal, had never studied psychology or neurology, but he had been talked into attending by a colleague who thought his work might have some application. Likewise, Michael Meaney, a McGill neurobiologist, had been talked into attending by the same colleague, who thought Meaney’s research into animal models of maternal neglect might benefit from Szyf’s perspective.

“I can still visualize the place — it was a corner bar that specialized in pizza,” Meaney says. “Moshe, being kosher, was interested in kosher calories. Beer is kosher. Moshe can drink beer anywhere. And I’m Irish. So it was perfect.”

The two engaged in animated conversation about a hot new line of research in genetics. Since the 1970s, researchers had known that the tightly wound spools of DNA inside each cell’s nucleus require something extra to tell them exactly which genes to transcribe, whether for a heart cell, a liver cell or a brain cell.

One such extra element is the methyl group, a common structural component of organic molecules. The methyl group works like a placeholder in a cookbook, attaching to the DNA within each cell to select only those recipes — er, genes — necessary for that particular cell’s proteins. Because methyl groups are attached to the genes, residing beside but separate from the double-helix DNA code, the field was dubbed epigenetics, from the prefix epi (Greek for over, outer, above).

Originally these epigenetic changes were believed to occur only during fetal development. But pioneering studies showed that molecular bric-a-brac could be added to DNA in adulthood, setting off a cascade of cellular changes resulting in cancer. Sometimes methyl groups attached to DNA thanks to changes in diet; other times, exposure to certain chemicals appeared to be the cause. Szyf showed that correcting epigenetic changes with drugs could cure certain cancers in animals.

Geneticists were especially surprised to find that epigenetic change could be passed down from parent to child, one generation after the next. A study from Randy Jirtle of Duke University showed that when female mice are fed a diet rich in methyl groups, the fur pigment of subsequent offspring is permanently altered. Without any change to DNA at all, methyl groups could be added or subtracted, and the changes were inherited much like a mutation in a gene.

 Now, at the bar in Madrid, Szyf and Meaney considered a hypothesis as improbable as it was profound: If diet and chemicals can cause epigenetic changes, could certain experiences — child neglect, drug abuse or other severe stresses — also set off epigenetic changes to the DNA inside the neurons of a person’s brain? That question turned out to be the basis of a new field, behavioral epigenetics, now so vibrant it has spawned dozens of studies and suggested profound new treatments to heal the brain.

According to the new insights of behavioral epigenetics, traumatic experiences in our past, or in our recent ancestors’ past, leave molecular scars adhering to our DNA. Jews whose great-grandparents were chased from their Russian shtetls; Chinese whose grandparents lived through the ravages of the Cultural Revolution; young immigrants from Africa whose parents survived massacres; adults of every ethnicity who grew up with alcoholic or abusive parents — all carry with them more than just memories.

Like silt deposited on the cogs of a finely tuned machine after the seawater of a tsunami recedes, our experiences, and those of our forebears, are never gone, even if they have been forgotten. They become a part of us, a molecular residue holding fast to our genetic scaffolding. The DNA remains the same, but psychological and behavioral tendencies are inherited. You might have inherited not just your grandmother’s knobby knees, but also her predisposition toward depression caused by the neglect she suffered as a newborn.

Or not. If your grandmother was adopted by nurturing parents, you might be enjoying the boost she received thanks to their love and support. The mechanisms of behavioral epigenetics underlie not only deficits and weaknesses but strengths and resiliencies, too. And for those unlucky enough to descend from miserable or withholding grandparents, emerging drug treatments could reset not just mood, but the epigenetic changes themselves. Like grandmother’s vintage dress, you could wear it or have it altered. The genome has long been known as the blueprint of life, but the epigenome is life’s Etch A Sketch: Shake it hard enough, and you can wipe clean the family curse.

Dec 172015
 

DISCLOSURE OF DOCUMENTS

NUMBER OF HITS on Category X1 and X1A during period of password removal.

  • Summary:   not possible to obtain (unless you are the CIA?!).

   Dan Schalm and Jeff Fisher (tech specialists) in email thread below say there isn’t a way to obtain the data.    In addition, I made concentrated effort to find a way through the WordPress stats package (JetPack) that is on my blog.  Answer:  no way I can find.   I had a look at Google Analytics.  At an entry cost of $150 which doesn’t include modifications you might possibly be able to generate the data.   However,  I believe I would have had to sign up before the period that began in 2014 in order for Google Analytics to have the data.

Conclusion:   not possible.

—–Original Message—–  (In reverse chronological order)

From: Jeff Fisher  (LFC Hosting)

Sent: December 14, 2016 1:23 PM

To: Sandra Finley

Subject: Re: re back end data, hits on specific pages

There isn’t I’m afraid.

Thanks,

Jeff

– – – – – – – –

On 14/12/16 02:21 PM, Sandra Finley wrote:

Hi Jeff,

Dan, who you may remember in association with my blog, suggested asking you. If you know the answer, I will figure out how to use your analytics.

If the answer if “No”, I will not work on something that doesn’t exist!:

QUESTION: Does LFC have a traffic analytics system set up on your server that goes back to time segment June 20, 2014 to May 7, 2015 (for categories X1 and X1A).

Thanks Jeff.    /Sandra

– – – – – – – –

From: Dan

Sent: December 13, 2016 11:10 PM

To: Sandra Finley

Subject: Re: re back end data, hits on specific pages

Hello Sandra. Unfortunately the site stats don’t break into details, just summaries for the time period you mentioned. It might be worth contacting Jeff, he may.

Dan

Dec 142015
 

My Christmas gift of joy to each of you is three little telephone calls.  I had great fun wrapping each up with a big bow.  Read on to receive yours!

Pamela Wallin claimed Senate travel expenses back-and-forth to her “home” in Wadena, Saskatchewan.  Wallin lives in Toronto.   When she was caught with her hand in the cookie jar,  she had a valid Ontario Health Card giving her primary residence as Toronto.

Nobody needs a rule book to know that what she did was wrong.

Pamela Wallin is skilled at excusing herself.  And oh!  she repaid $151 thousand.

Conservative Senator Bob Runciman offers:  (2015-12-10 Senators have little interest in suspending Pamela Wallin a 2nd time  CBC)

he’s comfortable with having her back (in Senate).  “I think anyone who is left out there twisting in the wind for over two years, it’s not right . . . “.

And by the way, it’s the fault of the RCMP because they haven’t brought charges against her yet.

Conservative leader in the Senate Claude Carignan and Conservative Senator Carolyn Stewart Olsen say Wallin should continue to sit.  (A classic example of the need for independent, arms’ length audit and adjudication, whether for doctors, lawyers, municipal council, NGO’s or senators – – human beings in joint cause bond with each other, they lose their ability to see clearly).

As I see it,  Pamela Wallin in her Senate job is an employee of the citizens of Canada.  If employees wrongfully take $150,000,  the employer takes action to recover the money,  AND the employee loses their job and all its benefits, including any right to severance pay.  The employee will often be prosecuted, pay a fine and do time in jail.

The costs of corrupted leadership (Senators are in leadership roles) is more than the cost inflicted by the individual leader. People gifted with leadership positions in a society are, by definition, role models.  To the extent that we allow leadership positions to be filled by self-serving, corrupt role models,  we should expect those traits to be reflected in the society.

Penalties for people in leadership roles who break the public trust should be harsher than for others because their actions do great damage to support for our system of governance.  Corruption undermines and erodes the base.  If ten Senators do what Wallin does, that’s $1.5 million dollars.  It creates an incentive for people not to pay taxes.

Long ago my Dad told me he didn’t mind paying taxes because the money was needed and well spent.  It helped out.  His view changed as corruption increased.  He cursed the perpetrators and begrudged paying taxes – – too much flows into the wrong pockets.

The more that citizens are lax in the expectation and insistence on meritorious behavior in public service. the faster will corruption spread.   The society enters a downward spiral – – greater inequity as resources are diverted away from serving the public need into the hands of the “influential”.

Inequity inexorably feeds violence.  I think we know that.

(Human beings have an innate sense of what is “fair”.  Parents and teachers deal with shouts, fights and tears over “that’s not fair!”.)

NO, to Pamela Wallin.

The four Senators,  Wallin, Runciman, Carignan and Olsen, were appointed to Canadian leadership roles in the Senate by a “Tough on Crime” Administration, ironically.  They appear to believe that what is good for the goose (their employers, us citizens). isn’t good for the gander (their cozy elite).  Some are downright brazen in their contempt for the gooses!

My little gift to you, fellow citizen:

I telephoned the offices of Runciman, Olsen and Carignan on your behalf (without prior consent, but with hope you will like your present).   The calls were answered immediately by the Senator’s Policy Advisor.   I asked for the Senator,  none were in.  But never mind, the Advisors were most agreeable to passing along my sentiments to their Senator.

I told them the Senators are out of touch with people if they think that it’s okay not to take the steps to bar Wallin from Senate  (basically the reasons provided above).   Added:  Canadians-in-the-street are kinda angry.   One of the Advisors was of the same view as me, needed no convincing.    I had some little laughs with two of them.  I had the feeling that Conservative partisans are quite happy to actually hear what is being told to them.  (? effects of the Senate scandals and Election results?)

They seemed to be genuine in their expression of thanks for the call.  It provides them with what they need to give their Senator a shake.

If you like,  here are the 3 phone numbers or email addresses if you want to  give the same little gift, to some of your friends, as you received from me.

A few times over the years, there has been no need to take to the streets, banging our pots and pans as they do in Quebec.  A small effort by some of us, phone calls or emails under the right circumstances, have the power to stop some of the corruption, serving as deterrence for more.

From the information in   2015-12-10 Senators have little interest in suspending Pamela Wallin a 2nd time

the Senators to contact, the ones who need to say NO, PAMELA WALLIN:

Claude Carignan,  613-992-0240  or 1-800-267-7362,  claude.carignan@sen.parl.gc.ca

Carolyn Stewart-Olsen, 613-992-0121  or 1-800-267-7362,  carolyn.stewartolsen@sen.parl.gc.ca

Bob Runciman, : (613) 943-4020,  barry.raison@sen.parl.gc.ca

 

Just tell them what you think.  

Things are happning in our ol’ world!  What a great time to be alive.

It brings me joy to join in the movements, even if it’s in small ways.

WISHING you peace this Christmas season will have little effect.

ACTIONING  corruption does have the potential.

It may be a long path from corruption to violence, but they are connected.  Look south of the border.

Dec 142015
 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/pamela-wallin-senate-suspension-1.3359939 

Those who ousted her from Red Chamber in 2013 note that RCMP have not laid charges

By Hannah Thibedeau, CBC News

After two years with no pay or privileges, Senator Pamela Wallin is back to work in the Senate — and those who led the charge to suspend her have little interest in expelling her again.

The former broadcast journalist and diplomat was ejected two years ago over questions about her travel expenses, but that suspension ended when Parliament dissolved in August for the federal election.

Wallin remains the subject of an RCMP investigation.

But those senators who once voted to kick her out have little appetite to sanction her a second time.

Conservative leader in the Senate Claude Carignan does not think another motion should be put forward.

“Before we had a report from the internal economy [committee], we decided to use our disciplinary process; we did, she had a sanction, she served the sanction and now she has the constitutional obligation to be here,” he said.

Fellow Conservative Senator Carolyn Stewart Olsen, who was a key member of the internal economy committee that sat in judgment and wrote the report on Wallin, now says Wallin should continue to sit.

li-pamela-wallin-cp03987495

Senator Pamela Wallin is back to work in the red chamber, and there appears to be little interest in suspending her a second time. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)

“She hasn’t been charged,” she said.

In an interview with CBC News chief correspondent Peter Mansbridge in 2013, Wallin apologized for mistakes she may have made when filing travel claims.

She has since paid back a total of $154,191.

But according to court documents, the RCMP believe Wallin committed fraud and breach of trust by asking the Senate to reimburse her travel expenses for private business.

She has not been charged.

Senator Bob Runciman, who also voted to oust Wallin, said he’s comfortable with having her back.

“I think anyone who is left out there twisting in the wind for over two years, it’s not right and it reflects badly on the RCMP,” he said

Dec 132015
 

ATTACHED:   appn-qb-1-notice-of-appn-request-expedited-procedure

From: Sandra Finley Sent: December 7, 2016 6:18 PM To: ‘s.sinclair@rslaw.com’  Subject: Ashu Solo v. Sandra Finley, QB #500 of 2015, Seek input re Notice of Application

Dec 7, 2016

Shawn Sinclair

Robertson Stromberg LLP Saskatoon, Saskatchewan  Direct Line: (306) 933-1367

 

Dear Shawn,

RE:  Request for legal advice.

Ashu Solo v. Sandra Finley, Court of Queen’s Bench #500 from 2015

 

Following is Information about the case, and then the question:

  • Would a legal opinion be sufficient, or
  • am I sufficiently deficient such that I should employ your services to full-out represent me?!

 

Origin of case: 

December 10, 2013    Ashu Solo, 42 years old at the time, began what is now a 3-year campaign against me.

Why?  . . .  because I forwarded the complaint of a 26-year-old woman (Tonia Zimmerman) about his use of Green Party social media.  I forwarded the complaint to the Ottawa office of the Green Party (Ethics Committee) for independent, 3rd-party resolution.   (As it turned out, Solo’s inappropriate use of GP social media was merely an expansion of cyberbullying of Zimmerman that had been on-going for a year.  He was 42 years old.)

Ashu was angry that the complaint was forwarded; one obvious reason – it might affect his intention to become a candidate for public office, through the Green Party.   Initially his attacks were to discredit me.

The Claim against me:  defamation

Co-defendant:    (Loosefoot Computing, blog hosting service, Regina.  Co-owner Andrew MacCorquodale, Counsel Paul Wagner, MacDougall Gauley)

My Counsel:

  1. January 16, 2015   Daniel Reid, Harper-Grey, Vancouver.  (BC-based Domain Name Registrar required relief from Ashu Solo’s attacks on them.  I employed a BC-based lawyer who was excellent.)However, continuing with Daniel would have required him to take out Sask license, and I would have potential travel costs to add to legal bills.   SO ….
  2. July 22, 2015   Grant Scharfstein, Saskatoon, junior lawyer Samuel Edmondson  took over.
  3. October 24, 2016    Self-Representation.   I had advised Counsel I would self-represent beginning with Mediation.  Legal bills now totalled about $25,000 and we had not even started Mediation.   (It is customary in blog service that clients cover legal costs that might occur in relation to blog, which the Plaintiff knows and which accounts for roughly half of the legal bills.)

EVENTS LEADING TO THE NEED FOR LEGAL OPINION

  1. Nov 22 MEDIATION.  The 3 Parties, 2 lawyers  and Mediator were gathered around the table.  When it came my turn to present my 5 minute perspective,  the Defendant effectively prevented me from being heard by coming across the table at me with non-stop loud shouting, “Stop lying!  Stop lying!”,  ending with “fucking bitch”.    More details (confidential), egregious,  are in attached word doc.

I believe it was a calculated move.  The Plaintiff knew the Mediator would bring a stop, which is what happened.  The Plaintiff could risk such behavior because what happens in Mediation is confidential and can’t be used in court proceedings.   (Maybe.)

2.  Nov 28   I proposed to Plaintiff’s lawyer that we proceed with Expedited procedure.

3.  Nov 29   Plaintiff declines;  I accept the declination.

4.  December 6    I rescinded acceptance of Plaintiff’s rejection of Expedited procedure and advised his Counsel that under provisions in Court of Queen’s Bench Rules I am submitting documents to the Court requesting to go directly to Trial (Expedited procedure).  And that I had talked with the Deputy Registrar – – the normally confidential information from Mediation would accompany the Application, but in a separate, sealed, and labeled envelope.

5.  DRAFT Notice of Application is attached.  The Confidential information from Mediation is damning.   In my estimation, a trial judge should be privy to it.  And CQB Rules, as I interpret them, allow for it.  (Details of which Rules and Legislation I “interpreted” (ha ha!) are in the DRAFT Appn.

6.  December 7   The OBJECTIONS and advice from Plaintiff’s Counsel, Tyler Dahl – – attached email.  (Furthermore, since your application has no hope of succeeding, we will serve a formal offer in response to any such application, in order to be awarded double costs.) 

WHAT IS THE LEGAL OPINION REQUESTED?

        1. I can’t be objective – I like my interpretation of the Rules and Act!   In my mind,  the Plaintiff’s arguments can be refuted.   And the wording in the DRAFT Notice of Application can be altered so the refutation is clear.
        2. If an objective analysis leads to conclusion that he has a strong base upon which to successfully challenge the Application, perhaps there is some other way to obtain Expedited procedure, and to get the confidential information from Mediation before the Court?(There has to be some way to stop what Ashu Solo is doing.  The Police won’t bring charges – complaints from different people (which I have documented)  but no broken bones.)
        3. Who should be representing me – – you or me?!

WORKING RELATIONSHIP, AND BILLING FOR YOUR SERVICES   – – to be discussed and determined.

NOTE re DOCUMENTATION:   I have a substantial store of documentation, mostly indexed,  under password protection with “subject” disguised, junk before the actual content to avoid possibility of disclosure through auto-generated reveal of opening lines of the posting,  and in “category” that is opaque (X1A, X1B).

Thank-you for considering my exploration of how we might work together,  I look forward to conversation.

Dec 102015
 

See:     2015-09-08-reply-to-request-for-particulars  

(from Ashu’s lawyer)

– – – – – – – – – – – – – –

My input to my lawyer in response.

From: Sandra Finley  Sent: September 8, 2015 5:51 PM To: ‘Peggy Anderson’  Cc: Samuel Edmondson

Subject: RE: Yourself and Ashu Solo

 

My response regarding the allegations:

  1.  The first box : WorldComp URL  and my blog page   http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=11503

The content of the posting (11503)  shows that the WorldComp URL was sent to me.   Sent: August-28-13 10:38 AM.

I did not write the material on the WorldComp URL.

I responded to the email I received reasonably and responsibly:

I propose we let it play out for a while yet.

The difficulty is in knowing which information to trust

2.  The first box:   WorldComp URL  and my blog page   http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=11491

This is a duplication of #1.    Sent: August-28-13 10:38 AM.

3.  The second box:  WorldComp URL  and my blog page   http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=11963

See following.  There is nothing defamatory in the material I posted.   It is a reasonable investigation and reporting back with a statement of facts.

Ashu’s name is apparently associated with WORLDCOMP.  Googling “site: world-academy-of-science.org      ashu” yields about 1100 hits.  For instance, Ashu is listed      at http://www.world-academy-of-science.org/worldcomp08/ws/conferences/swws08/committee      among the Members of Program & Organizing Committee for WorldComp’08.

I have found WORLDCOMP denounced as bogus in the following pages, including frequent mention of Ashu Solo’s involvement:

  • (As of April 11, 2017:  This link has been broken for 26 days.)  http://www.qualityofconferences.com/  

 

I can’t verify the credentials of the people making the accusations, but the number of different sources and the number of references given, at least in the first of the three sites, means it’s a little hard to dismiss all that as the work of a single crank.

4.   The third box:  a google site (URL)  and my blog page   http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=11963

This is a duplication of #3.    I have no interest in the Google site.  I did not author it.   I listed it because it showed up in the search I did.

5.   The fourth box: “quality of conferences” (URL),  and my blog page   http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=11963

Again, this is a duplication of #3.    I have no interest in the  “quality of conferences” site.  I did not author it.   I listed it because it showed up in the search I did.

6.   The fifth box: “tzmaxx” (URL)  and my blog page   http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=11775

If you click on tzmaxx, it is “not found”.    I cannot respond to this allegation, other than to say I have one blog  (www.sandrafinley.ca).    I maintain my credibility by the quality of the content.

7.   Regarding Allegation #2 that there are 202 hyperlinks.

I am not going to count;  I accept Mr. Solo’s count.  It is irrelevant.  The question, of course, is whether the material is defamatory.

– – – – – – –  – —

*APPENDED:

From  http://worldcomp-fake-bogus.blogspot.ca 

2). Hamid Arabnia’s Anti-Christmas Greetings Campaign:

The key person in Hamid Arabnia’s WORLDCOMP is Ashu Solo (AMG Solo or Ashu M.G. Solo).  Ashu Solo is the mouth-piece of Hamid Arabnia and he sends call-for-papers to almost all mailing lists and blogs in the world. See some sample call-for-papers are available: here or here or here or here or here or here . Ashu Solo is also the co-editor and co-author of many fake publications of WORLDCOMP. Click here to see his publications from DBLP and notice Hamid Arabnia’s name in almost all WORLDCOMP publications (note that DBLP stopped listing WORLDCOMP publications after 2010, once its fakeness was revealed).
In almost all western countries, “Merry Christmas” is used to express best wishes or good luck during Christmas season and this is a centuries-old tradition. However, Ashu Solo didn’t like this and he protested. Click here or here or here or here or here or here for details (or search Google using the words Ashu Solo, Christmas). Hamid Arabnia was the actual person behind this anti-Christmas greetings campaign. Ashu Solo was used as a mask for Hamid Arabnia. WORLDCOMP money is used to file complaints and lawsuits.
If Christmas greetings appear wrong to Hamid Arabnia (i.e., Ashu Solo) then why didn’t the fake conference WORLDCOMP business appear wrong?

 

Dec 102015
 

000078e8     June 24, 2015    Amended Statement of Claim

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

My response to my lawyer,  June 24.   (Note to myself:  excerpted from  Repeated requests.  Please supply the details of what is defamatory..

 

Re inclusion of web hosting services

(LFC and Fishnet) in the Statement of Claim,   . . . .   Fishnet is in Russia – – Ashu’s lawyer (Tyler) should know that the Court has no jurisdiction there.   . . .   wasting Ashu’s money . . .

Re the claim itself:

I read the first part and stopped.   It is, as are earlier communications,  a twisted version of information.

Furthermore and as before,  it is full of examples that do not meet the legal criteria for defamation;  you can tell just by the wording.   Really, it is a continuation of what has been received to date.  We repeatedly requested that they provide claims that meet criteria.

It has the appearance of being a document prepared by Ashu and given to the lawyer, Tyler, to submit.

I am thinking there are two options:

  1. A counter-claim, as we discussed earlier.   Probably the preferable option.
  2. I can go item-by-item and refute these claims (an odious waste of my time).   Unless a counter-claim were to shut him down.

I will leave password protection in place for the time being.