Sandra Finley

Aug 032010
 

Janette Doering, Calgary Herald

Published: Tuesday, August 03, 2010

For the last census, I received the long form. After answering the first few questions regarding age, marital status, etc., which the government already knows about me anyway, I began reading the questions carefully. I wrote on the subsequent pages “I respectfully decline to answer any further questions” and mailed it back to Statistics Canada. About two weeks went by before someone from StatsCan called to ask why I didn’t fill out the rest of the form. I explained that I didn’t think it was anyone else’s business to know what I pay for power or groceries or how much I still owe on my mortgage. That information is between me and various service providers. The StatsCan employee responded with, “You’re not the only one.” I left it at that. To all politicians, policy-makers and bureaucrats who think this information is so vital in forming your platforms, promises and red-tape plans, know this: I pay too much in taxes already for the lack of services from all levels of government, I pay too much in service fees to corporations to supply power, cable, phone, etc. And I think everyone is paying way too much attention to this whole issue. Should I again be selected to receive the long form, I will, again, respectfully decline to answer.

Janette Doering,

Canmore

© Calgary Herald 2010
Jul 312010
 

Margaret Fehr says, Believing this was not a mandatory census, I declined.   Margaret received a labour “survey”.   She is correct, StatsCan surveys are voluntary.  The law on StatsCan “surveys” (happen in between censuses)  is at   Are StatsCan surveys mandatory?  Interpretation of the Law.

 

Margaret Fehr’s letter-to-the-editor:

http://www2.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/news/forum/story.html?id=ecd05711-47bc-4869-a388-6544b92ca59d

Harassed by StatsCan

Margaret Fehr, The StarPhoenix

Published: Saturday, July 31, 2010

I received in the mail a few years ago a notice that a labour census was to be completed for Statistics Canada. Believing this was not a mandatory census, I declined.

What a mistake that was.

For the next year and a half, I was hounded and harassed by Statistics Canada, with rude people arriving on my doorstep. I received phone calls day and night, telling me that I had to take part in the labour census.

Finally, I received a letter on StatsCan letterhead with no date or signature, stating I would be taken to court if I did not comply. I contacted my MP who, being quite familiar with StatsCan tactics, told me not to worry about it.

The next year I received the long form census. One of the questions asked if I prefer to have sex with males or females.

Unfortunately, my dog knocked a full cup of coffee on the form. I sure hope Statistics Canada enjoyed the soggy census!

Margaret Fehr

Saskatoon

© The StarPhoenix (Saskatoon) 2010
Jul 292010
 

Thanks to John Keen for identifying it as “make war against those who make war” (Lockheed Martin).

It is the leaders, the power at the top, who create the war.  They profit.  It is the everyday citizens joined around the world who pay and who will put a stop to it.  The balance of power in the world has changed.

== = = == = = = = =

In the reading of “to Eric” (below), it is important to understand the consequences of “offset agreements” in Government contracts.

Canadians are paying more than $11 billion dollars to Lockheed Martin Corporation through various Government contracts.  Through offset agreements in the contracts, 75% of those taxes then go to build the military-industrial-parliamentary complex in Canada.  Lockheed is in the business of killing people and destroying the environment.  The Canadian economy will become as dependent upon the waging of war and as debt-laden, as the American.  IF we allow it.

NEVER has killing solved any problems.  It creates terrorists, it drives us into indebtedness (we pay taxes in order to pay billions of dollars in dividends for share-holders and in interest to banks), it de-stabilizes, it means that we do not have money to invest in the new economy which is one based on caring for the Earth and for others.

Get rid of immoral corporations.  Please read on;  the situation is more complex than just that, understand the WHY of the growing American military presence in Canada.  The remedy calls for booting out Lockheed Martin Corporation.  You can do that by refusing to cooperate with the May 2011 census, as long as Lockheed Martin with sub-contractor IBM has census contracts.

And fight to hold onto the unconditional Charter Right to Privacy.  It is critical.

– – – – – – – – – – –  —  – – — – –

Hi Eric,

There is one clear, simple and right position to take on the census long form.   The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Right to Privacy, is essential and must be upheld.  The census long form cannot be mandatory.  No accompanying contortions are necessary.

Existing law (the Charter Right to Privacy, Section 8 case law) says:  the Government cannot force citizens to hand over a  biographical core of personal information which  individuals ina free and democratic society would wish to maintain  — ANDcontrol from dissemination to the State.   (The Conservative announcement that the long form is no longer mandatory is not changing anything.  They are stating what was already the case.  As you know I am on trial for refusing to fill in the 2006 census.  I did so because of Lockheed Martin Corporation’s involvement in the Canadian census.  Lockheed Martin is the American military.)

The point:   Statistical data IN COMPARISON TO the Charter Right to Privacy (biographical core of personal information) is secondary.

If the information previously sent does not convince you that the Green Party must uphold the rule of law (Charter Right to Privacy), then please consider:

I am going to fight to defend the Charter Right to privacy because I know thatthe kids who are fighting to stop the tar sands (climate change) and the Northern Gateway Pipeline are at risk if I don’t.  

I will not allow anyone to take away the Charter Right to Privacy becauseI know that the water activists in Canada are at risk if I don’t.  

So are Muslims and Arabs – they are the Polish people and the Jews of World War Two – the people the police state uses propaganda against to demonize in order to assert the military presence.

The G20 Summit in Toronto was a billion-dollar display of military police might and tactics.  The protests are happening because corporations are running the Government. American corporate interests want Canadian water, oil, electricity and the nuclear industry.   They want them because the U.S. faces depletion of those resources.  They waged war on Iraq to secure oil.  They are in the process of setting up a puppet and police state in Canada in order to secure the resources.  I didn’t make this up – I sent the detailed documentation, the sources (chronology).   It’s all there in the public domain. 

Consider yet-another occurrence:

I did an interview with the New York Times over the Canadian census and the out-sourcing to Lockheed Martin Corporation.  I sent the information on Lockheed’s role to the reporter.  . . .  What got reported in the NYT?  . .

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/24/world/americas/24canada.html?_r=1&ref=canada

Intense Debate in Canada Over Longer Census

By IAN AUSTEN

Published: July 23, 2010

a small number of people refused to fill out (the Canadian)  census forms. But they were protesting the use of an American technology contractor.”

AN AMERICAN TECHNOLOGY CONTRACTOR”?!    Don’t mention the name Lockheed Martin Corporation?  They’re better known in the U.S. than in Canada.  Keep the people in the dark.  This is the way propaganda is used in a police state.

– – – – – – – – – – – – –

I documented that Lockheed Martin Corporation is one of the main corporate players in the determination by the Americans to appropriate oil, electricity, water and the nuclear industry in Canada.   Maclean’s magazine, Sept 13, 2006:  “Meet Nafta 2.0”, Ron Covais, President of the Americas for Lockheed Martin, in relation to the SPP meeting)

– – – – – – – – – – – – –

I showed you the statement made in the Ottawa Citizen in 2008:

(I believe “visa-free access” is a tactic of attempted intimidation to which Canadians should not bow.)

“…  In exchange for continued visa-free access to the United States, American officials are pressuring the federal government to supply them with more information on Canadians, says an influential analyst on Canada-U.S. relations.

“Not only about (routine) individuals, but also about people that you may be looking at for reasons, but there’s no indictment and there’s no charge,” Christopher Sands of the Hudson Institute told a security intelligence conference in Ottawa yesterday. .  Canadian officials have said this country will meet the new standard, “plus or minus a little,” by 2011, he said. “But there’ll be tremendous pressure (from the U.S.) to get there faster.”

– – – – – – – – – – – – –

There is no better way for the American military to gain access to the most comprehensive data base on all Canadians than through Lockheed Martin census contracts (the Patriot Act applies to subsidiaries).   Also, Lockheed Martin will have our health records:  “a premier systems integrator to manage and deliver large-scale electronic health record solutions for the Canadian healthcare sector”, using their “heritage in the aerospace and military markets”.    (Link no longer valid.)  They already manage the health records of the Canadian military.

– – – – – – – – – – – – –

Lockheed Martin is the American military.  One of their specialties is international surveillance, along with weapons of mass destruction including unmanned aerial vehicles (unmanned drones).

It is an act of treason to out-source census work to Lockheed Martin (with IBM as a sub-contractor)  – they are the biggest liars on the planet with a string of court convictions to prove it.  They were also instrumental in the decision of the Americans to drop bombs on Iraq in order to secure oil.  They used lies and propaganda in order to start that war so they could get the oil.   Oil = tar sands.

Anyone who believes the line “Lockheed Martin only does software for the Canadian census” is worse than naive.  They have no knowledge of history (the use of propaganda) or of Lockheed Martin’s record.  Only military states maintain comprehensive files (read “census long form”) on individual citizens.   Lockheed Martin is the American military.

The point I made:   “Statistical data in comparison to the Charter Right to Privacy of personal information is secondary” requires that you have an appreciation of the significance of the Charter Right to Privacy.

Unfortunately most Canadians do not KNOW the Charter Right, let alone its significance.  Democracy (Charter Rights and Freedoms for example) and history are not well taught in Canadian schools.

Pretend that you are one of the people who

1.      know that climate change is a large threat to the world

2.      have locked down and blockaded a giant dump truck and shovel at Shell’s massive Albian Sands open-pit mine in northern Alberta to send the message that the tar sands are a global climate crime that must be stopped.

3.      convinced the Norwegian Parliament that their crown corporation should get out of the tar sands

4.      are the First Nations people who will not allow the Northern Gateway Pipeline which is supposed to carry tar sands products from Fort McMurray to the West Coast.

5.      Police arrested after a protest that saw activists scale the Parliament building in Ottawa and drape it with banners advocating government action to combat climate change.  This was just before the Copenhagen meetings.

6.      has worked locally to stop nuclear developments

7.      has worked to stop water privatization projects

8.      are Muslim

9.      are Arab

10.     Pretend that you are someone whose country has oil — or even tar sands, let’s say.

11.     Pretend you are a citizen of a country that has water and is situated next-door to the U.S. that needs water

(Reference Scripps Institute of Oceanography report on the two largest water reservoirs in the U.S., Lake Mead and Lake Powell behind the Hoover and Glen Canyon Dams on the Colorado River:  50/50 chance that hydro-electric capacity will be gone by 2017 because of falling water levels and 50/50 chance that the reservoirs will be bone-dry by 2021.  I talked with lead researcher Tim Barnett in the summer of 2009 to see if they are getting their act together to help avert disaster.  He was very pessimistic.  I asked if there are going to be environmental refugees and if the population (residential, commercial, irrigation) dependent upon water from the Colorado River numbers in the 25 million.  His figuring is same as mine, yes.)

OKAY, now:

1.      Pretend that you are Simon Reisman giving a speech to corporate leaders about how much money there is to be made in selling Canadian water to the U.S.  Maybe you were in diapers at the time.  It was in the 1980’s.

2.      Pretend that you are Simon Reisman, chief negotiator for the free trade agreement (Brian Mulroney Prime Minister) and you give away the exclusion in the free trade agreement for water.  You also negotiate so that Canadian energy has to go to the U.S., no matter what shortages might exist in Canada, and at the same price as in the Canadian market.  The Mexican government didn’t sell out their citizens like the Canadian Mulroney Government did.

3.      Pretend that you are Ron Covais, President of the Americas for Lockheed Martin, who said to Maclean’s magazine,  (Meet NAFTA 2.0, Sept 13, 2006)   “We’ve decided not to recommend any things that would require legislative changes, because we won’t get anywhere.” The main avenue for changes would be through executive agencies, bureaucrats and regulations, he said, adding: “The guidance from the ministers was, ‘Tell us what we need to do and we’ll make it happen.'”

You want the resources that lie in Canada.  I’ve sent the information which shows that this agenda has been in the works for decades.  I’ve sent the information that shows the crisis situation now in the western U.S. in particular (water and hydro-electricity).  If you are the American military, part of the military-industrial-congressional complex in the U.S., what is your strategy going to be?

Maybe you think they don’t have a strategy?  Maybe you think that the successful and growing resistance in Canada to the tar sands, to privatization of water and electricity, will not create repercussions from those who want to appropriate?  Maybe you think that these people are not in the business of using their own agents to create the pretexts for military-police interventions (as they did at Montebello and in Toronto)?

Hundreds of thousands of young men (mostly) gave their lives for what we have, a Charter of Rights and Freedoms, to protect us against totalitarian corporate police-states.    I cannot understand those who advocate we should give that away through some form of “mandatory” long census form.    There are a lot of ill-informed people out there!

I repeat: there is one clear and simple position for the Green Party to take.   The Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Right to Privacy, is essential and must be upheld.  End of sentence.

Best wishes,

Sandra Finley

On 26-Jul-10, at 11:59 PM, Sandra Finley wrote:

Hello Eric,

Regarding your question:  If there is no penalty for not filling out a “mandatory”  Census then how do you see this as government using “force” to hand over personal information?     (insert hyperlink to Orwellian newspeak – – the census long form will be mandatory and voluntary)

The Government has relied on force (COERCION)  because citizens do not know their Charter Right to Privacy.

Excerpt from another email explains it:

I think it was obvious that the Crown (the Government) cannot win the case, which is a serious situation for them to be in.  They are using fairly extreme coercion (the threat of jail and a fine) to force people to hand over the “biographical core of personal information”.  This is in contravention of a constitutional right to privacy.  . ….

The Government  (StatsCan and the Justice Department) use the threat of the justice system to obtain compliance, just like Monsanto coerces farmers by using the threat of court action.  You’re liable to 3 months in jail and a $500 fine  (Section 31 of the Statistics Act taken out of context, without mention of Charter Rights and other conditions in the Statistics Act.)

Most people cannot afford the time and cost of defending themselves against the Government, nor the possible cost of going without income while they sit in jail.   At least two people charged for non-compliance with the 2006 census, Todd Stelmach and Darek Czernewcan, were found guilty because they did not have the resources to defend themselves.  Most people knuckle under before they see the court doors.

Perhaps the Justice Department, through the Crown Prosecutor, knew after the March 16th day in court that they are in deep trouble with the law.  It is all on the transcript.  I had a lawyer representing me on that day, which made a huge difference in the likely outcome of the trial.   Steve (the lawyer) has a passion for privacy law.  He specialized in it when he was working in Ontario.  He knows what he is doing in court, unlike me.

I had represented myself in Court up until then, and would have lost the case.  But just in time I realized that the Crown was heading for an override of the Constitutional right to Privacy.  Fortunately there was time to call in a lawyer who knows that the Government can’t meet the test requirements (the “Oakes” test) for an override of the charter right.  Had I not been able to call in a lawyer, I believe the Court would have found me guilty (same as the trial outcomes for Todd Stelmach and Darek Czernewcan) because I had no idea of how to defend against an override of my Charter Right.

The Government would not have flinched if I am found guilty.  (My next day in court is September 9th, 2010.)  Unexpectedly they came up against the lawyer, Steven, who knew the law;  they found themselves in need of an exit route.  The way out for them was to announce that the census long form is no longer mandatory, except that it never was mandatory under the law.

All that was needed was someone who they selected to bring charges against (me), who simultaneously through whatever quirks of fate, had the support to stand up to them in court.  Otherwise they would have continued to be disrespectful of the charter rights of citizens and gotten away with running roughshod over them.

The Government has counted on the ignorance of the population.  It is apparent from the media on the “no longer mandatory” nature of the census long form that Canadians don’t know the law.  Worse, they have little comprehension of the reason why we have a Charter right to privacy.  I say this of “educated” people.

A Governments takes away a charter right.  If citizens do not:

        know WHY they have the charter right, and

        stand up and fight to keep the right when it is taken away

then the simple outcome is that they, through ignorance, no longer have the right.  With a growing military presence in Canada, that is dangerous ground to give up. 

–        – – – – – – – – – —

(2)  ERIC – Regarding your second question to me:  Do you appreciate that if people can without penalty refuse to answer the long-form census – including  for reasons outlined in your case – then this will in turn force Stats Canada to change its policies to maintain compliance rates

The situation is that THE LAW does not allow the Government to force citizens to hand over  “a biographical core of personal information which individuals  in a free and democratic society would wish to maintain, and control from dissemination to the state”.

We agree to be governed by the law.  Governments must uphold the law.  The Charter of Rights and Freedoms is CONSTITUTIONAL LAW, the highest laws of the land.

The problem is this (well explained by John Ralston Saul):  we are uncomfortable with UNCERTAINTY and COMPLEXITY.  The unfortunate reality is that both are REALITY.  We don’t live in a simple and unchanging world.  Things will be just fine WITHOUT having the seeming certainty that statistics offer.    We will be REALLY screwed if we give up the Charter Right.

You have a choice:

–        more data to tell you that the rich are getting richer and the poor and middle classes getting poorer  OR

–        upholding the rights of citizens in a democracy that thousands upon thousands of young men have given their lives to defend.

Or so I see it.

Best wishes,

Sandra

From: Eric
Sent: Monday, July 26, 2010 9:18 PM
To: Sandra Finley
Subject: Re: Green Position on the Census long form

Hi Sandra,  If there is no penalty for not filling out a “mandatory”  Census then how do you see this as government using “force”   to hand over personal information?

Do you appreciate that if people can without penalty refuse to answer the long-form census – including  for reasons outlined in your case – then this will in turn force Stats Canada to change its policies to maintain compliance rates.

Regards,  Eric

On 26-Jul-10, at 10:58 PM, Sandra Finley wrote:

Hi Elizabeth,

SHORT ANSWER:  No, the long form should not be mandatory, even without Lockheed Martin.

It is helpful to understand the human psychology behind this.   WHY did the census long form strike a chord with Canadians?  Why all the fuss?

It is a repeat of WHY did the Canadian public respond to Harper’s prorogation in January, as they did?    Why not the usual apathy?

If you understand the psychology, I think you will find that it is prudent ALL AROUND:  the long form should not be mandatory.  It is the right position to take, from all angles, including that of gaining the support of the public.

(1)              THE GREEN PARTY SHOULD UPHOLD THE LAWS OF CANADA.

The census long form cannot be mandatory, by law (the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, Section 8, Privacy.  Section 8 is about freedom from “unreasonable search and seizure“.  The case law associated with Section 8 says that the Government cannot force citizens to hand over “a biographical core of personal information such as that individuals in a free and democratic society would want to maintain, and control from dissemination to the state”.

The reason for the charter right is sound, based on the historical record.  It is appropriate  and prudent to exercise the right to privacy of personal information, especially in today’s world (the militarism of the U.S., represented in this debate by Lockheed Martin Corporation).  There is increasing militarism, police-state tactics and overall weakening of democracy in Canada.  It is an environment in which the Charter Right to Privacy becomes critical.  If we do not defend it, we will not have it when we need it.  If you don’t think we will ever need it, you are naïve.  The Americans are fast approaching the wall on resource depletion, of water, oil and electricity especially in the West.

We have the right to privacy AND the Government cannot meet the “Oakes” test for a Section 1 override of the Right, in relation to the census long form.

Further, under the Statistics Act the census long form is also not mandatory:  citizens must fill in a census form unless they have “just cause” not to do so.  They have a Charter Right to Privacy as just cause (and for good reason if you know history).  In addition, charter rights override legislation like the Statistics Act.

People who are calling on the Government to make the census long form mandatory don’t understand that the law forbids this, and do not understand the importance of Charter Rights.  (I don’t know how they could even change the law to make the long form mandatory;  it would require a re-write of the common law associated with Constitutional Law?)

Nor do they have the information about Lockheed Martin’s role in the census.

The Government cannot just say, “The long form is mandatory”.  They have to abide by the laws of Canada.  The long form never was mandatory.   Coercion (you’ll go to jail if you don’t fill it out) is the only reason that it has been perceived to be mandatory.   As you know I am on trial over this issue (which started out in the form of opposition to Lockheed Martin’s involvement in the census).   This court challenge reclaims the Charter Right to privacy.  I cannot emphasize enough:  it is a very important Charter Right, one that Canadians are ill-advised to throw away.

(2)               More on the psychology below.  But I think the Green Party is dreaming if it thinks Canadians will ever go back to a “perceived” mandatory form.  Too much has already been undone.  The genie is out of the bag.

(3)             GUY-ON-THE-STREET RESPONSE to “long form not mandatory”:

The guy-on-the-street response is not the same as that of the vocal people who call for it to be mandatory. (The silent majority opinion is not the same as those calling for it to be mandatory.)  My sense of things is reflected in this exchange:

Dear Sandra, I read the newspaper briefly this morning looking for what was said – still no mention of Lockheed Martin,  However, there was one bright spot in today’s G+ M Neil Reynolds suggested that the mandatory long form of the Census is unimportant and that many countries are eschewing.  The funniest thing was his statement that in Britain the Census found that .7 % of the population are Jedi Knights.  Lynn

Dear Lynn,

Hey  I love it – the Jedi Knights!

That’s along the same vein as the farmers.  They receive lots of forms from StatsCan re agricultural production – – between Revenue Canada and StatsCan and the GST people, the Govt is not well appreciated.   My Dad’s cousin was a census supervisor at one time.  He was saying last night that the farmers lie through their teeth when it comes to Govt surveys.  He referred to some field visits he did.  Just one example:  the farmer had written down that he had 40,000 bushels in the bins – – but he didn’t even have a single bin on the farm!    I hear similar comments when I’m out home, and have for a long time.

I think there is an established culture around  getting the best of StatsCan.  I suppose it givespeople a sense of power.  The farmers have a laugh when they’re dropping their forms in the mail –  sort of like “they think they can jerk me around with the demand that I supply all this information to them,  well I’ll get the better of them”. 

The prima donas are the people who want the information, from the point-of-view of the guy-in-the-street

It is not just the farmers that have this attitude.  I have not talked with one person who says that they dutifully fill out the census long form with accurate information.  Quite the opposite.   They are indignant and they are pressed for time;  the census form simply isn’t a priority.  StatsCan officials delude themselves if they think they get accurate information.  There are 50 pages with 40 questions.  Forget it!  I’d rather get my housework done, or go golfing.  Besides which it is personal.  Many of the questions require you to look up information;  people simply grab a number out of the air instead.  They really do not care.  If StatsCan is dumb enough to think they are getting accurate information, so be it.

The difficulty with a centralized authority wielding the power, if you tell them the preceding (bogus data), their response is to do exactly what happened to friends here in Saskatoon.  StatsCan came in January 2010, in between censuses.  Instead of leaving a form to be filled out and mailed in, the StatsCan woman came into the house with her laptop computer.  She asked questions and entered the answers.  When it came to the figure for income tax, she insisted that they get out their actual income tax form so she could verify it.

. . .   And they create an ever-increasing bureaucracy to get “more and more”.  With StatsCan, a chevy is no longer enough.  We have to have a loaded Cadillac of information.  And there is a built-in incentive to keep growing:  if you can become a manager, a big part of your salary is tied to the number of employees you supervise.

The farmer, etc. starts to see that he exists in order to keep the bureaucracy employed.  You’re the cannon fodder.  Hours of your time looking up information and filling out forms that, quite frankly, ask some pretty stupid questions.  You don’t get paid for your time, but the guys forcing you to do this (some of it is under the threat of jail and a fine)  get paid rather handsomely.  You’re working hard, without security, while they sit behind their desks;  when they retire it’s on an indexed pension.

(I definitely do not think that all Government officials are the same.  There are excellent people, working hard in the public interest.  But there are lots of others, and there are systemic problems.  There are no limits.)

–        – – — – — –

Everyday people believe, and I think rightly so, that the information needed by the community is in the community;  it’s not in Ottawa.  

The Green Party is about de-centralized local Governance.  Centralized power structures, whether in the former communist countries, or in Western capitalist countries are either already overthrown, or they are in the process of being overthrown.   

A lot of what I have heard in the recent media coverage about the “you have to” have the data from StatsCan, “it is THE ONLY WAY”  – – i.e. it is inevitable, like globalization  – – is mostly hype.   There is never only one way;  we have ingenuity.  People will always find other and better ways of doing things.   What we have is an established status quo that doesn’t want to let go of what it has.

God forbid! they think it is more important to have numbers than it is to have a Charter Right to Privacy. 

THE PSYCHOLOGY (prorogation and census uproar) IS THIS:

–         It’s like in a relationship between two people.  One person will suddenly be triggered into an eruption.  The trigger will often have nothing to do with the underlying grievance.  There is stuff that people know at some level; they haven’t reached the point of being able to verbalize it

The back lash against prorogation wasn’t about prorogation.  At some level people know that Harper is running roughshod over democracy.  Prorogation opened the pressure valve.

The reason there is all the furor over the census long form is because there has been long term simmering resentment.  People are relatively powerless.   But no longer.  Which is why I say I think you are dreaming if you think we can go backwards, even a little bit.  We are in the process of fairly massive change, taking back our power from centralized authorities – a very positive development.  This is part of it.

You are aware of my concerns around the growing presence of the American military in Canada, represented by Lockheed Martin, The Troop Exchange Agreement, the so-called Canada First Defence Strategy (both from 2008).  And the reasons behind that growing presence.   You know the story of “IBM and the Holocaust” (by Edwin Black, 2001).   The Nazis were able to do what they did because IBM mechanized and grew their data files on individual citizens.  That information was mobilized for all kinds of purposes in the Nazi state.  ANY reading of history tells you:   you uphold the individual right of the citizen to Privacy of Information.   “Whites” may not understand and appreciate the WHY.  Poles and Jews most certainly should.  And in today’s world, I think we have to uphold the right, on behalf of Muslims and Arabs.  And on behalf of activists, the other vulnerable population when push comes to shove.

Sandra

– – – – – – – – – – – – – –

The two central issues around the census are:

Lockheed Martin’s involvement.

The Charter Right to Privacy.

Neither of these issues is being addressed and communicated effectively in the media coverage.

STATSCAN’S CORPORATE CLIENT BASE

It is also the case that the Government attempted to force me and others, through prosecution, the threat of 3 months in jail and a fine of $500, to hand over “a biographical core of personal information”.  From the testimony of Anil Arora, StatsCan witness at my trial and until recently the head of the census operation, StatsCan is bundling and selling information.  Its “client” base includes corporations.   I’ll be damned before I am coerced into handing over information so that it can be sold to corporations.  Nor will I pay in taxes for the exorbitant costs of such a “census”.  The corporations can buy their information from market survey companies.  A friend of mine does door-to-door surveys for such a company.  I have a choice, there is no coercion.

Long form or short form, I will not be cooperating with the Canadian census as long as the American military has ANY involvement in it.

Jul 282010
 

DAREK CZERNEWCAN

Guelph Mercury Jul 28, 2010

 

The Guelph Mercury write-up (below) is good, covers many bases, not too much detail.

Czernewcan’s Father was a colleague of Lech Wałęsa in the Gdansk, Poland Shipyards. Their Trade Union brought down the Communist regime.

 

Elaboration by Darek Czernewcan, why he didn’t fill in the Census, from http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=182:

“I purposely declined the census because I felt that the long form, which I received, asked questions which violated my right to privacy. Being an immigrant (originally, I’ve been a citizen now for 16 years), and having come to Canada from a (formerly) communist country, where even Big Brother did not resort to the kind of tactics I am facing in FREE Canada… Well, I was just offended. I did not spend a significant part of my life in the squalor of refugee camps, running away from political oppression, only to be met with the same kind of oppression in the FREE WORLD. I don’t want to rant too much, but I’ll just sum it up this way – I am being threatened with fines and jail time because in a FREE COUNTRY, I refused to tell the government how many hours in a week I spend doing dishes!”

From Darek’s wife, Kelly:

“. . . It gives me hope for my son’s future. Darek’s maternal grandfather lost his entire family during the Second World War, and only due to a fluke, survived the “ethnic cleansing” himself, as he was posted on the other side of the country at the time. Darek’s dad’s struggle against the Communist repression during Poland’s civil war seems smaller by comparison, and Darek’s fight just a sand-box shoving match, but we are talking about one family over the span of three short generations. I do not want my son’s life tattooed and barcoded by Lockheed Martin in this or the upcoming Census. As Stalin once said, “the people who vote count nothing, the people who count the votes count everything.”

 

Darek, as quoted in the Gerogia Strait on-line news:

” Czernewcan explained that during the Cold War, his father was a political prisoner of Poland’s Soviet government. Later, his parents immigrated to Canada to spare Czernewcan from compulsory military service.

“I have this intrinsic aversion to anything military,” he said.

(Sandra speaking:) The bona fide Census work is valued. I am in the camp that believes “Freedom is hammered out on the anvil of discussion, debate, and dissent.” Sometimes the government has to be called on its actions. The American military (through Lockheed Martin Corporation) should have nothing to do with the Canadian census, for various reasons. I doubt that the Statistics Act, when it was written, EVER contemplated that future governments would be doing this.)

 

But what happened to Czernewcan in the end? 

“I suppose I owe you guys a bit of an update. My case is now over. And I guess I both won and lost. I’m sorry to let you down, but I had to throw in the towel. (INSERT: he DIDN’T let us down! He did the right thing.) The Crown Attorney assigned to my case had a real hard-on for this. He said that if we go to trial, he would ask for the maximum penalty, maximum fine as well as maximum jail time, as well as an order to make me fill out the form.

I did not succeed in finding pro-bono legal representation. I have to be honest with you – personally, I can do 3 months in a provincial bucket standing on my head. But I am the sole provider for my family and we would end up homeless and broke if I was in jail for 3 months. So I asked the Crown what he would want if I pleaded guilty. He was ready to agree to a $300 fine and no jail time. So we took it to plea court. And this is where I got lucky. The judge was exceptionally reasonable. He said that he was not the least bit inclined to agree with the crown that this was a serious matter.

The judge said that he doesn’t see the purpose in prosecuting people like me. He asked me if I had anyone relying on me for support, and I said that yes, I had a wife who stayed at home and raised our 14-month old son. The judge was pleased to hear that. He said that since I have no criminal record he would like to give me an absolute discharge, but since there was some provision in the law that prevented him from doing so in this particular case, he gave me a suspended sentence. I should mention that this judge admonished the Crown Attorney for wasting the Court’s time with trivial matters and stopped just shy of asking them to bring him some real criminals! “

Census objectors come in many different forms, Guelph Mercury, July 28, 2010

http://www.guelphmercury.com/news-story/2691945-census-objectors-come-in-many-different-forms/

OTTAWA – If there were a census of census objectors, the questionnaire would require a long list of categories.

There are libertarians, pacifists, First Nations communities and those who jealously protect their privacy.

Canadians who baulk at filling out the forms have a wide variety of reasons for butting up against Statistics Canada. Some of them support the Conservative arguments for replacing the mandatory census with a voluntary survey, and some of them don’t.

One Ontario septuagenarian who wrote to The Canadian Press this week railed against the “Neanderthal” census worker who showed up at his door in 2006, pressing him to fill out the census form. His experience fits with the descriptions of concerned constituents cited by federal cabinet ministers in defending their decision.

“The census is not accurate because many (who fill out) the long form … give incorrect answers,” said the writer, who asked that his name be withheld.

“The long form is one of (Pierre) Trudeau’s gems, along with the army in Quebec and ‘Just watch me,’ the result a great country destroyed.”

Todd Stelmach of Kingston, Ont., went to court over his refusal to fill out the long-form census in 2006. He wound up paying a $300 fine, even as the prosecutor coaxed him to fill out the form on his day of sentencing.

The judge refused to go along with the Crown’s request to direct Stelmach to fill out the census form, which might have resulted in a more serious contempt of court charge.

But Stelmach’s resistance had nothing to do with the intrusiveness of the questions, or the attached penalties. Instead, he wanted to protests against Statistics Canada’s purchase of census hardware and software from defence manufacturer Lockheed Martin.

“I felt that an organization that profits from war that’s American shouldn’t be profiting from our census as well,” Stelmach said. “It was more of a Christian making a stand kind of thing.”

Stelmach says he’d still not fill out the mandatory short census, but has mixed feelings about the demise of the long census. Stelmach is a mental-health worker.

“I see that these things help make decisions for stuff that gets my work funding, so I’m not against it,” Stelmach said of the long census.

“I’ve always said I was pro-census, I was just against paying a war profiteer for the census.”

Also in 2006, Ontario truck driver Darek Czernewcan was ordered by a court to pay a fine. Czernewcan, a Polish immigrant whose father had been imprisoned in the Soviet Union during the Cold War, originally resisted because of privacy concerns and later opposed the Lockheed Martin connection.

Chantal Carey’s battle with Statistics Canada has a different twist.

Last year, the Ottawa resident refused to comply with the mandatory Labour Force Survey, a questionnaire of 53,000 Canadians every month.

She has eight slips of blue and yellow paper left at her door by insistent Statistics Canada interviewers with pleas to call them back. “We must complete this brief mandatory survey by the end of this weekend,” one wrote in pen.

But Carey, 25, read the Statistics Act, and could find no evidence that she was forced to fill out anything but the census. She has filed a complaint with the federal privacy commissioner, wanting a ruling on whether she should be forced to give up her personal data.

“I think there are people who really don’t like to do it. Perhaps they feel vulnerable or threatened, what are they going to with the information? If it’s sensitive information, do I want to give out information that might serve a certain field of activity that I don’t support?”

Would she fill out the new voluntary long-form household survey next year? Doubtful, says Carey, but she doesn’t have a fixed opinion on the Conservative government’s decision.

“I’ll have other things to do. I’d rather spend my time on other things, than that,” Carey said. “That’s my personal view.”

Many in Canada’s First Nations communities have also had a troubled relationship with the census. An estimated 200,000 aboriginals were not counted in the last go around, with large reserves such as Akwesasne and Kahnawake not participating.

Some argued they are not Canadian citizens and don’t need to comply. Others viewed their non-compliance as a protest against the Canadian government, and frictions that have gone back decades.

When Statistics Canada released census numbers in 2008, the Assembly of First Nations said the count was inaccurate when compared with the federal Indian registry. They said the numbers were being skewed to suggest fewer aboriginals were living on reserve.

“It’s exceedingly irritating,” an adviser to the assembly told The Canadian Press in 2008.

More than four per cent of the Canadian population was missed in the last census in 2006, the biggest gap since at least 1991.

Statistics Canada internal figures also show the missing tend to be young adults, ages 20-34, especially males; men who are separated from their spouses; and people whose mother tongue is neither French nor English.

The agency also says it referred 64 cases arising from the 2006 census to federal prosecutors for failure to complete the forms. The number of cases prosecuted was not immediately available.

Jul 272010
 

http://english.aljazeera.net/focus/2010/07/2010726112724506988.html 

At 15:44, the interviewer asks Julian:

What about your core values? .. maybe some incident in your life that helped form them?

IN HIS RESPONSE, JULIAN SAYS:

. . . capable generous men do not create victims, they nurture victims. That’s something from my Father and something from other capable generous men that have been in my life … I’m a combative person. So I’m not actually so deep on the nurture. .. There is another way of nurturing victims, which is to police perpetrators of crime. So that is something that has been in my character for a long time.

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

What a hoot! History speaks of the “balance of power” between nation states competing for power in the international arena. They use their “might makes right” with the largest military forces and the superior destructive power of their weapons.

TODAY, the balance of power is between PEOPLE from every nation, linked around the world, in opposition to the freaks of power and control and destruction at the tops of their corporate and government structures. It doesn’t matter which country is the perpetrator, we have joined hands to unseat the freaks. See the wikileaks information below.

Thanks to John Keen for identifying it as “make war against those who make war”.

It is interesting how common themes emerge:

– In phone conversation John says We can have absolute trust in the Government and corporate heads to lie.

– Lynn writes  I just want to comment on the WikiLeaks. Last night’s news was “tsk, tsking” about the veracity of the information on Wikileaks. The U.S. Government sources said ” Aww, we knew all that, it was old news ” The British were saying “It’s inaccurate” ( and the two countries – my goodness – lied to Parliament and Congress about reasons for war) And both countries also leaked the identities of secret service agents when those people contradicted the justification for war of each country-(Valerie Plame in the U.S. and who was the man who was said to have killed himself in Britain?) Veracity, accuracy indeed . The lies that tried to justify the war of aggression on Iraq.

Many thanks to Elaine for the WIKILEAKS’ most recent escapade. Wonderful! – – boy, does it ever give hope.

It’s worth your time to watch this short youtube interview:

Why the world needs WikiLeaks – Focus – Al Jazeera English

http://english.aljazeera.net/focus/2010/07/2010726112724506988.html 

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – — – –

As I see it, our efforts to put an end to Lockheed Martin’s involvement in the Canadian census is a contribution to the work that Julian Assange and the other people at wikileaks are doing. All of us, wherever we are, taking advantage of the particular opportunities, and also creating the conditions for the opportunities to happen.

People ARE taking away the power from those at the top who make the war because they profit from it.

If we don’t, we are the only ones who pay the price, whether we are here in Canada or over there in Afghanistan.

Canadians are paying at least 11 billion dollars in taxes to Lockheed Martin Corp. In the end, the money is used for one thing: to destroy. Young Canadian soldiers killed and maimed for life. You can’t even put a dollar value on that. All because the ways of Gandhi, non-violent resistance, are effective but they don’t make money for the military-industrial-congressional structure.

This latest “wikileak” is a profound shift in the balance-of-power between international citizens and the powers-at-the-tops.

Wikileaks raising hell with the Afghan papers:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2010/jul/26/war-logs-wikileaks-rebuts-criticism 

– – – – – – – – – – — – – – — –

It will be interesting now to see the renewed efforts to restrict internet access. To date, activists have been able to create a furor and block each time an attempt has been made.

It doesn’t matter that the New York Times covers for Lockheed Martin Corporation, and that the Canadian media has been largely silent on Lockheed’s involvement in the Canadian census and the Charter Right to Privacy. Everyday people are taking over.

People on my street in Canada spreading the information that will help the people who would like to walk like us, on their street in Afghanistan or Iraq. It is the leaders, the power at the top, who create the war. It is the everyday citizens who will put a stop to it. All we have to do is share the information in our networks. A fun way to do the revolution, eh?

Jul 242010
 

I contacted numbers of the people who rallied against the Government’s announcement that the census long form is no longer mandatory.  I included the July 24 communication to the Chief Statistician in the information sent to them.  I tried to make as water-tight an argument as possible.  But I think there is a problem:  most people don’t have time to read and contemplate.  They are overloaded.

Hello Don,   (Don McLeish)

I appreciated the opportunity to verbally present this other side to the census.

I will forward some of my correspondence on the issue.

The central message of this email:   the fragility of “reason” when it is divorced from morality.

My understanding of history is that the proclivity of educated people to compartmentalize (specialize) was an enabler of Hitler’s Nazi Europe and the holocaust.    With compartmentalization the moral component is de-activated.   So-called “reason” rules the day which means that a completely utilitarian model is used for decision-making.   The ones who should have protected European society during the nazi/fascist buildup, the educated and influential, did not.   They did not intervene when they saw the danger signs.   Today, Lockheed Martin is a great big danger sign that says it is time to intervene.

Governance is a dynamic system.  Dynamic systems provide feedback to tell whether they are stable or becoming unstable.  If the APPROPRIATE corrective action is taken IN A TIMELY WAY, then the system can be returned to stability.

Appropriate corrective action always addresses CAUSE.  (The feedback tells you “something is wrong”.   If your response is to address a symptom and not the cause, the dynamic system might appear to be “fixed”, but the fix will be temporary.  The underlying cause might be stilled for a time, but it still exists.)

TIMING of corrective action in dynamic systems is critical.   If you wait to take the appropriate action until after the tipping point has been reached, your interventions will be fruitless.   World War Two didn’t have to happen:  people of influence in the society simply didn’t intervene with appropriate corrective action  – – they didn’t stand up and say “this is wrong” – – while it was still possible, early in the game.

Of course, the other mistake that societies and people consistently make is to think “it won’t or can’t happen to us”.

The situation is complex.  Simplistic positions are unhelpful (I remind myself!).

Best wishes,

Sandra Finley

= = = = =  = = = = = = = = =

I sent the below (scroll down)  to Munir Sheikh (Chief Statistician, resigned)  on July 24th.    It explains a big part of the problem with the census and why many people will not cooperate with it.

–        Lockheed Martin census contracts caused thousands of people not to fill in a 2006 census form, or in other ways to subvert (e.g. the “Jedi Knight” story)

–        2006 – 2008:  People were coerced with threat of prosecution, jail and fine to fill in their census form

–        April 2008: Justice Dept laid charges against 64 out of the thousands of people (not all related to Lockheed resistance)

–        March 16, 2010:  it becomes obvious at trial that the Government is in serious breach of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms and can’t win the case

–        June 29, 2010:  Government announces that the long form is no longer mandatory (it never was mandatory because of Charter Rights)

Let me say this (the documentation that validates these statements is appended):

WRONG:  Contracting-out census work to Lockheed Martin Corp with its lengthy record of court convictions and the greasing of palms

WRONG:  Contracting-out census work to Lockheed Martin Corp, the manufacturer of land mines and cluster munitions, both in contravention of Canadian and International Law

NOT SMART:  Contracting–out to Lockheed Martin, one of whose specialties is international surveillance

COMPLICITY:  Contracting-out census work to Lockheed Martin Corp when the implications of the Patriot Act are known

QUISLINGS AND WOULD-BE PROFITEERS:  Contracting-out census work to Lockheed Martin, arguably the #1 player in the American military-industrial-congressional complex, when it is known that the American west is fast running out of water

PROPAGANDA:  Contracting-out census work to Lockheed Martin and then arguing that Lockheed Martin will not have access to the data component.  Probably the most influential proponent in the decision by the Bush Administration to drop bombs on Iraq in order to secure oil was Lockheed Martin Corp.  The war was sold with lies and propaganda.  Please do not expect me to believe that Lockheed Martin will not have access to the data – their record speaks for itself.  I am not quite so dumb or naïve.

MILITARY-POLICE DISPLAY:  the G20 summit was a display of police and military power FOR A REASON.  Lockheed Martin may not be able to drop bombs on Canada in order to secure oil and water and electricity and nuclear developments for American/Canadian corporate interests.  They only need a quisling government and the ability to threaten/intimidate people.  The G20 summit was a billion-dollar message that the police state has power.  The show of military-police might is necessary because the resistance in Canada to the American/Canadian corporate agenda (water, oil, electricity, nuclear) has been effective.

Dear Munir Sheikh,

I know you have resigned, but you may still be getting your email.  (INSERT:  I hope he received this.  The email was not returned.  But it may have been caught by spam filters.  Regardless, he knows this anyway.)

Your predecessors in StatsCan stalwartly refused to respond to the central question of awarding census contracts to Lockheed Martin Corporation.

I realize that you didn’t make the decision to give census contracts to Lockheed Martin Corporation.

I understand that Public Works Canada awarded the contracts.  But StatsCan implemented them.

I have appended excerpts from Lockheed Martin’s record.

I would really like to know, in the face of the evidence, how does StatsCan or anyone else, justify the implementation of contracts awarded to Lockheed Martin Corporation, in the face of their public record for acts that are in contravention of Canadian and International Law?   And far worse.  Is there no morality?

Thank-you and Best wishes,

Sandra Finley

– – – – – – – – – – – – – —

THE PUBLIC RECORD ON LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION

(You might want to scroll past the Iraq War information – you will know it – – to the chronology.)

The original census contracts were awarded to Lockheed Martin Corporation at about the same time as the Bush Administration was dropping bombs on Iraq in an illegal war of aggression (2003).  Which of course was hugely profitable for Lockheed Martin.   Then-Prime Minister Jean Chretien kept Canada out of the Iraq War.

Lockheed was in a position to influence, and did influence the decision that led to the destruction of Iraqi schools, hospitals, museums, water infrastructure – – everything.  It is a war that is on-going seven years later with many more than a million Iraqis dead, I don’t know how many permanently injured. Millions of other Iraqis are either refugees or they are homeless.  “Refugees International has observed extreme vulnerabilities among the hundreds of thousands of Iraqi refugees living in Syria, Jordan, and other parts of the region, as well as the millions of internally displaced persons within Iraq. … ”

It has cost the American public more than 733 billion dollars to wage the Iraq War (not counting Afghanistan) http://costofwar.com/, money they have needed for their own country.  They sink further into mountains of debt, tax-payers harnessed for generations to paying principle with interest (to the banks) – there is no money for social programmes that can stabilize the country.  The debt-loads threaten the stability of the world’s economic structures.  The international community is asked to step in to provide humanitarian aid to Iraq after the Americans (#1 player, Lockheed Martin) have dropped the bombs; the devastation inflicted by the war is total.

The hatred and the terrorists that have been created by that illegal war are incalculable.  Lockheed Martin’s profits and its share price go up.

All the good work done by hundreds of thousands of aid workers, religious groups, and others around the world are undone a thousand times over by Lockheed Martin.

. . .   What if those bombs had been dropped on us,  from the unmanned aerial vehicles (“UAV’s”, drones, airplanes) that are  Lockheed Martin’s more recent gift to humanity, following after land mines and cluster munitions which are both illegal under Canadian and International Law.  (Lockheed’s unmanned drone programme is now moving to Saskatoon; we sink deeper into the writhings of hell.)

There are a number of issues regarding Lockheed Martin’s involvement in the Canadian census:  large legal and moral issues, and as a significant step of the American military into Canada.

The Government’s announcement of “no longer mandatory” may have brought its actions within the boundaries permitted by Constitutional law, so the legal issue MAY have been addressed regarding the census long form (I haven’t looked at the short form); the MORAL ISSUE has definitely not been addressed.

Nor has the question of the legality or appropriateness of the Government providing billions of dollars to Lockheed Martin Corporation that is well-known for a lengthy record of court convictions and fines, procurement fraud, the manufacturing of weapons that are in contravention of Canadian and International Law, and its specialization in international surveillance.  Bribery.  On top of all this, they sell their illegal weapons to anyone with money.  According to POGO (the Project on Government Oversight in the U.S.) in 2000 alone, “Lockheed Martin was charged with 30 violations of the Arms Export Control Act and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations.  The violations were regarding the transfer of space launch assistance technologies to China.  Lockheed Martin paid a civil penalty of $13 million.”  There’s more, including the money it spends to purchase Government officials.

The iron irony (as mentioned):

•             Lockheed Martin has moved into Saskatoon (my home) with its unmanned drone agenda.

As long as these psychopaths continue to make their billion-dollar profits from the production of machinery for war,  the security of the world is in jeopardy.  (Democracy is badly corrupted by them, too.)  How anyone can think that security will increase by dropping bombs on other people from unmanned aerial vehicles is a new stretch of “rational”.   But it is utilitarian – – a good way for investors to make money.  Just remember that Lockheed Martin feeds at the public trough; there wouldn’t be all the war if American tax-payers weren’t willing to go in hock up to their eyeballs on behalf of Lockheed Martin – – another good way to push money uphill from tax-payers to the already-wealthy investors in Lockheed Martin.

I make the point in the chronology that with offset agreements in Lockheed Martin contracts, the Government is transitioning to an economy that makes money on war.  Many years ago I read that 45% of the American economy is dependent upon the waging of war.  The “Canada First Defence Strategy” enacted in June 2008 is very clearly about transforming the Canadian economy into a war economy.  Is that what we want?  Because that’s what you get with Lockheed Martin.

•             2003 fall:  it becomes known that Public Works Canada and Statistics Canada out-sourced census work to Lockheed Martin of the American military-industrial-congressional complex.  Lockheed Martin is a key player and profiteer from American and other wars.  http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?list=type&type=9

Lockheed has also been able to exercise its influence in a larger way – in support of the invasion of Iraq. The company’s former vice-president Bruce Jackson chaired the Coalition for the Liberation of Iraq, a bipartisan group formed to promote Bush’s plan for war in Iraq. Bruce Jackson was also involved in corralling the support for the war from Eastern European countries, going so far as helping to write their letter of endorsement for military intervention. Not surprisingly, Lockheed also has business relations with these countries. In 2003 Poland shelled out $3.5 billion for 48 F-16 fighter planes, which it was able to buy with a $3.8 billion loan from the US.”

•             2004 – health records of the Canadian military are contracted out to Lockheed Martin Corp.  Now there’s a nice conflict-of-interest!  I think of the American Iraqi war veterans whose health and reproductive capacity has been seriously harmed by weapons that use depleted uranium. And the Viet Nam war veterans whose lives were ruined by exposure to the chemical weapon called Agent Orange.  They have been decades in the battle for compensation while the military hospitals deny, deny, deny. . . .  You’re giving the health records of Canadian military personnel over to Lockheed Martin that makes the weapons?

•             2004 November 28:  New York Times, Lockheed and the Future of Warfare

LOCKHEED MARTIN doesn’t run the United States. But it does help run a breathtakingly big part of it.

http://www.globalsecurity.org/org/news/2004/041128-lockheed.htm

‘ . . .   ‘It’s impossible to tell where the government ends and Lockheed begins,” said Danielle Brian of the Project on Government Oversight, a nonprofit group in Washington that monitors government contracts. ”The fox isn’t guarding the henhouse. He lives there.”

No contractor is in a better position than Lockheed to do business in Washington. Nearly 80 percent of its revenue comes from the United States government. Most of the rest comes from foreign military sales, many financed with tax dollars. And former Lockheed executives, lobbyists and lawyers hold crucial posts at the White House and the Pentagon, picking weapons and setting policies.

Obviously, war and crisis have been good for business. The Pentagon’s budget for buying new weapons rose by about a third over the last three years, . . .  “

•             2005 March:  The SPP (Security and Prosperity Partnership Agreement) is signed by Martin (Canada), Bush (US) and Fox (Mexico).  Lockheed Martin plays a large role in the SPP (see 2006 September).   Harper replaced Martin as Prime Minister and in 2006 March:  The SPP is confirmed by Harper, Bush, and Fox.

•             2005 October:  Washington Post, Lockheed gets (American) census job  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/02/AR2005100201032.html

•             2005 November:  Ivan P. Fellegi, Chief Statistician of Canada, “I would like to emphasize that only 20% of the work for the 2006 Census will be contracted out while the remaining 80% is being done by Statistics Canada. The distribution, collection, follow-up and storage of questionnaires will be done strictly by Statistics Canada … ”  . .  “ Under the North American Free Trade Agreement and World Trade Organization Agreement regulations that governed this procurement, non-Canadian based firms were eligible to submit a bid… “

•             2006 spring:  emerging conflict in priorities.  Research organizations support the census because they regularly use StatsCan data.  From Don Roger’s letter to CCPA:  “ the privacy question is a sidebar. The Monitor has remained deafeningly silent on the moral contradiction of having Census taxpayers’ money going to the subsidiary of Lockheed Martin, one of the world’s biggest armaments manufacturers.  The same edition of the Monitor contains an article about the 10 Worst Corporations in the World. There is Lockheed Martin, rubbing shoulders with the worlds’s worst. …”

•             2006 April re Smart Border Plan:  Connie Fogal (then leader of the Canadian Action Party) publishes  http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=2242

The Smart Border Plan between the USA and Canada signed by John Manley December 2001 as Deputy Prime Minister of Canada and Tom Ridge, the U.S. Homeland Security Director which requires the sharing of citizen data, meaning the US Homeland Security gets what it wants to know about Canadians. The terms of this agreement are being implemented incrementally but quickly without the knowledge or consent of Canadians. It is not just covert sharing that is to happen, but overt as well. Start with the stealth and then whammy with the fait accompli.(John Manley currently is a leading light in the North American Task Force of CEO’s commanding the creation of the North American Union.) Our census data will be shared one way or the other so long as this agenda is permitted.

The Security and Prosperity Partnership Agreement signed by Martin (Canada), Bush (US) and Fox (Mexico) in March 2005 confirmed by Harper, Bush, and Fox in March 2006.  By this agreement the three leaders agreed to implement the grand design of the most influential corporations of North America to create a common unit of North America sharing data and merging the three countries into one union without an overall democratically accountable representative political structure. They agreed to expand the Smart Border Plan melding the three countries into one corporate/ military union, focusing initially on Canada /US unity. This means changing Canadian laws and legal structures to mimic those created by the US Congress removing civil liberties (like the security of our census information.)

The integration is proceeding in Canada by subtle but massive bureaucratic restructuring of our skin and skeleton, fleshed out by the dismantling of our constitutional rights without due process and by deceit. David Emerson has crossed to the Conservatives to continue that restructuring that he was spearheading under the Liberals. Take note of recently changed names of government agencies that reflect this transformation. …

•             2006:  I am back-and-forth in correspondence with Ivan Felligi, Chief Statistician, repeating that my objection expressed in 2004 is to Lockheed Martin’s involvement.  He does not address Lockheed Martin’s public record of court convictions, fines, etc. in his responses other than to say that through NAFTA American corporations can submit bids.

•             2006 September:  The President of the Americas for Lockheed Martin, Ron Covais, active on the SPP with Stephen Harper, tells Macleans Magazine in an article entitled “Meet NAFTA 2.0”   “We’ve decided not to recommend any things that would require legislative changes, because we won’t get anywhere.” The main avenue for changes would be through executive agencies, bureaucrats and regulations, he said, adding: “The guidance from the ministers was, ‘Tell us what we need to do and we’ll make it happen.'”

•             2007 August:  SPP (Security and Prosperity Partnership) Summit (Corporate CEO’s including Lockheed Martin, and Government officials).  Citizen protests at Montebello, Quebec against decision-making by unelected corporate interests in secret.    Police disguised as protestors are trained and deployed to turn peaceful protests violent. http://youtube.com/watch?v=DCRsj06wT64

Demands for a public inquiry . . . I don’t know where it stands.  The Government stone-walled.   More than a year later there was word that an inquiry would be held.  I have not seen news that an inquiry ever took place.  Watch the video, it’s an outrage that the Government should get away with this – that no one has been held to account.

•             2007 June:   (The StatsCan mantra when you ask them about the morality of contracting-out to Lockheed Martin is “Not our responsibility.  The contracts were negotiated by Public Works.”)   Francois Guimont who is well-known to us as head of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (Ag Canada, GMO’s, Monsanto’s  bioteched crops) is moved over to become Deputy Minister of Public Works and Government Services.  See 2008 July.  Lockheed Martin is awarded contracts for the 2011 Census, in spite of all the opposition from Canadians to date.

•             2008 February 14:  Canada and the U.S. sign the “Troop Exchange Agreement”.  Reported in the U.S.  Picked up by Canadian journalist David Pugliese February 22. http://www.canada.com/topics/news/story.html?id=403d90d6-7a61-41ac-8cef-902a1d14879d  “ … He (Stuart Trew, Council of Canadians) noted that work is also underway for the two nations to put in place a joint plan to protect common infrastructure such as roadways and oil pipelines.”

Are we going to see (U.S.) troops on our soil for minor potential threats to a pipeline or a road?” he asked.

 Trew also noted the U.S. military does not allow its soldiers to operate under foreign command so there are questions about who controls American forces if they are requested for service in Canada. “We don’t know the answers because the government doesn’t want to even announce the plan,” he said. 

But Canada Command spokesman Commander David Scanlon said it will be up to civilian authorities in both countries on whether military assistance is requested or even used. 

He said the agreement is “benign” and simply sets the stage for military-to-military co-operation if the governments approve.  (INSERT:  puppet governments will approve.)  . . .

If U.S. forces were to come into Canada they would be under tactical control of the Canadian Forces but still under the command of the U.S. military, Scanlon added.”

•             2008 March:  THE AMERICAN MILITARY FUNCTION IS MORE-AND-MORE “OUT-SOURCED” TO CORPORATIONS LIKE HALLIBURTON.  THERE IS LESS AND LESS ABILITY TO HOLD IT ACCOUNTABLE.  IT BYPASSES DEMOCRATIC PROCESS.  REFERENCE GUANTANAMO BAY, ABU GHRAIB AND DIAMONDBACK.  American prisons are also being privatized.  See 2008 June, Canada now has “compatible doctrine” and “interoperability”.

You will know about the contracting-out of military functions through the information coming out of Iraq.  That means the soldiers are not necessarily Americans.  American tax-payors are paying for a growing army of mercenaries that come from poor countries. Information about the operation of “the troops” and accountability are lost when the security function is no longer carried out by the Government.

Similar “partnerships” are occurring in the American prison system.  I’ve circulated an email regarding access to information. It contains the example of the prison in Oklahoma:  Diamondback Correctional Facility in Watonga, OK, a CCA prison that in 2004 held over 1,000 prisoners under a contract with the Arizona Department of Corrections, and another 800 prisoners under a contract with the Hawaii Department of Public Safety, but had no contract with the State of Oklahoma itself.  How can family from Hawaii visit prisoners, or even know how the prisoners are being treated?  There is NO access to information through the State of Oklahoma because they aren’t using the prison.

(UPDATE:  Diamondback was written about in the book “Blacked Out” regarding access-to-information in the U.S.  Recently Arizona re-patriated its prisoners – – perhaps because of the bad press  – –  and Diamondback closed, no longer profitable.)

The Canadian Bar Association has written to the Bush Administration, requesting that Guantanamo Bay (American Military Prison in Cuba) be shut down because of its complete disregard for international agreements on the treatment of prisoners.

•      2008 June 19:  the  “Canada First Defence Strategy” comes into being.  We now have “interoperability” with the American Military and “compatible doctrine”.   The decades-long Canadian dedication to alternatives to “killing wars” is gone.   Had this Strategy been in place in 2003, Canada would have directly participated in the killing and destruction that is on-going in Iraq, for no reason other than American imperialism.  And we would have been saddled with the debt that goes along with war.

The language of the strategy leads one to believe that Canadian industries will be the beneficiaries:

A Military in Partnership with Canadian Industry

The Canada First Defence Strategy will also have significant benefits for Canadian industry. The infusion of long-term stable funding it provides will enable industry to reach for global excellence and to be better positioned to compete for defence contracts at home and abroad, thus enabling a pro-active investment in research and development and opportunities for domestic and international spin-offs as well as potential commercial applications.”

Minister responsible, Peter Mackay: “… reveals details of $490-billion defence strategy to modernize military“.

But WHO REALLY gets the money?  (Tax-payors pay it.) The billion-dollar contracts are awarded to Lockheed Martin. Lockheed then works with Canadian industries  (Lockheed Martin distributes the goodies.): “Under the in-service support portion, the contractor (Lockheed Martin) will be required to spend in Canada 75 per cent of the total cost in direct industrial regional benefits – well above the 60-per-cent ratio negotiated by the previous government for purchases of this magnitude.”  (Source:  Michael M Fortier, Minister of Public Works, Government press release, January 2008.)

Canadian defence strategy is to become “compatible” in “doctrine” with the U.S..  The problem with the “doctrine” of the Bush Administration is that killing creates hatred.  Hatred breeds violence. Violence becomes terrorism. It is known that dropping bombs on people is counter-productive.  But lucrative for Lockheed Martin.

The killing-combat model (doctrine) only escalates problems.  It does not mobilize the tremendous power of people, as Gandhi did.  A crowd of thousands, eventually millions, will overcome the various forms of violence, given time. It is the fastest road to peace.  The killing ways of “combat” add to the hatred, prolong the conflict, is transferred from one generation to the next and will destroy the earth.  In its long history, the killing ways have never accomplished peace, only destruction.  This planet is and has been our one and only home, folks.

Becoming compatible with “the doctrine” of the Bush Administration, its buddies in Halliburton Corporation, Lockheed Martin, the contracting-out to mercenaries, etc., Canada too is setting up to cash in on “combat”.  Is that what we want for “defence” strategy – –  opportunities to make money?  (Really, it is a transfer of money out of the public purse to the military industry that has record profits because of illegal and immoral war.  Those record profits then go into the pockets of the already-wealthy who have money to invest, and do so with no conscience.)

The Canada First Defence Strategy states: “It will also allow the Government to develop a stronger, mutually beneficial relationship with industry.”  The role of Governments is the relationship with human beings and other species, not corporations (“industry”).

The contracting-out of Census work and other purchases have nothing to do with the efficiency of Lockheed Martin because it is the private sector.  It has everything to do with transnational corporate access to the public purse through Government contracts and contacts.  How is that accomplished?  In the U.S., “Lockheed Martin spent more on lobbying Congress than any of its competitors, spending $9.7 million in 2002. Only General Electric and Philip Morris reported more lobbying expenses. In the 2004 election cycle, Lockheed contributed more than $1.9 million”.

80% of Lockheed’s money comes from the Government of the USA.  The biggest chunk of the 80% is from military contracts.  (It should be noted that Lockheed is diversifying into other Government service areas.  The Canadian census is one example.  Lockheed is also set to perform “data capture” and other services for the 2011 Census in the United Kingdom.  It does the US census work.  The medical records of Canadian soldiers have already been mentioned.)

Lockheed Martin is an obvious vehicle through which to become interoperable with the U.S. military. See 2010 June below where Lockheed Martin is moving into Saskatoon with its unmanned drone technology.

•             2008, July 21:  Lockheed Martin is awarded contracts for the 2011 Canadian census.

•             2008, August:  Lockheed Martin is awarded census contracts in the UK.

The Office for National Statistics today announced the award of the first large contract to support the delivery of the 2011 Census for England and Wales. The contract has been won by Lockheed Martin UK Ltd.

•             2008, through “offset agreements” in the contracts, Lockheed Martin starts “gifting” tax-payer dollars.  The only way that Lockheed Martin has excess money to dole out (e.g. to Dalhousie University or to the Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technology), is if the government contracts are exorbitant. Lockheed Martin has a long history of “procurement fraud” in the U.S.

Lockheed gets the credit for the largesse and dictates how the money will be spent.  The public interest is lost to corporate interest.

Dalhousie University is announcing a multi-million dollar research contract with Lockheed-Martin. This contract is the result of government policy, which requires a foreign company to invest in Canada before it can enter into a government contract.”

Offset agreements will in time duplicate the American military-industrial-congressional complex in Canada.  Maybe that has already happened.

•             2008 November:  OTTAWA CITIZEN, “CANADIAN OFFICIALS .. WILL MEET THE NEW STANDARD” FOR SUPPLYING DATA ON CANADIANS TO THE AMERICANS

http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/story.html?id=64f59d78-ce97-48dc-b2fd-381859ce6c84

(I believe “visa-free access” is a tactic of attempted intimidation to which Canadians should not bow.)

“…  In exchange for continued visa-free access to the United States, American officials are pressuring the federal government to supply them with more information on Canadians, says an influential analyst on Canada-U.S. relations.

 Not only about (routine) individuals, but also about people that you may be looking at for reasons, but there’s no indictment and there’s no charge,” Christopher Sands of the Hudson Institute told a security intelligence conference in Ottawa yesterday. .  Canadian officials have said this country will meet the new standard, “plus or minus a little,” by 2011, he said. “But there’ll be tremendous pressure (from the U.S.) to get there faster.”

What better vehicle for the American military to get information on all Canadians than through the Census with Lockheed Martin as the conduit?

•             2008 December:  I read Edwin Black’s book, “IBM and the Holocaust”, 2001, http://www.ibmandtheholocaust.com

Detailed files on individual citizens is a characteristic of nazi/fascist/militaristic regimes. Mechanized census files were critical to Hitler’s extermination of people. Statistics Canada is moving more and more in this direction, with the help of Lockheed Martin and IBM as a sub-contractor.  I recommend you read “IBM and the Holocaust”.   It is dangerous to hand over detailed personal information to Government.  Canadians have a Charter Right to privacy specifically because of the historical abuses by Governments that collect data files on citizens.  It is prudent to learn the lessons of history.

•             2008, December 3: Canada signs international treaty banning cluster munitions.

Today governments from around the world are signing the most significant disarmament and humanitarian treaty of the decade, banning the use, production, transfer and stockpiling of cluster munitions.”

Lockheed Martin manufacturers cluster munitions.  The U.S. does not sign the treaty.

Announcing at the last minute it would join the group was Afghanistan, which had earlier been seen as bowing to U.S. pressure to refrain.”

Lockheed Martin subsequently removes all information and most of the references from its web-site to its cluster munitions.  They are replaced by a statement that says Lockheed does not manufacture cluster munitions.

•             2009 Early:  the U.S. Census Bureau (Lockheed Martin with IBM a sub-contractor, same as in Canada and the UK) hires 100,000 people to start doing census work in preparation for the 2010 U.S. census.  GPS locator information is being tied to individual census records.  (2010:  U.S. census documents are on the internet.  They are almost the same as the Canadian ones.)

•             2009 January 23:  Student protests at the University of New Brunswick, Lockheed Martin on campus.

Lockheed Martin Canada intends to return to the University of New Brunswick. http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/search/article/549077

The company, a subsidiary of the giant U.S. military-equipment maker, cancelled an employer information session planned for the campus on Wednesday after a UNB-based social activist group expressed opposition to its presence. . . .

•             2009 February 02.

LOCKHEED MARTIN HIKED U.S.LOBBYING BY WHOPPING 54% IN 2008

http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175029  The trial raises the issue of our complicity in the enrichment of a corporation that has a long record of very serious court convictions.  If I was Lockheed Martin Corporation I would be in jail for life.

In addition, Lockheed Martin has been (still is?) a major manufacturer of weapons of mass and indiscriminate destruction, land mines and cluster bombs both of which are outlawed by International Law. They are into unmanned drones which are also weapons of mass and indiscriminate destruction and immoral as far as I am concerned.

Lockheed Martin is a major contributor to American political campaigns and is well-positioned in the Pentagon.  There is good reason why the U.S. will not sign onto the “Laws of War” (International Humanitarian Law).

Canada is signatory to the International Laws that prohibit these weapons, and we have our own laws that are even more stringent than the International Conventions.

So how is it that we are awarding Government contracts collectively worth tens of billions of dollars to these people?  Canadian foreign policy dictates that we are to impose sanctions against entities that break International Laws.

The rule of law and morality must be enforced.  If citizens do not insist upon the rule of law, I don’t know who will.  Unfortunately, I cannot see how the Justice system can be used to address the morality of the Government’s actions.   That’s what elections are for, I guess.  And people inside Government have to stop being complicit collaborators with illegal and immoral corporations.

•             2009 December:  (An excellent article.)  U.S. WAR SPENDING EXCEEDS ALL STATE GOVERNMENT OUTLAYS http://www.atlanticfreepress.com/news/1/12560-us-war-spending-exceeds-all-state-government-outlays.html

•             2010, February 24:  USING DEFENCE STOCKS TO BOLSTER YOUR INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO, SPOTLIGHT ON LOCKHEED MARTIN, Globe & Mail  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/e-zines/globe-investor-magazine/using-defence-stocks-to-bolster-your-portfolio/article1478990/?cmpid=1

For me, this newspaper article is a tragedy of epic proportions.  Not a tragedy of a single person or family, but of our society.  It is bizarre that this can be an article from a “normal” newspaper, on a normal day, written by a normal person.  It’s not normal; it is insanity.  Invest your money in Lockheed Martin; war is a sure bet when the rest of the stock market is plummeting.  . . . (How different the world would be if “capital” was invested in enterprise that cared about the environment and people.  That day is coming!  See “Agenda for a New Economy, 2nd Edition” (2010) by David Korten.  “From Phantom Wealth to Real Wealth”, “A Declaration of Independence from Wall Street”.)

From John Ralston Saul’s “On Equilibrium”:

. .  if utilitarianism (e.g. making money from war and illegal weapons) is given leadership in a given area, it will set about demeaning, marginalizing and unraveling the non-utilitarian elements (INSERT:  like morals) at play. Why?  Because utility is not thought.  Nor is it argument.  It does not, in and of itself, have a purpose or a direction.  A toilet would just as happily dispose of fresh caviar or unwanted goldfish.  It will indifferently send its cargo off through a system of pipes to be deposited in a sewage-treatment plant or directly into your drinking-water supply.  That was the point about the IBM Hollerith punch-card machine, indifferently an organizer of death camps and of efficient workplace structures.

 Utilitarianism can only lead us if it reduces all else to its own narrow truth of utility.  The closest utility can come to a purpose is efficiency and, related to that, self-interest.  (INSERT: invest in Lockheed Martin because it will make you money.  Never mind about the moral issues.  A self-interest in the data available through StatsCan, never mind the moral issues.)  This can be made into a seductive proposition, thanks to myriad fast, apparently clear, short-term answers and concrete illustrations of those answers. 

But what makes a society a society or a civilization is precisely its more complex, less clear, more long-term, non-utilitarian aspects. And so it was a consensus around the ‘nature of the other’ which solidified the idea of responsible individualism and social inclusion, which drove the movement for egalitarian waste removal and clean-water supplies.  This was an illustration of culture in its broadest sense.  It included what we have always considered to be culture – ideas, literature, images, music, architecture, the sciences.  Why do we think of these as culture?  Because they are the repositories and the mechanisms of thought and argument.

…  None of this is a comment on whether utility is good or bad.  Or waste disposal.  Or trade. (INSERT:  or investment in Lockheed Martin)  Nor is it a comment on the necessary function of self-interest.  I’m simply pointing out that these characteristics and functions are not in and of themselves rational.  They are not equipped to lead society. 

Why then are we so obsessed by utilitarianism?  We have always wanted the comfort of clarity and permanent systems.  We remain uncomfortable with our own qualities and strengths – with complexity and uncertainty. … 

… Rousseau: “As soon as public service ceases to be the main concern of the citizens and they come to prefer to serve the state with their purse rather than their person, the state is already close to ruin.

Norway will not invest public money in Lockheed Martin Corporation.  Morality enters into their investment decisions.  You invest your money in the kind of economy that is beneficial to the Earth and its people.  It’s a no-brainer.  What has happened to us?

•             2010, March 3:  “ . . .  Secure Flight, the newest weapon in the U.S.’s war on terrorism, gives the United States unprecedented power over who can board planes that fly over U.S. airspace -even if the flights originate and land in Canada.

The program, set to take effect globally in December, was created as part of the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act, adopted by the U.S. Congress in 2004.

Canada’s Parliament never adopted or even discussed the Secure Flight program – even though Secure Flight transfers the authority to screen passengers, and their personal information, from domestic airlines to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. 

The European Parliament, on the other hand, has consistently voiced objections to the Secure Flight plan. .. “

•             2010 March:  The U.S. Census is starting up with a big ad campaign.   There is large opposition because of the privacy issue.  I contact numbers of websites:  the Americans appear to be completely unaware that Lockheed Martin/IBM are essentially the U.S. Census Bureau.

•             2010 March 24:  Armoured vehicles adopted by B.C. RCMP  “The RCMP said the so-called “Cougars for cops” is a national program, and residents of other cities can expect to see the vehicles on their streets too. “

http://news.ca.msn.com/local/britishcolumbia/article.aspx?cp-documentid=23717966

(This is part of the “normalization” of a military presence in Canadian communities.  It is not normal at all and should be strenuously resisted.)

•             2010 April 10.  Lockheed Martin sets up in First Nations (Whitecap) business park outside Saskatoon.

Business park in the works

(Link no longer valid   http://www.leaderpost.com/business/Business+park+works/2786466/story.html)

You will see in the article that Whitecap Development Corp (First Nations) south of Saskatoon  “is trying to obtaining licensing rights” for “an unmanned vehicle for military .. use”.

Drones that drop bombs come to mind.  Lockheed Martin is in that business:

(Link no longer valid  http://www.lockheedmartin.com/news/press_releases/2006/LOCKHEEDMARTINSUNMANNEDSYSTEMSTECHN.html)

•             2010 June 26:  Aerospace Giant Lockheed Martin Donating  $3.5 Million  Training Package to the Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technology (SIIT) in Saskatoon

(Link no longer valid  http://www.thestarphoenix.com/technology/Lockheed+Martin+donates+SIIT/3204419/story.html)

Also:  http://www.marketwatch.com/story/lockheed-martin-donates-35-million-canadian-training-package-to-saskatchewan-indian-institute-of-technologies-2010-06-25-90590?reflink=MW_news_stmp

we are talking about unmanned drones that drop bombs on real live people, but ones that live far away.

First Nations people should have training in the jobs of the future:  energy conservation, retrofitting and renewable energy.  They should not be held hostage by the likes of Lockheed Martin Corporation.

And so, the American military-industrial-congressional complex is imported by quislings who rely on ignorance, into Canada.  We now have “inter-operability” with the Americans, “compatible doctrine” and other goodies like lots of money to expand the military-industrial economy that is dependent on the making of war.

And so we in Saskatchewan are now part of the unmanned drones launched by computer-game whiz kids from military installations in the desert in Nevada against targets in Yemen and elsewhere.  We in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan will play a central role in the further development of this latest outrage against humanity.  The tactics of the Nazis were marginally less immoral.

Infrequently I have been accused of undermining a “good” Canada by being critical.  And of undermining our “good” neighbours, the Americans.

My response:  If wrong is not challenged aggressively, the Americans (and we) live a myth of democracy, not reality.  Failure to identify and address the wrong is the surest way for a good system to fail.

By tabling the problems I am fulfilling my responsibility as a member of the human species.

I have followed what Lockheed Martin is doing.  From my perspective it is part of the growing police state.   StatsCan’s reassurances about Lockheed Martin’s role in the Canadian census fall into the category of the reassurances given to Canadians in 1995 that CN would remain Canadian.  They even passed legislation to ensure that CN’s headquarters would remain in Montreal.  Today CN is American-owned.  People are naïve if they think that Lockheed Martin and the Government are to be trusted.  It is only a matter of time before Lockheed will have what it wants.  This is not a good situation for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that the American Patriot Act trumps all Canadian laws.  Any American corporation and its subsidiaries that have access to data bases can be ordered to hand over the data base information to the American Government (the Pentagon).  No notice is given to the owner of the data base.

This mess over the census arises because Public Works Canada and Statistics Canada out-sourced census work to Lockheed Martin Corporation which is essentially the American military/Pentagon.

Lockheed is responsible for death and destruction in untold numbers.  Why would we allow Lockheed Martin into our country?  Or the American military?   Both should be on trial for murder, along with the Bush Administration.

In spite of all the protests over the Government contracts awarded to Lockheed Martin for the 2006 census, the Government went ahead and gave them contracts for the 2011 census, too.  I don’t buy the argument that “NAFTA made me do it”, or that Lockheed Martin Canada is not the same as Lockheed Martin USA.  In a democracy I am responsible for the actions of my Government.   In life, you have to draw your line in the sand.  Government contracts with corporations whose mission is to destroy life are not to be tolerated.

Minister Responsible for the census contracts is Tony Clement, Minister of Industry

minister.industry AT  ic.gc.caClement.T ATparl.gc.ca  (613) 944-7740

To contact StatCan (I guess we are its “clients”):

Statistics Canada is committed to serving its clients in a prompt, reliable, courteous, and fair manner.[eneral enquiries

  • Our agents are available Monday to Friday (except holidays) from 8:30 am to 4:30 pm.

Online request
infostats AT statcan.gc.ca

Telephone
1-800-263-1136 or 613-951-8116

Note:

A StatCan email address with an “a” in it is from the higher up administration.

e.g.  Dale.Johnston AT a.statcan.gc.ca

versus   Marc.Hamel AT statcan.gc.ca   (from the email address, you can tell that this is a fellow whose job is to write letters, he will sign off as a “ census manager” but the real census managers have the   “@a.statcan.gc.ca” addresses.)

Jul 242010
 

This may poke a big hole in your faith in the media.

Because of the controversey over the Canadian Government’s recent announcement that the  census long form will be voluntary and the connection to my trial, I was contacted and interviewed by various media.  Ian Austen, the New York Times reporter in Ottawa, was one of them.  I followed up by sending Ian the information on Lockheed Martin’s involvement in the Canadian census, including the protests against it.  See the article resulting from the interview,  as printed in the NY Times – –  item #2 below which says:

In 2006 a small number of people refused to fill out census forms. But they were protesting the use of an American technology contractor.

The New York Times  and their readership would surely know the name of Lockheed Martin Corporation very well.   Better than Canadians, one would think.   There is no excuse for their failure to be specific.  This is misleading journalism.

Hey!  A prize to the first person who is able to break the media barrier!  I can’t seem to crack it.   I have done good interviews with national TV and print media, speaking to:

1. Lockheed Martin’s involvement in the census.

2.   The Charter Right to Privacy.

To-date, nothing has come of the interviews.

The census would not be in the media today, except for the contracting-out to Lockheed Martin that started the resistance seven years ago.  But not a word about Lockheed Martin’s role.

The reporting by the New York Times tells me  . . . I better get this email out fast and we need to try letters-to-editors of local newspapers, more facebook, more.   More kicking butt!

CONTENTS

(1)  INTERVIEWS, CBC TV NATIONAL NEWS AND THE GLOBE & MAIL

(2)  NEW YORK TIMES, JULY 23 2010, INTENSE DEBATE IN CANADA OVER LONGER CENSUS

(3)  LETTER TO EDITOR

(4)  LETTER TO STATSCAN WITH ONLY THE LOCKHEED MARTIN INFORMATION

= = = = = = = = = = = = = =

(1)   INTERVIEWS, CBC TV NATIONAL NEWS AND THE GLOBE & MAIL

CBC TV News.  A week ago Wednesday.  Interviewer Margo McDermaid on speakerphone from Ottawa.  Local CBC camera man came to my house.  I believe Margo was pleased with the results.  The camera man was certainly complimentary and appreciative.  (Not that I look for that – I am saying that there was nothing wrong with the content.)  Margo told me that she expected it would be on CBC Radio that same evening and it would be on TV News the next day, or maybe in the next couple of days.  She would send an email to let me know when.  “When” didn’t happen.

I phoned Margo at the beginning of this past week to see if “the chronology” of events would be of any use.  She was leaving for Germany, said “yes” and to send the information to Sara Brunetti at the CBC.  Sara was the central person on this, knows all the background.  Margo said that the Government was going to do public meetings to explain their decision around the census long form.  The CBC was thinking they might hold off and put the Lockheed/Charter Right to Privacy interview material in with the Government’s announcement of the public meetings.   I am thinking that maybe the resignation of the Chief Statistician threw a spanner into the timing of the intended public meetings -they didn’t happen.  And so the Lockheed Martin/Charter Right goes unaddressed, at least through the CBC.

Although it doesn’t explain why CBC Radio is not addressing it, at least not to my knowledge.  Thanks so much:  some people have provided feedback to the media and to others, as they have heard the issues go un-addressed.  Maybe if there is enough feedback they will do something.

I sent an email to “The Current” after hearing an interview that didn’t deal with the central issues (census – – what about Lockheed Martin’s role?).  But as I say, I can’t seem to crack the barrier.   I tried “ultra short” communications; not even that worked!

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – –

Globe & Mail:  Beginning of this week past.  Reporter Adrian Morrow called and did an interview of some length.  Friday (yesterday) he called before noon to arrange a follow-up interview.  Would it be okay to do “questions and answers”?  I said Fine – the interview was set for 2:00 pm.  Adrian called at 2:00, the interview was off.  The Globe is planning to do a special on the census.  … As far as I know, nothing ever came of this either.  It seems that the media doesn’t want to discuss Lockheed Martin’s involvement in the census?

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = == = = = = = = = = = =

(2)   NEW YORK TIMES, JULY 23 2010, INTENSE DEBATE IN CANADA OVER LONGER CENSUS

I was interviewed by Ian Austen, the New York Times.  I followed up by sending him the information on Lockheed Martin’s involvement in the Canadian census, including the protests against it.    The interview and the information sent to Ian got reduced to:  “In 2006 a small number of people refused to fill out census forms. But they were protesting the use of an American technology contractor.

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/24/world/americas/24canada.html?_r=1&ref=canada

Intense Debate in Canada Over Longer Census

By IAN AUSTEN
Published: July 23, 2010

OTTAWA — In their fleeting summers, Canadians tend to prefer lakes and beer over political discussions. But a government decision to change Canada’s census law has started a heated debate and led to the resignation of the country’s chief statistician on Wednesday night.

Related

·        Document: Resignation Letter of Munir Sheikh, Chief Statistician of Canada

The resignation of Munir Sheikh, who led Statistics Canada, was preceded by protests across the country’s ideological spectrum, including many who usually share the Conservative government’s views. If anything, his departure appears to have increased calls for the government to reverse its position on making a longer census form voluntary.

Next week, a House of Commons committee will hold special hearings on Parliament Hill, a place normally abandoned to tourists during July.

The government’s decision was not just unexpected, but it was also made without notice and in the absence of any obvious outcry against the census’ being excessively nosy. That has left many wondering why the government brought this on itself.

“I’ve had a lot of difficulty figuring it out,” said Roger Gibbins, the president and chief executive of the Canada West Foundation, a policy group with generally right-of-center views. “I live in a hard-core Conservative constituency in the heart of Calgary. There are probably more people worried about flying saucers’ landing in their backyard than there are worried about the long-form census.”

All Canadians are required to fill out a short census form every five years. Since 1971, a mandatory longer form has also been mailed to about 20 percent of households. That form for 2006 ran 40 pages long.

The government decided last month that completing the long form would be voluntary during next year’s census. To make up for the anticipated decline in responses, it will mail the long form to about 30 percent of households, a concept that some cabinet ministers later suggested was endorsed by Statistics Canada.

Once the change was finally noticed, economists, statisticians, local governments and many corporations swiftly asked the government to abandon it.

With few exceptions, they argued that a voluntary census response would create a skewed statistical portrait of the country. Evidence, much of it from the United States, shows that members of many groups — including the very poor and the very wealthy — do not fill out census forms unless compelled by law. The protesters also rejected the claim that mailing out more copies would overcome statistical deficiencies.

The federal government relies on census data to transfer money to Canada’s provinces each year for many programs, including health care. Its results are also used widely by the private sector.

Federal politicians were initially slow to explain the reasons for the change. But over the past week, Tony Clement, the industry minister, said that the government was responding to privacy and coercion complaints.

“We do not believe Canadians should be forced, under threat of fines, jail, or both, to disclose extensive private and personal information,” Mr. Clement said in a statement.

The Canadian news media have had little success in finding many people with such concerns. In 2006 a small number of people refused to fill out census forms. But they were protesting the use of an American technology contractor.

But Maxime Bernier, a prominent Conservative member of Parliament from Quebec, told The Toronto Star that his office received about 1,000 complaints via e-mail a day about the census in 2006. He subsequently said those e-mail messages were deleted long ago.

Canada’s privacy commissioner received two complaints about the 2006 census, a spokeswoman said.

Kenneth Prewitt, the former director of the United States Census Bureau who is now a professor at Columbia University, said that the Canadian government had the power to make its long census form voluntary, even if the idea was not sound. But he was critical of Mr. Clement for suggesting that Statistics Canada finds the idea acceptable from a sampling standpoint.

“I wouldn’t call this political interference,” Professor Prewitt said. “I would call this government stupidity.”

Mr. Sheikh was more circumspect in a resignation statement, which appeared briefly on the Statistics Canada Web site.

“I want to take this opportunity to comment on a technical statistical issue which has become the subject of media discussion,” he wrote. “This relates to the question of whether a voluntary survey can become a substitute for a mandatory census. It cannot.”

Jul 232010
 

REPLY FROM STATSCAN

29/07/2010

Ms. Finley

Thank you for your note.  I hope that you will understand that I cannot comment on the matters described in your note.

Marc Hamel

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =

QUESTION TO STATSCAN & MINISTER RESPONSIBLE: 

HOW DO YOU JUSTIFY LOCKHEED MARTIN CONTRACTS?

From: Sandra Finley
Sent: July-23-10 5:03 PM
To: Marc.Hamel@  AT   tatcan.gc.ca
Cc: minister.industry  AT   ic.gc.ca
Subject: Census: how do you justify the provision of contracts to Lockheed Martin Corporation?

 

Dear Marc,

 

Your predecessors have stalwartly refused to even attempt to respond to the central question of awarding census contracts to Lockheed Martin Corporation.

 

I realize that you didn’t make the decision to give census contracts to Lockheed Martin Corporation; you are placed in a job that requires you to answer the questions.

 

I understand that Public Works Canada awarded the contracts.  But StatsCan implemented them.

 

I have appended excerpts from Lockheed Martin’s record.

 

I will appreciate a response to the question:  how does StatsCan justify the implementation of contracts awarded to Lockheed Martin Corporation, in the face of their public record for acts that are in contravention of Canadian and International Law?

 

 

Thank-you and

 

Best wishes,

Sandra Finley

Saskatoon

306-373-8078

 

– – – – – – – – – – – – – —

 

THE PUBLIC RECORD ON LOCKHEED MARTIN CORPORATION

 

The original census contracts were awarded to Lockheed Martin Corporation at about the same time as the Bush Administration was dropping bombs on Iraq in an illegal war of aggression (2003).  Which of course was hugely profitable for Lockheed Martin.   Then-Prime Minister Jean Chretien kept Canada out of the Iraq War.

 

Lockheed was in a position to influence, and did influence the decision that led to the destruction of Iraqi schools, hospitals, museums, water infrastructure – – everything.  It is a war that is on-going seven years later with many more than a million Iraqis dead, I don’t know how many permanently injured. Millions of other Iraqis are either refugees or they are homeless.  “Refugees International has observed extreme vulnerabilities among the hundreds of thousands of Iraqi refugees living in Syria, Jordan, and other parts of the region, as well as the millions of internally displaced persons within Iraq. … ”

 

It has cost the American public more than 733 billion dollars to wage the Iraq War (not counting Afghanistan) http://costofwar.com/, money they have needed for their own country.  They sink further into mountains of debt, tax-payers harnessed for generations to paying principal with interest (to the banks) – there is no money for social programmes that can stabilize the country.  The international community is asked to step in to provide humanitarian aid to Iraq after the American military-industrial-congressional complex (#1 player, Lockheed Martin) has dropped the bombs; the devastation inflicted by the war is total.

 

The hatred and the terrorists that have been created by that illegal war are incalculable.  Lockheed Martin’s profits and its share price go up.

 

All the good work done by hundreds of thousands of aid workers, religious groups, and others around the world are undone a thousand times over by Lockheed Martin.

 

. . .   What if those bombs had been dropped on us,  from the unmanned aerial vehicles (“UAV’s”, drones, airplanes) that are  Lockheed Martin’s more recent gift to humanity, following after land mines and cluster munitions which are both illegal under Canadian and International Law.  (Lockheed’s unmanned drone programme is now moving to Saskatoon; we sink deeper into the writhings of hell.)

 

There are a number of issues regarding Lockheed Martin’s involvement in the Canadian census:  large legal and moral issues, and as a significant step of the American military into Canada.

 

The Government’s announcement of “no longer mandatory” may have brought its actions within the boundaries permitted by Constitutional law, so the legal issue MAY have been addressed regarding the census long form (I haven’t looked at the short form); the MORAL ISSUE has definitely not been addressed.

 

Nor has the question of the legality or appropriateness of the Government providing more than a billion dollars to Lockheed Martin Corporation that is well-known for a lengthy record of court convictions and fines, procurement fraud, the manufacturing of weapons that are in contravention of Canadian and International Law, and its specialization in international surveillance.  Bribery.  On top of all this, they sell their illegal weapons to anyone with money.  According to POGO (the Project on Government Oversight in the U.S.) in 2000 alone, “Lockheed Martin was charged with 30 violations of the Arms Export Control Act and the International Traffic in Arms Regulations.  The violations were regarding the transfer of space launch assistance technologies to China.  Lockheed Martin paid a civil penalty of $13 million.”  There’s more, including the money it spends to purchase Government officials.

 

The iron irony (as mentioned):

•             Lockheed Martin has moved into Saskatoon (my home) with its unmanned drone agenda.

 

As long as these psychopaths continue to make their billion-dollar profits from the production of machinery for war,  the security of the world is in jeopardy.  (Democracy is badly corrupted by them, too.)  How anyone can think that security will increase by dropping bombs on other people from unmanned aerial vehicles is a new stretch of “rational”.   But it is utilitarian – – a good way for investors to make money.  Just remember that Lockheed Martin feeds at the public trough; there wouldn’t be all the war if American tax-payers weren’t willing to go in hock up to their eyeballs on behalf of Lockheed Martin – – another good way to push money uphill from tax-payers to the already-wealthy investors in Lockheed Martin.

 

I make the point in the chronology that with offset agreements in Lockheed Martin contracts, the Government is transitioning to an economy that makes money on war.  Many years ago I read that 45% of the American economy is dependent upon the waging of war.  The “Canada First Defence Strategy” enacted in June 2008 is very clearly about transforming the Canadian economy into a war economy.  Is that what we want?  Because that’s what you get with Lockheed Martin.

 

•             2003 fall:  it becomes known that Public Works Canada and Statistics Canada out-sourced census work to Lockheed Martin of the American military-industrial-congressional complex.  Lockheed Martin is a key player and profiteer from American and other wars.  http://www.corpwatch.org/article.php?list=type&type=9

 

Lockheed has also been able to exercise its influence in a larger way – in support of the invasion of Iraq. The company’s former vice-president Bruce Jackson chaired the Coalition for the Liberation of Iraq, a bipartisan group formed to promote Bush’s plan for war in Iraq. Bruce Jackson was also involved in corralling the support for the war from Eastern European countries, going so far as helping to write their letter of endorsement for military intervention. Not surprisingly, Lockheed also has business relations with these countries. In 2003 Poland shelled out $3.5 billion for 48 F-16 fighter planes, which it was able to buy with a $3.8 billion loan from the US.”

 

•             2004 – health records of the Canadian military are contracted out to Lockheed Martin Corp.  Now there’s a nice conflict-of-interest!  I think of the American Iraqi war veterans whose health and reproductive capacity has been seriously harmed by weapons that use depleted uranium. And the Viet Nam war veterans whose lives were ruined by exposure to the chemical weapon called Agent Orange.  They have been decades in the battle for compensation while the military hospitals deny, deny, deny. . . .  You’re giving the health records of Canadian military personnel over to Lockheed Martin that makes the weapons?

 

•             2004 November 28:  New York Times, Lockheed and the Future of Warfare

LOCKHEED MARTIN doesn’t run the United States. But it does help run a breathtakingly big part of it.

http://www.globalsecurity.org/org/news/2004/041128-lockheed.htm

‘ . . .   ‘It’s impossible to tell where the government ends and Lockheed begins,” said Danielle Brian of the Project on Government Oversight, a nonprofit group in Washington that monitors government contracts. ”The fox isn’t guarding the henhouse. He lives there.”

No contractor is in a better position than Lockheed to do business in Washington. Nearly 80 percent of its revenue comes from the United States government. Most of the rest comes from foreign military sales, many financed with tax dollars. And former Lockheed executives, lobbyists and lawyers hold crucial posts at the White House and the Pentagon, picking weapons and setting policies.

Obviously, war and crisis have been good for business. The Pentagon’s budget for buying new weapons rose by about a third over the last three years, . . .  “

 

•             2005 March:  The SPP (Security and Prosperity Partnership Agreement) is signed by Martin (Canada), Bush (US) and Fox (Mexico).  Lockheed Martin plays a large role in the SPP (see 2006 September).   Harper replaced Martin as Prime Minister and in 2006 March:  The SPP is confirmed by Harper, Bush, and Fox.

 

•             2005 October:  Washington Post, Lockheed gets (American) census job  http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2005/10/02/AR2005100201032.html

 

•             2005 November:  Ivan P. Fellegi, Chief Statistician of Canada, “I would like to emphasize that only 20% of the work for the 2006 Census will be contracted out while the remaining 80% is being done by Statistics Canada. The distribution, collection, follow-up and storage of questionnaires will be done strictly by Statistics Canada … ”  . .  “ Under the North American Free Trade Agreement and World Trade Organization Agreement regulations that governed this procurement, non-Canadian based firms were eligible to submit a bid… “

 

•             2006 spring:  emerging conflict in priorities.  Research organizations support the census because they regularly use StatsCan data.  From Don Roger’s letter to CCPA:  “ the privacy question is a sidebar. The Monitor has remained deafeningly silent on the moral contradiction of having Census taxpayers’ money going to the subsidiary of Lockheed Martin, one of the world’s biggest armaments manufacturers.  The same edition of the Monitor contains an article about the 10 Worst Corporations in the World. There is Lockheed Martin, rubbing shoulders with the worlds’s worst. …”

 

•             2006 April re Smart Border Plan:  Connie Fogal (then leader of the Canadian Action Party) publishes  http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=2242

The Smart Border Plan between the USA and Canada signed by John Manley December 2001 as Deputy Prime Minister of Canada and Tom Ridge, the U.S. Homeland Security Director which requires the sharing of citizen data, meaning the US Homeland Security gets what it wants to know about Canadians. The terms of this agreement are being implemented incrementally but quickly without the knowledge or consent of Canadians. It is not just covert sharing that is to happen, but overt as well. Start with the stealth and then whammy with the fait accompli.(John Manley currently is a leading light in the North American Task Force of CEO’s commanding the creation of the North American Union.) Our census data will be shared one way or the other so long as this agenda is permitted.

The Security and Prosperity Partnership Agreement signed by Martin (Canada), Bush (US) and Fox (Mexico) in March 2005 confirmed by Harper, Bush, and Fox in March 2006.  By this agreement the three leaders agreed to implement the grand design of the most influential corporations of North America to create a common unit of North America sharing data and merging the three countries into one union without an overall democratically accountable representative political structure. They agreed to expand the Smart Border Plan melding the three countries into one corporate/ military union, focusing initially on Canada /US unity. This means changing Canadian laws and legal structures to mimic those created by the US Congress removing civil liberties (like the security of our census information.)

The integration is proceeding in Canada by subtle but massive bureaucratic restructuring of our skin and skeleton, fleshed out by the dismantling of our constitutional rights without due process and by deceit. David Emerson has crossed to the Conservatives to continue that restructuring that he was spearheading under the Liberals. Take note of recently changed names of government agencies that reflect this transformation. …

 

•             2006:  I am back-and-forth in correspondence with Ivan Felligi, Chief Statistician, repeating that my objection expressed in 2004 is to Lockheed Martin’s involvement.  He does not address Lockheed Martin’s public record of court convictions, fines, etc. in his responses other than to say that through NAFTA American corporations can submit bids.

 

•             2006 September:  The President of the Americas for Lockheed Martin, Ron Covais, active on the SPP with Stephen Harper, tells Macleans Magazine in an article entitled “Meet NAFTA 2.0”   “We’ve decided not to recommend any things that would require legislative changes, because we won’t get anywhere.” The main avenue for changes would be through executive agencies, bureaucrats and regulations, he said, adding: “The guidance from the ministers was, ‘Tell us what we need to do and we’ll make it happen.'”

 

•             2007 August:  SPP (Security and Prosperity Partnership) Summit (Corporate CEO’s including Lockheed Martin, and Government officials).  Citizen protests at Montebello, Quebec against decision-making by unelected corporate interests in secret.    Police disguised as protestors are trained and deployed to turn peaceful protests violent. http://youtube.com/watch?v=DCRsj06wT64

 

Demands for a public inquiry . . . I don’t know where it stands.  The Government stone-walled.   More than a year later there was word that an inquiry would be held.  I have not seen news that an inquiry ever took place.  Watch the video, it’s an outrage that the Government should get away with this – that no one has been held to account.

 

•             2007 June:   (The StatsCan mantra when you ask them about the morality of contracting-out to Lockheed Martin is “Not our responsibility.  The contracts were negotiated by Public Works.”)   Francois Guimont who is well-known to us as head of the Canadian Food Inspection Agency (Ag Canada, GMO’s, Monsanto’s  bioteched crops) is moved over to become Deputy Minister of Public Works and Government Services.  See 2008 July.  Lockheed Martin is awarded contracts for the 2011 Census, in spite of all the opposition from Canadians to date.

 

•             2008 February 14:  Canada and the U.S. sign the “Troop Exchange Agreement”.  Reported in the U.S.  Picked up by Canadian journalist David Pugliese February 22. http://www.canada.com/topics/news/story.html?id=403d90d6-7a61-41ac-8cef-902a1d14879d  “ … He (Stuart Trew, Council of Canadians) noted that work is also underway for the two nations to put in place a joint plan to protect common infrastructure such as roadways and oil pipelines.”

 

Are we going to see (U.S.) troops on our soil for minor potential threats to a pipeline or a road?” he asked.

 

Trew also noted the U.S. military does not allow its soldiers to operate under foreign command so there are questions about who controls American forces if they are requested for service in Canada. “We don’t know the answers because the government doesn’t want to even announce the plan,” he said.

 

But Canada Command spokesman Commander David Scanlon said it will be up to civilian authorities in both countries on whether military assistance is requested or even used.

 

He said the agreement is “benign” and simply sets the stage for military-to-military co-operation if the governments approve.  (INSERT:  puppet governments will approve.)  . . .

 

If U.S. forces were to come into Canada they would be under tactical control of the Canadian Forces but still under the command of the U.S. military, Scanlon added.”

 

•             2008 March:  THE AMERICAN MILITARY FUNCTION IS MORE-AND-MORE “OUT-SOURCED” TO CORPORATIONS LIKE HALLIBURTON.  THERE IS LESS AND LESS ABILITY TO HOLD IT ACCOUNTABLE.  IT BYPASSES DEMOCRATIC PROCESS.  REFERENCE GUANTANAMO BAY, ABU GHRAIB AND DIAMONDBACK.  American prisons are also being privatized.  See 2008 June, Canada now has “compatible doctrine” and “interoperability”.

 

You will know about the contracting-out of military functions through the information coming out of Iraq.  That means the soldiers are not necessarily Americans.  American tax-payors are paying for a growing army of mercenaries that come from poor countries. Information about the operation of “the troops” and accountability are lost when the security function is no longer carried out by the Government.

 

Similar “partnerships” are occurring in the American prison system.  I’ve circulated an email regarding access to information. It contains the example of the prison in Oaklahoma:  Diamondback Correctional Facility in Watonga, OK, a CCA prison that in 2004 held over 1,000 prisoners under a contract with the Arizona Department of Corrections, and another 800 prisoners under a contract with the Hawaii Department of Public Safety, but had no contract with the State of Oklahoma itself.  How can family from Hawaii visit prisoners, or even know how the prisoners are being treated?  There is NO access to information through the State of Oaklahoma because they aren’t using the prison.

 

The Canadian Bar Association has written to the Bush Administration, requesting that Guantanamo Bay (American Military Prison in Cuba) be shut down because of its complete disregard for international agreements on the treatment of prisoners.

 

•      2008 June 19:  the  “Canada First Defence Strategy” comes into being.  We now have “interoperability” with the American Military and “compatible doctrine”.   The decades-long Canadian dedication to alternatives to “killing wars” is gone.   Had this Strategy been in place in 2003, Canada would have directly participated in the killing and destruction that is on-going in Iraq, for no reason other than American imperialism.  And we would have been saddled with the debt that goes along with war.

 

The language of the strategy leads one to believe that Canadian industries will be the beneficiaries:

 

A Military in Partnership with Canadian Industry

The Canada First Defence Strategy will also have significant benefits for Canadian industry. The infusion of long-term stable funding it provides will enable industry to reach for global excellence and to be better positioned to compete for defence contracts at home and abroad, thus enabling a pro-active investment in research and development and opportunities for domestic and international spin-offs as well as potential commercial applications.”

 

Minister responsible, Peter Mackay: “… reveals details of $490-billion defence strategy to modernize military“.

 

But WHO REALLY gets the money?  (Tax-payors pay it.) The billion-dollar contracts are awarded to Lockheed Martin. Lockheed then works with Canadian industries  (Lockheed Martin distributes the goodies.): “Under the in-service support portion, the contractor (Lockheed Martin) will be required to spend in Canada 75 per cent of the total cost in direct industrial regional benefits – well above the 60-per-cent ratio negotiated by the previous government for purchases of this magnitude.”  (Source:  Michael M Fortier, Minister of Public Works, Government press release, January 2008.)

 

Canadian defence strategy is to become “compatible” in “doctrine” with the U.S..  The problem with the “doctrine” of the Bush Administration is that killing creates hatred.  Hatred breeds violence. Violence becomes terrorism. It is known that dropping bombs on people is counter-productive.  But lucrative for Lockheed Martin.

 

The killing-combat model (doctrine) only escalates problems.  It does not mobilize the tremendous power of people, as Gandhi did.  A crowd of thousands, eventually millions, will overcome the various forms of violence, given time. It is the fastest road to peace.  The killing ways of “combat” add to the hatred, prolong the conflict, is transferred from one generation to the next and will destroy the earth.  In its long history, the killing ways have never accomplished peace, only destruction.  This planet is and has been our one and only home, folks.

 

Becoming compatible with “the doctrine” of the Bush Administration, its buddies in Halliburton Corporation, Lockheed Martin, the contracting-out to mercenaries, etc., Canada too is setting up to cash in on “combat”.  Is that what we want for “defence” strategy – –  opportunities to make money?  (Really, it is a transfer of money out of the public purse to the military industry that has record profits because of illegal and immoral war.  Those record profits then go into the pockets of the already-wealthy who have money to invest, and do so with no conscience.)

 

The Canada First Defence Strategy states: “It will also allow the Government to develop a stronger, mutually beneficial relationship with industry.”  The role of Governments is the relationship with human beings and other species, not corporations (“industry”).

 

The contracting-out of Census work and other purchases have nothing to do with the efficiency of Lockheed Martin because it is the private sector.  It has everything to do with transnational corporate access to the public purse through Government contracts and contacts.  How is that accomplished?  In the U.S., “Lockheed Martin spent more on lobbying Congress than any of its competitors, spending $9.7 million in 2002. Only General Electric and Philip Morris reported more lobbying expenses. In the 2004 election cycle, Lockheed contributed more than $1.9 million”.

 

80% of Lockheed’s money comes from the Government of the USA.  The biggest chunk of the 80% is from military contracts.  (It should be noted that Lockheed is diversifying into other Government service areas.  The Canadian census is one example.  Lockheed is also set to perform “data capture” and other services for the 2011 Census in the United Kingdom.  It does the US census work.  The medical records of Canadian soldiers have already been mentioned.)

 

Lockheed Martin is an obvious vehicle through which to become interoperable with the U.S. military. See 2010 June below where Lockheed Martin is moving into Saskatoon with its unmanned drone technology.

 

•             2008, July 21:  Lockheed Martin is awarded contracts for the 2011 Canadian census.

 

•             2008, August:  Lockheed Martin is awarded census contracts in the UK.

The Office for National Statistics today announced the award of the first large contract to support the delivery of the 2011 Census for England and Wales. The contract has been won by Lockheed Martin UK Ltd.

 

•             2008, through “offset agreements” in the contracts, Lockheed Martin starts “gifting” tax-payer dollars.  The only way that Lockheed Martin has excess money to dole out (e.g. to Dalhousie University or to the Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technology), is if the government contracts are exorbitant. Lockheed Martin has a long history of “procurement fraud” in the U.S.

 

Lockheed gets the credit for the largesse and dictates how the money will be spent.  The public interest is lost to corporate interest.

 

Dalhousie University is announcing a multi-million dollar research contract with Lockheed-Martin. This contract is the result of government policy, which requires a foreign company to invest in Canada before it can enter into a government contract.”

 

Offset agreements will in time duplicate the American military-industrial-congressional complex in Canada.  Maybe that has already happened.

 

•             2008 November:  OTTAWA CITIZEN, “CANADIAN OFFICIALS .. WILL MEET THE NEW STANDARD” FOR SUPPLYING DATA ON CANADIANS TO THE AMERICANS

http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/story.html?id=64f59d78-ce97-48dc-b2fd-381859ce6c84

 

(I believe “visa-free access” is a tactic of attempted intimidation to which Canadians should not bow.)

 

“…  In exchange for continued visa-free access to the United States, American officials are pressuring the federal government to supply them with more information on Canadians, says an influential analyst on Canada-U.S. relations.

 

“Not only about (routine) individuals, but also about people that you may be looking at for reasons, but there’s no indictment and there’s no charge,” Christopher Sands of the Hudson Institute told a security intelligence conference in Ottawa yesterday. .  Canadian officials have said this country will meet the new standard, “plus or minus a little,” by 2011, he said. “But there’ll be tremendous pressure (from the U.S.) to get there faster.”

 

What better vehicle for the American military to get information on all Canadians than through the Census with Lockheed Martin as the conduit?

 

•             2008 December:  I read Edwin Black’s book, “IBM and the Holocaust”, 2001, http://www.ibmandtheholocaust.com

 

Detailed files on individual citizens is a characteristic of nazi/fascist/militaristic regimes. Mechanized census files were critical to Hitler’s extermination of people. Statistics Canada is moving more and more in this direction, with the help of Lockheed Martin and IBM as a sub-contractor.  I recommend you read “IBM and the Holocaust”.   It is dangerous to hand over detailed personal information to Government.  Canadians have a Charter Right to privacy specifically because of the historical abuses by Governments that collect data files on citizens.  It is prudent to learn the lessons of history.

 

•             2008, December 3: Canada signs international treaty banning cluster munitions.

 

Today governments from around the world are signing the most significant disarmament and humanitarian treaty of the decade, banning the use, production, transfer and stockpiling of cluster munitions.”

 

Lockheed Martin manufacturers cluster munitions.  The U.S. does not sign the treaty.

 

Announcing at the last minute it would join the group was Afghanistan, which had earlier been seen as bowing to U.S. pressure to refrain.”

 

Lockheed Martin subsequently removes all information and most of the references from its web-site to its cluster munitions.  They are replaced by a statement that says Lockheed does not manufacture cluster munitions.

 

•             2009 Early:  the U.S. Census Bureau (Lockheed Martin with IBM a sub-contractor, same as in Canada and the UK) hires 100,000 people to start doing census work in preparation for the 2010 U.S. census.  GPS locator information is being tied to individual census records.  (2010:  U.S. census documents are on the internet.  They are almost the same as the Canadian ones.)

 

•             2009 January 23:  Student protests at the University of New Brunswick, Lockheed Martin on campus.

 

Lockheed Martin Canada intends to return to the University of New Brunswick. http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/search/article/549077

 

The company, a subsidiary of the giant U.S. military-equipment maker, cancelled an employer information session planned for the campus on Wednesday after a UNB-based social activist group expressed opposition to its presence. . . .

 

•             2009 February 02.

LOCKHEED MARTIN HIKED U.S.LOBBYING BY WHOPPING 54% IN 2008

http://www.tomdispatch.com/post/175029

 

 

The trial raises the issue of our complicity in the enrichment of a corporation that has a long record of very serious court convictions.  If I was Lockheed Martin Corporation I would be in jail for life.

 

In addition, Lockheed Martin has been (still is?) a major manufacturer of weapons of mass and indiscriminate destruction, land mines and cluster bombs both of which are outlawed by International Law. They are into unmanned drones which are also weapons of mass and indiscriminate destruction and immoral as far as I am concerned.

 

Lockheed Martin is a major contributor to American political campaigns and is well-positioned in the Pentagon.  There is good reason why the U.S. will not sign onto the “Laws of War” (International Humanitarian Law).

 

Canada is signatory to the International Laws that prohibit these weapons, and we have our own laws that are even more stringent than the International Conventions.

 

So how is it that we are awarding Government contracts collectively worth way more than a billion dollars to these people?  Canadian foreign policy dictates that we are to impose sanctions against entities that break International Laws.

 

The rule of law and morality must be enforced.  If citizens do not insist upon the rule of law, I don’t know who will.  Unfortunately, I cannot see how the Justice system can be used to address the morality of the Government’s actions.   That’s what elections are for, I guess.  And people inside Government have to stop being complicit collaborators with illegal and immoral corporations.

 

•             2009 December:  (An excellent article.)  U.S. WAR SPENDING EXCEEDS ALL STATE GOVERNMENT OUTLAYS http://www.atlanticfreepress.com/news/1/12560-us-war-spending-exceeds-all-state-government-outlays.html

 

•             2010, February 24:  USING DEFENCE STOCKS TO BOLSTER YOUR INVESTMENT PORTFOLIO, SPOTLIGHT ON LOCKHEED MARTIN, Globe & Mail  http://www.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/e-zines/globe-investor-magazine/using-defence-stocks-to-bolster-your-portfolio/article1478990/?cmpid=1

 

For me, this newspaper article is a tragedy of epic proportions.  Not a tragedy of a single person or family, but of our society.  It is bizarre that this can be an article from a “normal” newspaper, on a normal day, written by a normal person.  It’s not normal; it is insanity.  Invest your money in Lockheed Martin; war is a sure bet when the rest of the stock market is plummeting.  . . . (How different the world would be if “capital” was invested in enterprise that cared about the environment and people.  That day is coming!  See “Agenda for a New Economy, 2nd Edition” (2010) by David Korten.  “From Phantom Wealth to Real Wealth”, “A Declaration of Independence from Wall Street”.)

 

From John Ralston Saul’s “On Equilibrium”:

. .  if utilitarianism (e.g. making money from war and illegal weapons) is given leadership in a given area, it will set about demeaning, marginalizing and unraveling the non-utilitarian elements (INSERT:  like morals) at play. Why?  Because utility is not thought.  Nor is it argument.  It does not, in and of itself, have a purpose or a direction.  A toilet would just as happily dispose of fresh caviar or unwanted goldfish.  It will indifferently send its cargo off through a system of pipes to be deposited in a sewage-treatment plant or directly into your drinking-water supply.  That was the point about the IBM Hollerith punch-card machine, indifferently an organizer of death camps and of efficient workplace structures.

 

Utilitarianism can only lead us if it reduces all else to its own narrow truth of utility.  The closest utility can come to a purpose is efficiency and, related to that, self-interest.  (INSERT: invest in Lockheed Martin because it will make you money.  Never mind about the moral issues.)  This can be made into a seductive proposition, thanks to myriad fast, apparently clear, short-term answers and concrete illustrations of those answers.

 

But what makes a society a society or a civilization is precisely its more complex, less clear, more long-term, non-utilitarian aspects. And so it was a consensus around the ‘nature of the other’ which solidified the idea of responsible individualism and social inclusion, which drove the movement for egalitarian waste removal and clean-water supplies.  This was an illustration of culture in its broadest sense.  It included what we have always considered to be culture – ideas, literature, images, music, architecture, the sciences.  Why do we think of these as culture?  Because they are the repositories and the mechanisms of thought and argument.

 

…  None of this is a comment on whether utility is good or bad.  Or waste disposal.  Or trade. (INSERT:  or investment in Lockheed Martin)  Nor is it a comment on the necessary function of self-interest.  I’m simply pointing out that these characteristics and functions are not in and of themselves rational.  They are not equipped to lead society.

 

Why then are we so obsessed by utilitarianism?  We have always wanted the comfort of clarity and permanent systems.  We remain uncomfortable with our own qualities and strengths – with complexity and uncertainty. …

 

… Rousseau: “As soon as public service ceases to be the main concern of the citizens and they come to prefer to serve the state with their purse rather than their person, the state is already close to ruin.

 

Norway will not invest public money in Lockheed Martin Corporation.  Morality enters into their investment decisions.  You invest your money in the kind of economy that is beneficial to the Earth and its people.  It’s a no-brainer.  What has happened to us?

 

•             2010, March 3:  “ . . .  Secure Flight, the newest weapon in the U.S.’s war on terrorism, gives the United States unprecedented power over who can board planes that fly over U.S. airspace -even if the flights originate and land in Canada.

 

The program, set to take effect globally in December, was created as part of the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act, adopted by the U.S. Congress in 2004.

 

Canada’s Parliament never adopted or even discussed the Secure Flight program – even though Secure Flight transfers the authority to screen passengers, and their personal information, from domestic airlines to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

 

The European Parliament, on the other hand, has consistently voiced objections to the Secure Flight plan. .. “

 

•             2010 March:  The U.S. Census is starting up with a big ad campaign.   There is large opposition because of the privacy issue.  I contact numbers of websites:  the Americans appear to be completely unaware that Lockheed Martin/IBM are essentially the U.S. Census Bureau.

 

•             2010 March 24:  Armoured vehicles adopted by B.C. RCMP  “The RCMP said the so-called “Cougars for cops” is a national program, and residents of other cities can expect to see the vehicles on their streets too. “

http://news.ca.msn.com/local/britishcolumbia/article.aspx?cp-documentid=23717966

 

(This is part of the “normalization” of a military presence in Canadian communities.  It is not normal at all and should be strenuously resisted.)

 

•             2010 April 10.  Lockheed Martin sets up in First Nations (Whitecap) business park outside Saskatoon.

Business park in the works

http://www.leaderpost.com/business/Business+park+works/2786466/story.html

 

You will see in the article that Whitecap Development Corp (First Nations) south of Saskatoon  “is trying to obtaining licensing rights” for “an unmanned vehicle for military .. use”.

 

Drones that drop bombs come to mind.  Lockheed Martin is in that business:

http://www.lockheedmartin.com/news/press_releases/2006/LOCKHEEDMARTINSUNMANNEDSYSTEMSTECHN.html

 

•             2010 June 26:  Aerospace Giant Lockheed Martin Donating  $3.5 Million  Training Package to the Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technology (SIIT) in Saskatoon

 

http://www.thestarphoenix.com/technology/Lockheed+Martin+donates+SIIT/3204419/story.html

 

Also:  http://www.marketwatch.com/story/lockheed-martin-donates-35-million-canadian-training-package-to-saskatchewan-indian-institute-of-technologies-2010-06-25-90590?reflink=MW_news_stmp

 

we are talking about unmanned drones that drop bombs on real live people, but ones that live far away.

 

First Nations people should have training in the jobs of the future:  energy conservation, retrofitting and renewable energy.  They should not be held hostage by the likes of Lockheed Martin Corporation.

 

And so, the American military-industrial-congressional complex is imported by quislings who rely on ignorance, into Canada.  We now have “inter-operability” with the Americans, “compatible doctrine” and other goodies like lots of money to expand the military-industrial economy that is dependent on the making of war.

 

And so we in Saskatchewan are now part of the unmanned drones launched by computer-game whiz kids from military installations in the desert in Nevada against targets in Yemen and elsewhere.  We in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan will play a central role in the further development of this latest outrage against humanity.  The tactics of the Nazis were marginally less immoral.

 

Infrequently I have been accused of undermining a “good” Canada by being critical.  And of undermining our “good” neighbours, the Americans.

 

My response:  If wrong is not challenged aggressively, the Americans (and we) live a myth of democracy, not reality.  Failure to identify and address the wrong is the surest way for a good system to fail.

 

By tabling the problems I am fulfilling my responsibility as a member of the human species.

 

I have followed what Lockheed Martin is doing.  From my perspective it is part of the growing police state.   StatsCan’s reassurances about Lockheed Martin’s role in the Canadian census fall into the category of the reassurances given to Canadians in 1995 that CN would remain Canadian.  They even passed legislation to ensure that CN’s headquarters would remain in Montreal.  Today CN is American-owned.  People are naïve if they think that Lockheed Martin and the Government are to be trusted.  It is only a matter of time before Lockheed will have what it wants.  This is not a good situation for a number of reasons, not the least of which is that the American Patriot Act trumps all Canadian laws.  Any American corporation and its subsidiaries that have access to data bases can be ordered to hand over the data base information to the American Government (the Pentagon).  No notice is given to the owner of the data base.

 

This mess over the census arises because Public Works Canada and Statistics Canada out-sourced census work to Lockheed Martin Corporation which is essentially the American military/Pentagon.

 

Lockheed is responsible for death and destruction in untold numbers.  Why would we allow Lockheed Martin into our country?  Or the American military?   Both should be on trial for murder, along with the Bush Administration.

 

In spite of all the protests over the Government contracts awarded to Lockheed Martin for the 2006 census, the Government went ahead and gave them contracts for the 2011 census, too.  I don’t buy the argument that “NAFTA made me do it”, or that Lockheed Martin Canada is not the same as Lockheed Martin USA.  In a democracy I am responsible for the actions of my Government.   In life, you have to draw your line in the sand.  Government contracts with corporations whose mission is to destroy life are not to be tolerated.

 

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Email from:

Sandra Finley

Saskatoon SK  S7N 0L1

306-373-8078

sabest1@sasktel.net

Jun 292010
 

http://www.thestar.com/news/canada/article/830206–tories-eliminate-compulsory-long-census-form

Published On Tue Jun 29 2010   – – in the Globe & Mail, the Toronto Star and many other newspapers.

Jennifer Ditchburn The Canadian Press

OTTAWA—The federal government is scrapping the mandatory long census form in favour of a voluntary survey — a move some critics blame on a Conservative campaign to slash analytical work done by Statistics Canada.

For the first time in 35 years, the census will not feature a detailed, long form that Canadians are obliged to send back to the government.

Instead, a mandatory short form will go out to everyone for next year’s census, with basic questions about how many people live in the household and their ages and genders.

The voluntary “national household survey,” with detailed questions about ethnicity, income, and education, will be sent to one-third of homes. That’s an increase from the 20 per cent of homes that used to get the mandatory long-form.

The move is a response to protests from some Canadians who resented the personal questions in the long form. Similar opposition has been raised in the United States by some Republicans opposed to Washington collecting and analyzing data.

“Our feeling was that the change was to make a reasonable limit on what most Canadians felt was an intrusion into their personal privacy in terms of answering the longer form,” said Erik Waddell, spokesman for Industry Minister Tony Clement, said Tuesday.

Some Canadians also criticized the fact Statistics Canada had purchased data software from U.S. defence corporation Lockheed Martin, although the agency has insisted the firm does not have access to personal data.

One woman in Saskatchewan is still battling the federal government in the courts over her refusal to complete the census.

Don Rogers, a Kingston, Ont., man who mounted the “Count Me Out” campaign against the census, counselled Canadians on how to provide minimum co-operation on the census. That included crumpling the forms or writing answers upside-down.

“The Canadian census was originally a count of heads and cows … and we would certainly like it to revert back, if not all the way to that point, but to a collection of very basic, minimal information,” said Rogers.

“There’s no need to ask how many rooms in your house, there’s no need to ask how many hours of unpaid work do the members of your household do.”

What the impact will be on the quantity of data that Statistics Canada receives is a question even the agency can’t answer. Officials are counting on Canadians, who generally have high rates of response to surveys, to do their civic duty and mail in the forms.

“What we can tell you is that the data we will release will be of quality, but we do acknowledge that we may not get the same level of detail as that of a census,” said Rosemary Bender, director general of the agency’s census, social and demographic statistics branch.

“This is something we’ll be monitoring closely…”

Insiders who spoke to The Canadian Press on condition of anonymity decry a new world order within the agency since the Conservatives came to power in 2006 and legendary chief statistician Ivan Fellegi retired.

Employees were told a little over a year ago that there would be less emphasis on analysis. A highly praised survey on immigrants to Canada, for example, has been axed. Other analytical jobs, in areas such as business and trade statistics, and the aging population, have been eliminated.

Some employees say the agency will lose its status as best statistical office in the world.

One StatsCan source said the move could have a negative impact on the dozens of provincial governments, community groups and other organizations that depend on the data for developing policy.

“It will be a disaster. A lot of policy across Canada has been based on that long form,” the source said.

University of Western Ontario statistician David Bellhouse says the main problem with making the long form voluntary is that there will be a bias in the numbers.

Certain groups of Canadians might be more inclined not to fill out the form, skewing the results. Already, many aboriginals living on reserves have balked at filling out the census.

“You’re getting an incomplete picture. The people who refuse to respond might be different from the people who are willing to respond,” said Bellhouse.

“In surveys, it’s generally known that when you ask the question about what is your income, people in higher incomes typically refuse to respond to that question and you can be slightly biased downwards.”

Jun 262010
 

UPDATE:  this initiative has been significantly expanded to include more Government money and other public institutions.

UPDATE (Lockheed Martin continues to increase its presence in Saskatchewan:

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We in Saskatoon are now part of the unmanned drones launched by computer-game-whiz kids.  You are dreaming in technicolour if you think that bombs won’t one day be coming at us from UAV’s in the sky.  Lockheed Martin was fined $13 million in one year alone for contravention of U.S. Arms Export Control laws.  They do not care to whom they sell their wares, be they cluster munitions, weapons with depleted uranium, etc.

CONTENTS

(1)   COMMENTARY

(2)   LOCKHEED MARTIN DONATES $3.5 MILLION TO SIIT, SASKATOON STAR PHOENIX,  June 26, 2010

(3)  SIIT WEBSITE – LOCKHEED MARTIN DONATES CA $3.5 MILLION TRAINING PACKAGE TO SASKATCHEWAN INDIAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGIES, June 25

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(1)  COMMENTARY 
 
April 2010 announcement Saskatoon Star Phoenix:  Lockheed Martin Corp is moving into the Whitecap Business Park south of Saskatoon.

June 26, 2010 announcement SSP:  Lockheed Martin is donating $3.5 million to SIIT (Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technology on 3rd Ave in downtown Saskatoon). 

 

It is not mentioned  in the Star Phoenix article what kind of “aerospace” technology we are talking about.  It seems reasonable to assume that it’s the same being talked about at White Cap:  an unmanned vehicle for military .. use.  If you marry the two articles, add in “aerospace”, it would seem that indeed we are talking about unmanned drones that drop bombs on real live people, but ones that live far away.

” …  the advanced technology area of aircraft engineering and sustainment,”Tom Digan, president of Lockheed Martin Canada said …

And so, the American military-industrial-congressional complex is imported by quislings who rely on ignorance, into Canada.  We now have “inter-operability” with the Americans, “compatible doctrine” and other goodies like lots of money to expand the military-industrial economy that is dependent on the making of war.  Thank-you, Stephen and all our politicians!  Where is the opposition?

Lockheed Martin – –  unmanned drones launched by computer-game whiz kids from military installations in the desert in Nevada against targets in Yemen and elsewhere.  Civilian deaths – – and more hatred to stoke the fires of terrorists.  We in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan put our hands in the gloves of the people responsible for UAVs, the latest outrage  against humanity, not to mention their earlier outrages.  The tactics of the Nazis were marginally less immoral than those of Lockheed Martin.

But it’s not over yet.  We will stop Lockheed Martin.  Non-cooperation (non-violent resistance, the weapon of Ghandi) with the May 2011 Census so long as Lockheed Martin has a role in it, is one part of it.

= == == = ==  = = = = ==

“The center is an expression of a successful public private partnership with Industrial and Regional Benefits related to military defence procurement at the core.”

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(2)   LOCKHEED MARTIN DONATES $3.5 MILLION TO SIIT, SASKATOON STAR PHOENIX,  June 26, 2010

http://www2.canada.com/saskatoonstarphoenix/news/local/story.html?id=8251de1d-8d96-4bbd-b31b-9fefe24d39f4

Lockheed Martin donates $3.5M to SIIT

The StarPhoenix

Published: Saturday, June 26, 2010

Aerospace giant Lockheed Martin is donating a $3.5-million “training package” to the Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technology (SIIT).

The donation, announced at the school’s main campus in downtown Saskatoon Friday morning, includes a package of training materials for the school’s Aviation Maintenance and Engineering (AME) faculty.

The announcement folllows other previously announced partnerships between the company and SIIT. It was made at the school’s Saskatoon campus by company and school officials, as well as Saskatoon Blackstrap MP and Minister of State for Western Economic Diversification Lynne Yelich, Saskatchewan Advanced Education, Employment and Labour Minister Rob Norris and Saskatchewan Minister of First Nations and Metis Relations Bill Hutchinson.

    The company will supply the training materials and the two-year course to become a “certified aircraft maintenance engineer” will be taught by SIIT instructors.

Last month, Lockheed Martin donated $100,000 to support the AME program and announced the continued collaboration with SIIT to develop and implement courseware and instructors’ materials for training in more than three dozen engineering disciplines including systems engineering, quality assurance, logistics and interface engineering management.

The advanced modules are similar to those used internally by the corporation and are based on decades of lessons learned in aerospace and systems engineering on major, complex programs.

“We believe this program will enable post-secondary students to enhance their knowledge and skills in the advanced technology area of aircraft engineering and sustainment,” Tom Digan, president of Lockheed Martin Canada said in a statement.

© The StarPhoenix (Saskatoon) 2010

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(3)  SIIT WEBSITE – –  LOCKHEED MARTIN DONATES CA $3.5 MILLION TRAINING PACKAGE TO SASKATCHEWAN INDIAN INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGIES, June 25

(bottom of this article:  it is written by Lockheed Martin.)

http://www.siit.sk.ca/news_events/2010/june/25/lockheed-martin-donates-ca35-million-training-package-saskatchewan-indian-i

Lockheed Martin Donates CA$3.5 Million Training Package to Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technologies

June 25, 2010

SASKATOON, SASKATCHEWAN – June 25, 2010 – Lockheed Martin announced a CA$3.5 million donation of a package of training materials to the school’s Aviation Maintenance and Engineering (AME) faculty.

The announcement, which builds on its relationship with the Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technologies, was made at the school’s Saskatoon campus in partnership with the Honourable Lynne Yelich, Minister of State for Western Economic Diversification.

Lockheed Martin last month donated CA$100,000 to support the AME program and announced at that time the continued collaboration with faculty administration to develop and implement courseware and instructor’s materials for training in more than three-dozen engineering disciplines including systems engineering, quality assurance, logistics and interface engineering management. The advanced modules are similar to those used internally by the corporation and are based on decades of lessons learned in aerospace and systems engineering on major, complex programs.

“We believe this program will enable post-secondary students to enhance their knowledge and skills in the advanced technology area of aircraft engineering and sustainment,” said Tom Digan, president of Lockheed Martin Canada. “Leveraging lessons-learned from decades of work on complex engineering programs, the courseware will build upon the student’s existing curriculum and help ensure that the Canadian aviation industry has the skill force for the future.

“We are honored to have a partnership with Lockheed Martin Canada,” said Randell Morris, President and CEO of the Saskatchewan Indian Institute of Technologies. “The responsiveness on the part of this world class defence contractor to the needs of a growing institution such as SIIT is remarkable. We will implement this training package within our Aviation Learning Center, a new training facility site located at the Saskatoon Airport. The center is an expression of a successful public-private partnership with Industrial and Regional Benefits related to military defence procurement at the core. The new facility and these types of training tools provided through Lockheed Martin Canada are the conduit to working more closely with industry and our First Nation communities. I am very grateful to Lockheed Martin for this investment as it showcases how a First Nation post-secondary institution can partner with industry and work together to grow the western economy.”

Lockheed Martin Mission Systems and Sensors (MS2) is donating the courseware, valued at more than CA$3.5M, as part of the company’s commitment to the Canadian government to satisfy industrial and regional benefits associated with its role as prime contractor for the mid-life modernization of the combat systems on board the Navy’s Halifax Class frigate. The CA$1.6 billion program was awarded in late 2008 to Lockheed Martin Canada.

In the first 12 months of the contract, Lockheed Martin has provided more than CA$200 million in economic and regional benefits though strategic industrial partnerships and investments in research and development. The government’s Department of Western Economic Diversification has added its support to this initiative.

“This program will create jobs and opportunity for Aboriginal students,” said the Honourable Lynne Yelich. “We are pleased to see partnerships like this that will help build a stronger, more diversified economy.”

Earlier this year, the Saskatchewan government announced a CA$350,000 investment in the AME program including an operating grant and donated aircraft to enhance the post-secondary training opportunities for Saskatchewan students.

“The provincial government is pleased to be part of this exciting initiative that will help meet the strong labour market demand for aviation maintenance engineering,” Advanced Education, Employment and Labour Minister Rob Norris said. “This program allows students to receive this specialized training right here in Saskatchewan and be part of our growing workforce.”

Lockheed Martin Canada has about 500 employees principally located in the Ottawa head office, Montreal and Dartmouth. Headquartered in Bethesda, Md., Lockheed Martin is a global security company that employs about 136,000 people worldwide and is principally engaged in the research, design, development, manufacture, integration and sustainment of advanced technology systems, products and services. The corporation reported 2009 sales of $45.2 billion US.

Media Contact: Michael Barton, 613-862-6686; e-mail, Michael.Barton@lmco.com

For additional information, visit our website:
http://www.lockheedmartin.com