Sandra Finley

Feb 202009
 

Scientific American calling for seed companies to allow independant scientists to assess the safety of gmos and a follow up from the 24 USA crop scientists complaining earlier this year.  ( http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/20/business/20crop.html)

• Scientists must ask corporations for permission before publishing independent research on genetically modified crops. That restriction must end Scientific American, Editorial, August 2009 edition, published 21 July 2009: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=do-seed-companies-control-gm-crop-research

 

February 20, 2009

Crop Scientists Say Biotechnology Seed Companies Are Thwarting Research

By ANDREW POLLACK

 

Biotechnology companies are keeping university scientists from fully researching the effectiveness and environmental impact of the industry’s genetically modified crops, according to an unusual complaint issued by a group of those scientists.

 

“No truly independent research can be legally conducted on many critical questions,” the scientists wrote in a statement submitted to the Environmental Protection Agency. The E.P.A. is seeking public comments for scientific meetings it will hold next week on biotech crops.

 

The statement will probably give support to critics of biotech crops, like environmental groups, who have long complained that the crops have not been studied thoroughly enough and could have unintended health and environmental consequences.

 

The researchers, 26 corn-insect specialists, withheld their names because they feared being cut off from research by the companies. But several of them agreed in interviews to have their names used.

 

The problem, the scientists say, is that farmers and other buyers of genetically engineered seeds have to sign an agreement meant to ensure that growers honor company patent rights and environmental regulations. But the agreements also prohibit growing the crops for research purposes.

 

So while university scientists can freely buy pesticides or conventional seeds for their research, they cannot do that with genetically engineered seeds. Instead, they must seek permission from the seed companies. And sometimes that permission is denied or the company insists on reviewing any findings before they can be published, they say.

 

Such agreements have long been a problem, the scientists said, but they are going public now because frustration has been building.

 

“If a company can control the research that appears in the public domain, they can reduce the potential negatives that can come out of any research,” said Ken Ostlie, an entomologist at the University of Minnesota, who was one of the scientists who had signed the statement.

 

What is striking is that the scientists issuing the protest, who are mainly from land-grant universities with big agricultural programs, say they are not opposed to the technology. Rather, they say, the industry’s chokehold on research means that they cannot supply some information to farmers about how best to grow the crops. And, they say, the data being provided to government regulators is being “unduly limited.”

 

The companies “have the potential to launder the data, the information that is submitted to E.P.A.,” said Elson J. Shields, a professor of entomology at Cornell.

 

William S. Niebur, the vice president in charge of crop research for DuPont, which owns the big seed company Pioneer Hi-Bred, defended his company’s policies. He said that because genetically engineered crops were regulated by the government, companies must carefully police how they are grown.

 

“We have to protect our relationship with governmental agencies by having very strict control measures on that technology,” he said.

 

But he added that he would welcome a chance to talk to the scientists about their concerns.

 

Monsanto and Syngenta, two other biotech seed companies, said Thursday that they supported university research. But as did Pioneer, they said their contracts with seed buyers were meant to protect their intellectual property and meet their regulatory obligations.

 

But an E.P.A. spokesman, Dale Kemery, said Thursday that the government required only management of the crops’ insect resistance and that any other contractual restrictions were put in place by the companies.

 

The growers’ agreement from Syngenta not only prohibits research in general but specifically says a seed buyer cannot compare Syngenta’s product with any rival crop.

 

Dr. Ostlie, at the University of Minnesota, said he had permission from three companies in 2007 to compare how well their insect-resistant corn varieties fared against the rootworms found in his state. But in 2008, Syngenta, one of the three companies, withdrew its permission and the study had to stop.

 

“The company just decided it was not in its best interest to let it continue,” Dr. Ostlie said.

 

Mark A. Boetel, associate professor of entomology at North Dakota State University, said that before genetically engineered sugar beet seeds were sold to farmers for the first time last year, he wanted to test how the crop would react to an insecticide treatment. But the university could not come to an agreement with the companies responsible, Monsanto and Syngenta, over publishing and intellectual property rights.

 

Chris DiFonzo, an entomologist at Michigan State University, said that when she conducted surveys of insects, she avoided fields with transgenic crops because her presence would put the farmer in violation of the grower’s agreement.

 

An E.P.A. scientific advisory panel plans to hold two meetings next week. One will consider a request from Pioneer Hi-Bred for a new method that would reduce how much of a farmer’s field must be set aside as a refuge aimed at preventing insects from becoming resistant to its insect-resistant corn.

 

The other meeting will look more broadly at insect-resistant biotech crops.

 

Christian Krupke, an assistant professor at Purdue, said that because outside scientists could not study Pioneer’s strategy, “I don’t think the potential drawbacks have been critically evaluated by as many people as they should have been.”

 

Dr. Krupke is chairman of the committee that drafted the statement, but he would not say whether he had signed it.

 

Dr. Niebur of Pioneer said the company had collaborated in preparing its data with universities in Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska, the states most affected by the particular pest.

 

Dr. Shields of Cornell said financing for agricultural research had gradually shifted from the public sector to the private sector. That makes many scientists at universities dependent on financing or technical cooperation from the big seed companies.

 

“People are afraid of being blacklisted,” he said. “If your sole job is to work on corn insects and you need the latest corn varieties and the companies decide not to give it to you, you can’t do your job.”

 

www.cban.ca

Join the Global Rejection of GE Wheat! www.cban.ca/GEwheat

Feb 092009
 

I despaired last November when the CRTC denied the requests to ban Internet ‘Throttling’.

Even the U.S. has banned it.

HOWEVER!  I overlooked this statement: Based on an outcry of more than 1,100 submissions made to the CRTC, the federal regulator will hold a public hearing in July … 

DEADLINE for submissions to the public hearing:   FEBRUARY 16th.

The Chairperson of the CRTC is:  Konrad von Finckenstein.

Please – –  send this far and wide.  There needs to be as many emails and phone calls as possible.

(outdated section deleted)

 

I lodged my complaint and expectation that von Finckenstein is to provide leadership.  I was transferred to “client service”.

“Patrick” at client service didn’t think there is a big problem because they’ve only received 10 or 15 calls.

I asked “how many emails have you received on net neutrality or internet throttling?”   Reply:  He really doesn’t know.  (The answer is thousands upon thousands.)

 

I guess we have to make some phone calls, in addition to the emails!  (phone numbers no longer valid)

 

I have grown impatient.  I have expectations of government.

If you value equal access to the internet and are unfamiliar with the issue,  (link no longer valid)

Scroll down to the videos of Matt Thompson, for example.  He does an excellent job of explaining.

The CRTC is “in charge of regulating and supervising” Canadian broadcasting and telecommunications.  It is in charge of regulating Bell, Shaw and Rogers Communications. Its decisions around the internet are of very serious concern.

My view differs from some:

–  the air waves and radio waves are part of “the commons”.  They have the same status as water, our knowledge base, etc.

–  I worked for a Telephone Company for a relatively small number of years.  The sole responsibility of one department was to get more and more “rate increases” and concessions from Government regulators.  This department grew from a volkswagon beetle carload to an elite dining car trainload – just in the time I was there.  By now I shudder to think how large the department is.

–  We are powerful when connected with each other and with information. It ain’t smart to be stupid and inactive.  There is a great deal at stake.

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

NEWSPAPER REPORT, NOV 2008,  CRTC denies request to ban Internet ‘Throttling’

THE U.S. and OBAMA support “NET NEUTRALITY” – – see high-lighted information:

By David George-Cosh, Financial Post November 28, 2008

CRTC president Konrad von Finckenstein  Photograph by: Wayne Cuddington/Ottawa Citizen, Canwest News ServiceBCE Inc. may have won an important ruling on Thursday on how it controls its Internet services, but the debate over Canada’s role in managing its part of the world wide web has just begun.

Canada’s telecom regulator denied a request by the Canadian Association of Internet Providers to prohibit the slowing or “throttling” of Internet traffic, while also calling for public hearings on the broader issue of Internet traffic management.

“Based on the evidence before us, we found that the measures employed by Bell Canada to manage its network were not discriminatory. Bell Canada applied the same traffic-shaping practices to wholesale customers as it did to its own retail customers,” said Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission chairman Konrad von Finckenstein.

In April, CAIP filed a complaint with the CRTC alleging that Bell’s slowing down of its wholesale Internet service was created a competitive disadvantage to the 50-odd companies it represents. In a later submission to the regulator, Bell countered, saying it needed to manage its network effectively to ensure its service would not be congested for its customers.

The decision closes one chapter in a long-awaited ruling that industry observers saw as a judgment on how fair Canada’s Internet is for consumers. But it opens another. Based on an outcry of more than 1,100 submissions made to the CRTC, the federal regulator will hold a public hearing in July to address the extent in which ISPs can manage traffic within the legislative guidelines.

Advocates of net neutrality — the principle that access to the Internet should not be controlled or hindered — should not give up hope just yet, said Michael Geist, Canada Research Chair of Internet and e-commerce Law at the University of Ottawa.

“The [CRTC] has clearly recognized that it was looking at a narrow slice of the network neutrality issue. It’s a very specific context on a specific service with limited number of players,” Mr. Geist said. “I think they realized this issue was bigger than that and therefore it has called for a full scale proceeding on the issue next year.”

Nonetheless, CAIP president Tom Copeland is disappointed in the ruling.

“It’s a very disappointing day not just for competition but should be for consumers as well,” Mr. Copeland said in an interview.

“The more that incumbent carriers are allowed to undertake in this behaviour, the further Canada falls behind in a number of Internet-related activities, whether that’s broadband penetration, competition or innovation.”

Bell’s chief of regulatory affairs, Mirko Bibic, applauded the decision and has no qualms about holding a public debate about net neutrality.

“One thing it will serve to do which will be useful for everyone is that it will avoid any future applications against us or any other ISPs for different things that may be done for the same reasons,” Mr. Bibic said.

A formal hearing in Canada over net neutrality follows in the footsteps of a ruling in September by the U.S. Federal Communications Commission that cable operator Comcast Corp. couldn’t delay some peer-to-peer traffic on its network.

The concept has also reverberated in Washington. President-elect Barack Obama campaigned on a pro-net neutrality platform while it is expected the Senate will introduce net neutrality into law and ban ISPs from blocking content next year.

Still, there remains frustration that Canada remains several steps behind their American counterparts when it comes to technology-related legislation.

“The communication regulator in [the U.S.] have already come out against traffic shaping … and yet Canada’s going to take until the end of next year before we have any position on it,” Mr. Copeland said.

© Copyright (c) National Post

Feb 022009
 

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

February 02, 2009

Economic Death Spiral at the Pentagon

Recently, reviewing lobbying disclosure reports, the Washington Times discovered “that 18 of the top 20 recipients of federal bailout money spent a combined $12.2 million lobbying the White House, the Treasury Department, Congress, and federal agencies during the last quarter of 2008.” Citibank alone, according to the New York Times, fielded “an army of Washington lobbyists,” plunking down $1.77 million in lobbying fees just in the fourth quarter of last year.

And it isn’t only sinking financial institutions begging for federal dollars that have bolstered their Washington lobbying corps. So have the biggest U.S. armaments companies — “drastically,” according to reporter August Cole of the Wall Street Journal. In 2008, he found, Northrop Grumman almost doubled its lobbying budget to $20.6 million (from $10.9 million the previous year); Boeing upped its budget from $10.6 million to $16.6 million in the same period; and Lockheed-Martin, the company that received the most contracts from the Pentagon last year, hiked its lobbying efforts by a whopping 54% in 2008.

If you want to get a taste of what that means, then click here to view an ad for that company’s potentially embattled boondoggle, the F-22, the most expensive jet fighter ever built.

What you’ll discover is not just that it will “protect” 300 million people — that’s you, if you live in the USA — but that it will also employ 95,000 of us. In other words, the ad’s threatening message implies, if the Obama administration cuts this program in bad times, it will throw another 95,000 Americans out on the street. Now that’s effective lobbying for you, especially when you consider, as Chalmers Johnson does below, that for any imaginable war the U.S. might fight in the coming decades, the F-22 will be a thoroughly useless plane.

We don’t usually think of the Pentagon as a jobs-and-careers scam operation, a kind of Mega-Madoff Ponzi scheme that goes BOOM!, though it is clearly designed for the well-being of defense contractors, military officers, and congressional representatives; nor do we usually consider the “defense” budget as a giant make-work jobs racket, as arms experts Bill Hartung and Christopher Preble recently suggested, but it’s never too late.

Chalmers Johnson, author of the already-classic Blowback Trilogy, including most recently Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic, makes vividly clear just how little the Pentagon is organized to consider the actual defense needs of the United States. In many ways, it remains a deadly organization of boys with toys that now poses a distinct economic danger to the rest of us. (Check out, as well, a TomDispatch audio interview with Johnson on the Pentagon’s economic death spiral by clicking here). Tom

The Looming Crisis at the Pentagon
How Taxpayers Finance Fantasy Wars
By Chalmers Johnson

Like much of the rest of the world, Americans know that the U.S. automotive industry is in the grips of what may be a fatal decline. Unless it receives emergency financing and undergoes significant reform, it is undoubtedly headed for the graveyard in which many American industries are already buried, including those that made televisions and other consumer electronics, many types of scientific and medical equipment, machine tools, textiles, and much earth-moving equipment — and that’s to name only the most obvious candidates. They all lost their competitiveness to newly emerging economies that were able to outpace them in innovative design, price, quality, service, and fuel economy, among other things.

A similar, if far less well known, crisis exists when it comes to the military-industrial complex. That crisis has its roots in the corrupt and deceitful practices that have long characterized the high command of the Armed Forces, civilian executives of the armaments industries, and Congressional opportunists and criminals looking for pork-barrel projects, defense installations for their districts, or even bribes for votes.

Given our economic crisis, the estimated trillion dollars we spend each year on the military and its weaponry is simply unsustainable. Even if present fiscal constraints no longer existed, we would still have misspent too much of our tax revenues on too few, overly expensive, overly complex weapons systems that leave us ill-prepared to defend the country in a real military emergency. We face a double crisis at the Pentagon: we can no longer afford the pretense of being the Earth’s sole superpower, and we cannot afford to perpetuate a system in which the military-industrial complex makes its fortune off inferior, poorly designed weapons.

Double Crisis at the Pentagon

This self-destructive system of bloated budgets and purchases of the wrong weapons has persisted for so long thanks to the aura of invincibility surrounding the Armed Forces and a mistaken belief that jobs in the arms industry are as valuable to the economy as jobs in the civilian sector.

Recently, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Admiral Michael Mullen began to advocate nothing less than protecting the Pentagon budget by pegging defense spending to a fixed percentage of gross domestic product (GDP, the total value of goods and services produced by the economy). This would, of course, mean simply throwing out serious strategic analysis of what is actually needed for national defense. Mullen wants, instead, to raise the annual defense budget in the worst of times to at least 4% of GDP. Such a policy is clearly designed to deceive the public about ludicrously wasteful spending on weapons systems which has gone on for decades.

It is hard to imagine any sector of the American economy more driven by ideology, delusion, and propaganda than the armed services. Many people believe that our military is the largest, best equipped, and most invincible among the world’s armed forces. None of these things is true, but our military is, without a doubt, the most expensive to maintain. Each year, we Americans account for nearly half of all global military spending, an amount larger than the next 45 nations together spend on their militaries annually.

Equally striking, the military seems increasingly ill-adapted to the types of wars that Pentagon strategists agree the United States is most likely to fight in the future, and is, in fact, already fighting in Afghanistan — insurgencies led by non-state actors. While the Department of Defense produces weaponry meant for such wars, it is also squandering staggering levels of defense appropriations on aircraft, ships, and futuristic weapons systems that fascinate generals and admirals, and are beloved by military contractors mainly because their complexity runs up their cost to astronomical levels.

That most of these will actually prove irrelevant to the world in which we live matters not a whit to their makers or purchasers. Thought of another way, the stressed out American taxpayer, already supporting two disastrous wars and the weapons systems that go with them, is also paying good money for weapons that are meant for fantasy wars, for wars that will only be fought in the battlescapes and war-gaming imaginations of Defense Department “planners.”

The Air Force and the Army are still planning as if, in the reasonably near future, they were going to fight an old-fashioned war of attrition against the Soviet Union, which disappeared in 1991; while the Navy, with its eleven large aircraft-carrier battle groups, is, as William S. Lind has written, “still structured to fight the Imperial Japanese Navy.” Lind, a prominent theorist of so-called fourth-generation warfare (insurgencies carried out by groups such as al-Qaeda), argues that “the Navy’s aircraft-carrier battle groups have cruised on mindlessly for more than half a century, waiting for those Japanese carriers to turn up. They are still cruising today, into, if not beyond, irrelevance.  Submarines are today’s and tomorrow’s capital ships; the ships that most directly determine control of blue waters.”

In December 2008, Franklin “Chuck” Spinney, a former high-ranking civilian in the Pentagon’s Office of Systems Analysis (set up in 1961 to make independent evaluations of Pentagon policy) and a charter member of the “Fighter Mafia” of the 1980s and 1990s, (Link no longer valid) wrote, “As has been documented for at least twenty years, patterns of repetitive habitual behavior in the Pentagon have created a self-destructive decision-making process. This process has produced a death spiral.”

As a result, concluded Spinney, inadequate amounts of wildly overpriced equipment are purchased, “new weapons [that] do not replace old ones on a one for one basis.” There is also “continual pressure to reduce combat readiness,” a “corrupt accounting system” that “makes it impossible to sort out the priorities,” and a readiness to believe that old solutions will work for the current crisis.

Failed Reform Efforts

There’s no great mystery about the causes of the deep dysfunction that has long characterized the Pentagon’s weapons procurement system. In 2006, Thomas Christie, former head of Operational Test and Evaluation, the most senior official at the Department of Defense for testing weapons and a Pentagon veteran of half a century, detailed more than 35 years of efforts to reform the weapons acquisition system. These included the 1971 Fitzhugh (or Blue Ribbon) Commission, the 1977 Steadman Review, the 1981 Carlucci Acquisition Initiatives, the 1986 Packard Commission, the 1986 Goldwater-Nichols Department of Defense Reorganization Act, the 1989 Defense Management Review, the 1990 “Streamlining Review” of the Defense Science Board, the 1993-1994 report of the Acquisition Streamlining Task Force and of the Defense Science Board, the late 1990s Total System Performance Responsibility initiative of the Air Force, and the Capabilities-Based Acquisition approach of the Missile Defense Agency of the first years of this century.

Christie concluded: “After all these years of repeated reform efforts, major defense programs are taking 20 to 30 years to deliver less capability than planned, very often at two to three times the costs and schedules planned.” He also added the following observations:

“Launching into major developments without understanding key technical issues is the root cause of major cost and schedule problems Costs, schedules, and technical risks are often grossly understated at the outset There are more acquisition programs being pursued than DoD [the Department of Defense] can possibly afford in the long term.

“By the time these problems are acknowledged, the political penalties incurred in enforcing any major restructuring of a program, much less its cancellation, are too painful to bear. Unless someone is willing to stand up and point out that the emperor has no clothes, the U.S. military will continue to hemorrhage taxpayer dollars and critical years while acquiring equipment that falls short of meeting the needs of troops in the field.”

The inevitable day of reckoning, long predicted by Pentagon critics, has, I believe, finally arrived. Our problems are those of a very rich country which has become accustomed over the years to defense budgets that are actually jobs programs and also a major source of pork for the use of politicians in their reelection campaigns.

Given the present major recession, whose depths remain unknown, the United States has better things to spend its money on than Nimitz-class aircraft carriers at a price of $6.2 billion each (the cost of the USS George H. W. Bush, launched in January 2009, our tenth such ship) or aircraft that can cruise at a speed of Mach 2 (1,352 miles per hour).

However, don’t wait for the Pentagon to sort out such matters. If it has proven one thing over the last decades, it’s that it is thoroughly incapable of reforming itself. According to Christie, “Over the past 20 or so years, the DoD and its components have deliberately and systematically decimated their in-house technical capabilities to the point where there is little, if any, competence or initiative left in the various organizations tasked with planning and executing its budget and acquisition programs.”

Gunning for the Air Force

President Obama has almost certainly retained Robert M. Gates as Secretary of Defense in part to give himself some bipartisan cover as he tries to come to grips with the bloated defense budget. Gates is also sympathetic to the desire of a few reformers in the Pentagon to dump the Lockheed-Martin F-22 “Raptor” supersonic stealth fighter, a plane designed to meet the Soviet Union’s last proposed, but never built, interceptor.

The Air Force’s old guard and its allies in Congress are already fighting back aggressively. In June 2008, Gates fired Secretary of the Air Force Michael W. Wynne and Air Force Chief of Staff General T. Michael Moseley. Though he was undoubtedly responding to their fervent support for the F-22, his cover explanation was their visible failure to adequately supervise the accounting and control of nuclear weapons.

In 2006, the Air Force had managed to ship to Taiwan four high-tech nose cone fuses for Minutemen ICBM warheads instead of promised helicopter batteries, an error that went blissfully undetected until March 2008. Then, in August 2007, a B-52 bomber carrying six armed nuclear cruise missiles flew across much of the country from Minot Air Force Base in North Dakota to Barksdale Air Force Base in Louisiana. This was in direct violation of standing orders against such flights over the United States.

As Julian Barnes and Peter Spiegel of the Los Angeles Times noted in June 2008, “Tensions between the Air Force and Gates have been growing for months,” mainly over Gates’s frustration about the F-22 and his inability to get the Air Force to deploy more pilotless aircraft to the various war zones. They were certainly not improved when Wynne, a former senior vice president of General Dynamics, went out of his way to cross Gates, arguing publicly that “any president would be damn happy to have more F-22s around if we had to get into a fight with China.” It catches something of the power of the military-industrial complex that, despite his clear desire on the subject, Gates has not yet found the nerve — or the political backing — to pull the plug on the F-22; nor has he even dared to bring up the subject of canceling its more expensive and technically complicated successor, the F-35 “Joint Strike Fighter.”

More than 20 years ago, Chuck Spinney wrote a classic account of the now-routine bureaucratic scams practiced within the Pentagon to ensure that Congress will appropriate funds for dishonestly advertised and promoted weapons systems and then prevent their cancellation when the fraud comes to light. In a paper he entitled “Defense Power Games,” of which his superiors deeply disapproved, Spinney outlined two crucial Pentagon gambits meant to lock in such weaponry: “front-loading” and “political engineering.”

It should be understood at the outset that all actors involved, including the military officers in charge of projects, the members of Congress who use defense appropriations to buy votes within their districts, and the contractors who live off the ensuing lucrative contracts, utilize these two scams. It is also important to understand that neither front-loading nor political engineering is an innocent or morally neutral maneuver. They both involve criminal intent to turn on the spigot of taxpayer money and then to jam it so that it cannot be turned off. They are de rigueur practices of our military-industrial complex.

Front-loading is the practice of appropriating funds for a new weapons project based solely on assurances by its official sponsors about what it can do. This happens long before a prototype has been built or tested, and invariably involves the quoting of unrealistically low unit costs for a sizeable order. Assurances are always given that the system’s technical requirements will be simple or have already been met. Low-balling future costs, an intrinsic aspect of front-loading, is an old Defense Department trick, a governmental version of bait-and-switch. (What is introduced as a great bargain regularly turns out to be a grossly expensive lemon.)

Political engineering is the strategy of awarding contracts in as many different Congressional districts as possible. By making voters and Congressional incumbents dependent on military money, the Pentagon’s political engineers put pressure on them to continue supporting front-loaded programs even after their true costs become apparent.

Front-loading and political engineering generate several typical features in the weapons that the Pentagon then buys for its arsenal. These continually prove unnecessarily expensive, are prone to break down easily, and are often unworkably complex. They tend to come with inadequate supplies of spare parts and ammunition, since there is not enough money to buy the numbers that are needed. They also force the services to repair older weapons and keep them in service much longer than is normal or wise. (For example, the B-52 bomber, which went into service in 1955, is still on active duty.)

Even though extended training would seem to be a necessary corollary of the complexity of such weapons systems, the excessive cost actually leads to reductions in training time for pilots and others. In the long run, it is because of such expedients and short-term fixes that American casualties may increase and, sooner or later, battles or wars may be lost.

For example, Northrop-Grumman’s much touted B-2 stealth bomber has proven to be almost totally worthless. It is too delicate to deploy to harsh climates without special hangars first being built to protect it at ridiculous expense; it cannot fulfill any combat missions that older designs were not fully adequate to perform; and — at a total cost of $44.75 billion for only 21 bombers — it wastes resources needed for real combat situations.

Instead, in military terms, the most unexpectedly successful post-Vietnam aircraft has been the Fairchild A-10, unflatteringly nicknamed the “Warthog.” It is the only close-support aircraft ever developed by the U.S. Air Force. Its task is to loiter over battlefields and assist ground forces in disposing of obstinate or formidable targets, which is not something that fits comfortably with the Air Force’s hot-shot self-image.

Some 715 A-10s were produced and they served with great effectiveness in the first Persian Gulf War. All 715 cumulatively cost less than three B-2 bombers. The A-10 is now out of production because the Air Force establishment favors extremely fast aircraft that fly in straight lines at high altitudes rather than aircraft that are useful in battle. In the Afghan war, the Air Force has regularly inflicted heavy casualties on innocent civilians at least in part because it tries to attack ground targets from the air with inappropriately high-performance equipment.

Using the F-22 to Fight the F-16

The military-industrial complex is today so confident of its skills in gaming the system that it does not hesitate to publicize how many workers in a particular district will lose their jobs if a particular project is cancelled. Threats are also made — and put into effect — to withhold political contributions from uncooperative congressional representatives.

As Spinney recalls, “In July 1989, when some members of Congress began to build a coalition aimed at canceling the B-2, Northrop Corporation, the B-2’s prime contractor, retaliated by releasing data which had previously been classified showing that tens of thousands of jobs and hundreds of millions in profits were at risk in 46 states and 383 congressional districts.” The B-2 was not cancelled.

Southern California’s biggest private employers are Boeing Corporation and Northrop-Grumman. They are said to employ more than 58,000 workers in well-paying jobs, a major political obstacle to rationalizing defense expenditures even as recession is making such steps all but unavoidable.

Both front-loading and political engineering are alive and well in 2009. They are, in fact, now at the center of fierce controversies surrounding the extreme age of the present fleet of Air Force fighter aircraft, most of which date from the 1980s. Meanwhile the costs of the two most likely successors to the workhorse F-16 — the F-22 Raptor and the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter — have run up so high that the government cannot afford to purchase significant numbers of either of them.

The F-16 made its first flight in December 1976, and a total of 4,400 have been built. They have been sold, or given away, all over the world. Planning for the F-22 began in 1986, when the Cold War was still alive (even if on life support), and the Air Force was trumpeting its fears that the other superpower, the USSR, was planning a new, ultra-fast, highly maneuverable fighter.

By the time the prototype F-22 had its roll-out on May 11, 1997, the Cold War was nearly a decade in its grave, and it was perfectly apparent that the Soviet aircraft it was intended to match would never be built. Lockheed Martin, the F-22’s prime contractor, naturally argued that we needed it anyway and made plans to sell some 438 airplanes for a total tab of $70 billion. By mid-2008, only 183 F-22s were on order, 122 of which had been delivered. The numbers had been reduced due to cost overruns. The Air Force still wants to buy an additional 198 planes, but Secretary Gates and his leading assistants have balked. No wonder. According to arms experts Bill Hartung and Christopher Preble, at more than $350 million each, the F-22 is “the most expensive fighter plane ever built.”

The F-22 has several strikingly expensive characteristics which actually limit its usefulness. It is allegedly a stealth fighter — that is, an airplane with a shape that reduces its visibility on radar — but there is no such thing as an airplane completely invisible to all radar. In any case, once it turns on its own fire-control radar, which it must do in combat, it becomes fully visible to an enemy.

The F-22 is able to maneuver at very high altitudes, but this is of limited value since there are no other airplanes in service anywhere that can engage in combat at such heights. It can cruise at twice the speed of sound in level flight without the use of its afterburners (which consume fuel at an accelerated rate), but there are no potential adversaries for which these capabilities are relevant. The plane is obviously blindingly irrelevant to “fourth-generation wars” like that with the Taliban in Afghanistan — the sorts of conflicts for which American strategists inside the Pentagon and out believe the United States should be preparing.

Actually, the U.S. ought not to be engaged in fourth-generation wars at all, whatever planes are in its fleet. Outside powers normally find such wars unwinnable, as the history of Afghanistan, that “graveyard of empires” going back to Alexander the Great, illustrates so well. Unfortunately, President Obama’s approach to the Bush administration’s Afghan War remains deeply flawed and will only entrap us in another quagmire, whatever planes we put in the skies over that country.

Nonetheless, the F-22 is still being promoted as the plane to buy almost entirely through front-loading and political engineering. Some apologists for the Air Force also  (Link no longer valid) claim that we need the F-22 to face the F-16. Their argument goes this way: We have sold so many F-16s to allies and Third World customers that, if we ever had to fight one of them, that country might prevail using our own equipment against us. Some foreign air forces like Israel’s are fully equipped with F-16s and their pilots actually receive more training and monthly practice hours than ours do.

This, however, seems a trivial reason for funding more F-22s. We should instead simply not get involved in wars with former allies we have armed, although this is why Congress prohibited Lockheed from selling the F-22 abroad. Some Pentagon critics contend that the Air Force and prime contractors lobby for arms sales abroad because they artificially generate a demand for new weapons at home that are “better” than the ones we’ve sold elsewhere.

Thanks to political engineering, the F-22 has parts suppliers in 44 states, and some 25,000 people have well-paying jobs building it. Lockheed Martin and some in the Defense Department have therefore proposed that, if the F-22 is cancelled, it should be replaced by the F-35 Joint Strike Fighter, also built by Lockheed Martin.

Most serious observers believe that this would only make a bad situation worse. So far the F-35 shows every sign of being, in Chuck Spinney’s words, “a far more costly and more troubled turkey” than the F-22, “even though it has a distinction that even the F-22 cannot claim, namely it is tailored to meet the same threat that ceased to exist at least three years before the F-35 R&D [research and development] program began in 1994.”

The F-35 is considerably more complex than the F-22, meaning that it will undoubtedly be even more expensive to repair and will break down even more easily. Its cost per plane is guaranteed to continue to spiral upwards. The design of the F-22 involves 4 million lines of computer code; the F-35, 19 million lines. The Pentagon sold the F-35 to Congress in 1998 with the promise of a unit cost of $184 million per aircraft. By 2008, that had risen to $355 million per aircraft and the plane was already two years behind schedule.

According to Pierre M. Sprey, one of the original sponsors of the F-16, and Winslow T. Wheeler, a 31-year veteran staff official on Senate defense committees, the F-35 (Link no longer valid)  is overweight, underpowered, and “less maneuverable than the appallingly vulnerable F-105 ‘lead sled’ that got wiped out over North Vietnam in the Indochina War.” Its makers claim that it will be a bomber as well as a fighter, but it will have a payload of only two 2,000-pound bombs, far less than American fighters of the Vietnam era. Although the Air Force praises its stealth features, it will lose these as soon as it mounts bombs under its wings, which will alter its shape most un-stealthily.

It is a non-starter for close-air-support missions because it is too fast for a pilot to be able to spot tactical targets. It is too delicate and potentially flammable to be able to withstand ground fire. If built, it will end up as the most expensive defense contract in history without offering a serious replacement for any of the fighters or fighter-bombers currently in service.

The Fighter Mafia

Every branch of the American armed forces suffers from similar “defense power games.” For example, the new Virginia-class fast-attack submarines are expensive and not needed. As the New York Times wrote editorially, “The program is little more than a public works project to keep the Newport News, Va., and Groton, Conn., naval shipyards in business.”

I have, however, concentrated on the Air Force because the collapse of internal controls over acquisitions is most obvious, as well as farthest advanced, there — and because the Air Force has a history of conflict over going along with politically easy decisions that was recently hailed by Secretary of Defense Gates as deserving of emulation by the other services. The pointed attack Gates launched on bureaucratism was, paradoxically, one of the few optimistic developments in Pentagon politics in recent times.

On April 21, 2008, the Secretary of Defense caused a storm of controversy by giving a speech to the officers of the Air War College at Maxwell Air Force Base, Alabama. In it, he singled out for praise and emulation an Air Force officer who had inspired many of that service’s innovators over the past couple of generations, while being truly despised by an establishment and an old guard who viewed him as an open threat to careerism.

Colonel John Boyd (1927-1997) was a significant military strategist, an exceptionally talented fighter pilot in both the Korean and Vietnamese war eras, and for six years the chief instructor at the Fighter Weapons School at Nellis Air Force Base in Las Vegas. “Forty-Second Boyd” became a legend in the Air Force because of his standing claim that he could defeat any pilot, foreign or domestic, in simulated air-to-air combat within 40 seconds, a bet he never lost even though he was continuously challenged.

Last April, Gates said, in part:

“As this new era continues to unfold before us, the challenge I pose to you today is to become a forward-thinking officer who helps the Air Force adapt to a constantly changing strategic environment characterized by persistent conflict.

“Let me illustrate by using a historical exemplar: the late Air Force Colonel John Boyd. As a 30-year-old captain, he rewrote the manual for air-to-air combat. Boyd and the reformers he inspired would later go on to design and advocate for the F-16 and the A-10. After retiring, he would develop the principals of maneuver warfare that were credited by a former Marine Corps Commandant [General Charles C. Krulak] and a Secretary of Defense [Dick Cheney] for the lightning victory of the first Gulf War.

“In accomplishing all these things, Boyd — a brilliant, eccentric, and stubborn character — had to overcome a large measure of bureaucratic resistance and institutional hostility. He had some advice that he used to pass on to his colleagues and subordinates that is worth sharing with you. Boyd would say, and I quote: ‘One day you will take a fork in the road, and you’re going to have to make a decision about which direction you want to go. If you go one way, you can be somebody. You will have to make compromises and you will have to turn your back on your friends. But you will be a member of the club and you will get promoted and get good assignments. Or you can go the other way and you can do something — something for your country and for your Air Force and for yourself. If you decide to do something, you may not get promoted and get good assignments and you certainly will not be a favorite of your superiors. But you won’t have to compromise yourself. To be somebody or to do something. In life there is often a roll call. That’s when you have to make a decision. To be or to do’ We must heed John Boyd’s advice by asking if the ways we do business make sense.”

Boyd’s many accomplishments are documented in Robert Coram’s excellent biography, Boyd: The Fighter Pilot Who Changed the Art of War. They need not be retold here. It was, however, the spirit of Boyd and “the reformers he inspired,” a group within Air Force headquarters who came to be called the “Fighter Mafia,” that launched the defense reform movement of the 1980s and 1990s. Their objectives were to stop the acquisition of unnecessarily complex and expensive weapons, cause the Air Force to take seriously the idea of a fourth generation of warfare, end its reliance on a strategy of attrition, and expose to criticism an officer’s corps focused on careerist standards.

Unless Secretary Gates succeeds in reviving it, their lingering influence in the Pentagon is just about exhausted today. We await the leadership of the Obama administration to see which way the Air Force and the rest of the American defense establishment evolves.

Despite Gates’s praise of Boyd, one should not underestimate the formidable obstacles to Pentagon reform. Over a quarter-century ago, back in 1982, journalist James Fallows outlined the most serious structural obstacle to any genuine reform in his National Book Award-winning study, National Defense. The book was so influential that at least one commentator includes Fallows as a non-Pentagon member of Boyd’s “Fighter Mafia.”

As Fallows then observed (pp. 64-65):

“The culture of procurement teaches officers that there are two paths to personal survival. One is to bring home the bacon for the service as the manager of a program that gets its full funding. ‘Procurement management is more and more the surest path to advancement’ within the military, says John Morse, who retired as a Navy captain after twenty-eight years in the service.

“The other path that procurement opens leads outside the military, toward the contracting firms. To know even a handful of professional soldiers above the age of forty and the rank of major is to keep hearing, in the usual catalogue of life changes, that many have resigned from the service and gone to the contractors: to Martin Marietta, Northrop, Lockheed, to the scores of consulting firms and middlemen, whose offices fill the skyscrapers of Rosslyn, Virginia, across the river from the capital. In 1959, Senator Paul Douglas of Illinois reported that 768 retired senior officers (generals, admirals, colonels, and Navy captains) worked for defense contractors. Ten years later Senator William Proxmire of Wisconsin said that the number had increased to 2,072.”

Almost 30 years after those words were written, the situation has grown far worse. Until we decide (or are forced) to dismantle our empire, sell off most of our 761 military bases (according to official statistics for fiscal year 2008) in other people’s countries, and bring our military expenditures into line with those of the rest of the world, we are destined to go bankrupt in the name of national defense. As of this moment, we are well on our way, which is why the Obama administration will face such critical — and difficult — decisions when it comes to the Pentagon budget.

Chalmers Johnson is the author of three linked books on the crises of American imperialism and militarism. They are Blowback (2000), The Sorrows of Empire (2004), and Nemesis: The Last Days of the American Republic (2006). All are available in paperback from Metropolitan Books. To listen to a TomDispatch audio interview with Johnson on the Pentagon’s potential economic death spiral, click here.

Copyright 2009 Chalmers Johnson

Jan 212009
 

CONTENTS

(1)   LOCKHEED MARTIN CANCELS RECRUITMENT ON UNB CAMPUS, FREDERICTON

(2)   UPDATE, PROTEST AT UNB:  “LOCKHEED MARTIN HAS NO INTENTION OF HOPPING OVER NEW BRUNSWICK“

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

(1)   LOCKHEED MARTIN CANCELS RECRUITMENT ON UNB CAMPUS, FREDERICTON

From: Matthew

Hi All,

Great news! Last night 20 protesters showed up to ‘welcome’ Lockheed Martin.

There were several others who would have come, but had received the cancelation notice. LM didn’t show. Given the scale of the resistance they would have faced this was a wise choice on their part.

The below posted e-mail from student services confirms that they canceled because of the resistance. While the e-mail says they were still interviewing, we learned today that the interviews as well were canceled, any interested parties will have to Apply online.

While small scale in comparison to the war machine that is Lockheed Martin, this is a clear victory. Students and others mobilized and made the climate so unfriendly to a war enabler that they simply did not come.

On another note, the UNB Student Union did not pass the motion about Lockheed Martin.  There has been quite a bit of student press about this, mostly negative, but at least people are talking.

—– Forwarded message     Date: Tue, 20 Jan 2009 14:00:17 UT

From: heathers AT unb.ca   (Coordinator of Employer Services)

Reply-To: heathers AT unb.ca

Subject: Canceled – Lockheed Martin Information Session

As you are probably all aware there are a group of students intending to protest the Lockheed Martin info session scheduled for this evening in C127.

After consulting with management Lockheed Martin has decided to cancel the session.  They will however still be doing their on Campus interviews that have been scheduled.

If you have not an interview scheduled and would like to have the opportunity( or know of a student that would like) to make contact with Lockheed Martin in regards to employment could you get them to contact me in student employment.

Kathi

Katherine McNeil B.A.  C.H.R.P   Coordinator of Employer Services

Student Employment Services   University of New Brunswick

Fredericton NB E3B-5A3    Phone 1-506-453-4712   email kathim AT unb.ca

hhtp://www.unb.ca/employment

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

(2)   UPDATE, PROTEST AT UNB:  “LOCKHEED MARTIN HAS NO INTENTION OF HOPPING OVER NEW BRUNSWICK“

This is a story we’ve been following.  Many thanks to Tracy in N.B.:

(Remember these are quarter profits/sales.)

* Lockheed Martin posted its fourth-quarter earnings yesterday — when almost every company is reporting losses — LM is doing fine reporting earnings of US$823 million compared with year-ago profit of $799 million.

Sales also grew three per cent to $11.13 billion from $10.84 billion a year ago. Defence electronics like missiles and information technology were up.

– – – — – – – – – – – – – –

Lockheed Martin has no intention of hopping over N.B.

Hiring campaign / Company encounters opposition to its presence at UNB

MICHAEL STAPLES Canada east News Service Telegraph-Journal, Published Friday January 23rd, 2009

(Link no longer valid:  http://telegraphjournal.canadaeast.com/search/article/549077)

[Also published by The Daily Gleaner: Protest forces weapons company to delay UNB recruitment:

(Link no longer valid:  http://dailygleaner.canadaeast.com/search/article/549174)   and Times & Transcript: Students protest recruitment session:   (Link no longer valid:  http://timestranscript.canadaeast.com/search/article/549366)

Lockheed Martin Canada intends to return to the University of New Brunswick.

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.

Lockheed Martin Canada spokesperson Michael Barton said the company, which is currently on a hiring campaign, has no intention of hopping over New Brunswick.

Barton said efforts are underway to identify an appropriate time to return.

“We just didn’t have enough information provided to us to make an informed decision so we decided to err on the side of caution and reschedule the visit (for) a time when it makes sense to everyone.”

Barton said the company had not encountered opposition to its presence at UNB previous to this.

Strax, named after a former UNB professor, is critical of Lockheed Martin which it describes as the world’s largest exporter of arms and munitions.

“By hosting this career fair, UNB would have promoted the work of Lockheed Martin and not only become complicit in its actions, but actively facilitated Lockheed’s production of immoral, and sometimes illegal, products,” the group said in a release.

Ann Soucey, the manager of student recruitment for UNB, expressed disappointment that Wednesday’s session was cancelled. Visiting campus is something the company has done without incident over the last few years, she said.

“For our students, it’s important that we have a range of employers from across Canada come on campus to do recruitment,” Soucey said. “We have career fairs – three of those a year – and then there’s an opportunity all during the year for employers to come and do information sessions to talk about their organizations.”

Soucey said various companies will often turn up when they have a job posting and will use that occasion to set up opportunities for students to meet with the company in question.

“I just feel it was unfortunate the students didn’t have an opportunity to meet with the representatives from Lockheed Martin to know, for themselves, what was going on and what career options are available to them. They’re very interested in working with us to hire our students.”

Soucey said UNB has always had an excellent relationship with Lockeed Martin – a relationship that’s been problem free.

“We are just going to look at alternatives ways that we can still provide those opportunities for our graduates.”

Jon O’Kane, vice-president external with the UNB Student Union, said a motion presented by a councillor at its Monday meeting to oppose Lockheed Martin’s recruitment session was defeated.

“The motion was actually defeated and voted against under the spirit that it really isn’t our position to take stances on those matters and our focus should be more on our students rather than on moral issues,” O’Kane said.

“What we did was send a message that we are trying to control our scope to make sure that we are focused and really trying to do the best work for students.”

O’Kane said each student will have to make up his or her mind as to whether they want to attend future Lockheed Martin recruitment sessions.

Jan 152009
 

In the U.S. census (Lockheed Martin and IBM) 500,000 workers are going building-to-building to collect GPS locator information to add to the census data base.

If you google “census u.s. lockheed martin gps” you’ll find a number of reports. I only took time to look at a couple.

Will they try to do it in Canada?  see  2010-01-17  Canada:  the census starts with “the dwelling”, “maps and locations”, information from the StatsCan witness at my trial.

CONTENTS

(1)        THE SALES PITCH FOR MARRYING GPS LOCATOR INFORMATION TO THE CENSUS RECORD

(2)        “WHAT TO DO” FOR AMERICANS IN RELATION TO THEIR CENSUS (2010)

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

The IBM/Lockheed Martin Census: GPSing Your Home  http://www.opednews.com/articles/The-Reason-Why-the-IBM-Loc-by-Greg-Nick-090512-899.html

For OpEdNews: Greg Nick – Writer

From April 1st, 500,000 census workers, part of a $700 million taxpayer-funded contract, will travel all known streets and roads to identify every living quarter where people live or could potentially live. Each structure also will receive Global Positioning System (GPS) coordinates to make sure it is recorded in the right location.

Below are excerpts from a video of the US Census Bureau ad,  (Link no longer valid)  A New Portrait of America:

“On April 1st, 2010, our nation will be counted, every person whoever they are, wherever they live, and what we learn will transform what we know about ourselves. The 2010 Census, it’s a new portrait of America.   The 2010 Census is an exciting milestone for America. It promises to deliver accurate information about our diverse and growing population. And it’s important for the future of each community. Census Data will be used to allocate $300 billion in Federal funds every year.   It is the foundation of our Constitution. Communities use the data to plan for their future, like disaster and emergency services, health care services, schools, transportation, libraries, senior centers and more.

“The 2010 Census builds on the success of previous Censuses and is the best plan and most well researched Census ever.   The 2010 Census is important. This census is the commitment to the American way of life. To Be Counted as a resident of the United States I think is one of the proudest things that can happen to you in this country. It’s important to stand up for yourself, be counted. Let people know you’re out there. It’s a new portrait of America.”

Cue to the American flag….A video shot of diverse and multicultural people ranging from Hispanics, Asians to African and echoing the words, “It’s easy, it’s important, it’s safe!” Flashes on the screen pacify the end user: “It’s safe!”   The words, the mantra: “It’s safe!” burn into your subconscious.   Let’s remember that.

September 20, 2007 marked the day the U.S. Census Bureau awarded IBM  Global Business Services a contract worth $89.5 million over nine years to provide data tabulation and dissemination services in support of the 2010 Census Decennial Response Integration System (DRIS) program.   Fantastic news to one of the biggest IT companies in the world, otherwise known as Big Blue. It’s also known as the Nazi Nexus Hollerith Machine company to the Jewish families and other non-compliant races who lost their loved ones in WWII to the Third Reich. We will focus on the IBM Nazi nexus later in the article; let’s focus on what is currently happening with the US Census.

As we speak, US Census Bureau agents are pounding the pavements in the USA. Armed with a device, the HTC Census running on an Intel Bulverde 416MHz processor. Yes sir! Census agents are getting on with their business with an attitude of ‘I’m just doing my job’ as they capture your GPS front door coordinates. The catch phrase of these public servants echoes the hand that feeds them, the USA Census Bureau. “What are we doing on your doorstep?” Um, we are “Helping YOU make informed decisions,” replies the USA Census Agent, and don’t you think anything else!

Each US Census Bureau worker is assigned a funky HTC Census dual-band CDMA/EV-DO device that is WiFi but also comes with a phone jack, allowing it to be connected to a land-line network. The HTC Census is biometrically protected to the user, as this (Link no longer valid:  Census Bureau YouTube video explains. The ‘worker Census bees’ must have no problem with biometric harvesting, and soldier on collecting GPS co-ordinates for the Queen bee.

Once the GPS (Global Positioning System, formerly known as GNSS – global navigation satellite system developed by the US Department of Defense) co-ordinates are matched to the mapping address, the HTC spits out a ‘you have successfully completed this address’ which motivates the Census worker bee onto the next address.

This little viewed (“Not available”:   YouTube US Census Bureau video)  depicts a lovely lady who courteously knocks on the door and introduces herself. “Hi! My name is Elizabeth from the US Census Bureau.   We are in the area today, verifying addresses for the 2010 census. Here is a copy of our privacy act along with my purpose here today. What is your address? Is this also your mailing address. Great. Okay, thanks, that sums it up. If you don’t mind, I’ll be up front updating my maps.” The Census worker thanks the resident and they bid farewell to each other. How lovely!

Now back to the real world.   The reality is that US Census Bureau Agents are conducting themselves in a covert, shifty and stealthy manner. US citizens who have experienced US Census Bureau agents first hand have commented they seem untrustworthy, reveal very little when questioned and get the job done regardless.   In this home video, a Census worker gets upset he is being video taped. ‘Getting the job done’ means getting your GPS coordinates. But remember the US Census Bureau advertisement: “It’s easy, it’s important, it’s safe!” “It’s safe!”   Ah, I feel better after drinking the GPS Census Kool Aid.

The US Census Bureau goes on to say, “We honor privacy, protect confidentiality, share our expertise globally, and conduct our work openly. We are guided on this mission by our strong and capable workforce, our readiness to innovate, and our abiding commitment to our customers.” Who exactly are these customers? A bit of a clue to our readers who are not up on their history: the customer is NOT you. It’s DARPA, the CIA, FBI and other domestic spy agencies.

Let us remember these public servants responded to the (Link no longer valid)  US Census Bureau job ad which read: “Thousands are needed for temporary jobs. Conducting the census is a huge undertaking. Thousands of census takers are needed to update address lists and conduct interviews with community residents. Most positions require a valid driver’s license and use of a vehicle. However, public transportation may be authorized in certain areas.”

Would these temporary public servants be as gun ho if they were made aware that IBM had a dark and sinister story hiding in their blue chip closet?

What if the US Census advertisement read as follows?

“Conducting a military operation is hard work and GPS marking every door in America requires a hard worker! Ideally, you would not have studied history and specifically have not read IBM and the Holocaust by Edwin Black. You need to have persistent qualities even when abused, but remember the data you collect will be extremely helpful to Lockheed Martin and IBM who will pass on the data to government agencies which may or may not be used for sinister purposes.”

If we stepped back in time, we would realize that census data is extremely powerful in anyone’s hands, but what if those hands were Hitler’s? That infamous war criminal relied on IBM Census data in WWII to fuel the war machine. The census data provided by IBM to Nazi Germany was used for planning invasion and occupation plans for Europe and provided key information to the Nazis to exterminate the non compliant races.

Edwin Black, author of IBM and the Holocaust, and an award-winning, investigative journalist for the New York Times, painstakingly documented how IBM’s Dohemag subsidiary was integral to the Nazi killing machine by providing the necessary automation to ‘locate all the Jews of Europe.’ As the Third Reich embarked upon its plan of conquest and genocide, IBM and its subsidiaries helped create enabling technologies, step-by-step, from the Census, to identification and cataloging programs of the 1930’s, to the selections of the 1940’s.

According to IBM’s historical archives, German inventor Herman Hollerith developed and patented census tabulating equipment in the late Nineteenth Century.  The mock-up below represents the machine used by the U.S. Census Bureau in compiling the 1890 Census.

This equipment is representative of the tabulating system invented and developed by Herman Hollerith (1860-1929) and built for the U.S. Census Bureau. These machines were first used in compiling the 1890 Census. IBM History.

Hollerith’s patents were acquired by the Computing-Tabulating-Recording Co. (which later became IBM), and this work became the basis of the IBM Punch Card System.   But when IBM Germany formed its philosophical and technological alliance with Nazi Germany, census and registration took on a new mission. IBM Germany invented the racial census–listing not just religious affiliation, but bloodline going back generations. This was the Nazi data lust. Not just to count the Jews–but to identify them. Hooray for IBM work experience and double hooray for an IBM proven track record!

“We appreciate the Census Bureau’s continued confidence in IBM to support their efforts,” said John Nyland, Managing Partner, IBM Global Business Services, Public Sector obviously reflecting on the fact “Working with our business partners, IBM is helping the Census Bureau with innovative approaches to flexible and timely data analysis and dissemination.” IBM is also supporting the Census Bureau as a subcontractor to Lockheed Martin on the Decennial Response Integration System (DRIS) 2010 data collection contract. Yes that’s right, the world’s largest defense contractor by revenue is working with IBM to ensure America is counted.   But let’s not get alarmed. Let’s remember the US Census Bureau advertisement….”It’s easy, it’s important, its safe! … It’s safe!”

In 2005, Lockheed Martin won the contract to develop the Decennial Response Integration System (DRIS) in order to:

• Receive, capture, and standardize census data provided by respondents via census forms and telephone agents;
• Provide assistance to the public through the telephone; and
• Receive standardized data collected via hand-held computers.

In 2007, IBM joined the team, subcontracting with BAE Systems, ESRI, Space-Time Research, SAS, M-Cubed, Roundarch, Dataline, FWG, Measurable Results, RCM, PKW, Fenestra, and Acumen Solutions. [12]

In 2009, ACORN the Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, also joined the Census team.

So what exactly are we concerned about? Are we saying that IBM and Lockheed Martin have used temporary public servants to undertake their cloaked military GPS Census operation?   That’s precisely what we are saying. Let us be crystal clear: if US Census workers were armed with their GPS and dressed in IBM/Lockheed Martin military apparel, there would be an outcry and perhaps an awakening on what is happening to the constitutional rights of Americans. But IBM has shown great veiling expertise and US citizens have   barely noticed   a massively organized militarization of their information quietly occurring, shrouded in a cloak and dagger US Census Bureau marketing campaign. It can’t get any more intimate and personal than your front door GPS coordinates, can it?

The question we must now ask, ‘Why are they doing this and what will they do with the information?’

– – — – – – – – – – – – – – — –

(2)          “WHAT TO DO” FOR AMERICANS IN RELATION TO THEIR CENSUS (2010)

(Link no longer valid:  http://www.bloggersbase.com/politics-and-opinions/us-census-workers-getting-gps-coordinates-for-everyones-front-door/

US Census Workers Getting GPS Coordinates for Everyone’s Front Door

By jmalmberg

File this under the heading of “intrusive government”. The US Census Bureau is out canvassing every neighborhood in the country right now. You may ask “why?” since the Census isn’t due until next year. Well, the answer is simple. They are gathering GPS coordinates for the front door of every single family in the United States. The reason for gathering that information however may not be so simple. If you are alarmed by this, perhaps that’s because you should be.

Starting on April 1st of this year (INSERT: 2009), Census workers began hitting the streets to gather the GPS coordinates of each and every home in the country. Their efforts are being funded through a $700 million taxpayer funded contract with Lockheed Martin and IBM.

According to the Census Bureau, the collection of GPS coordinates will assist the government in collection of census data

. Huh?  Even after they collect this data, they still plan on going door to door next year (2010). At the very least, it would seem that this year’s efforts could be postponed until next year and the coordinates could be taken by the Census workers then. That would kill two birds with one stone and it would also save taxpayers some money.  Putting that point aside for a minute though, I can’t see how having the coordinates of your houses front door will assist in gathering data in any way. Perhaps the Census workers aren’t all that bright. They might mistakenly go to your side door and we can’t have that can we? After all, address information is so much more inaccurate. That will only get you within a few feet of the front door. Figuring it out from there may be too stressful for the poor Census takers.

The truth is that there is no good reason for the government to gather and store this information in a free society. There are however a number of reasons that a totalitarian government may want this type of data. For instance, weapons systems can be programmed with these coordinates for targeting (INSERT:  that is what they are doing right now. Unmanned drones launched from the U.S. desert to drop bombs on Yemen.)   Hitler and Stalin would have loved this kind of data. I’ll leave the rest to your imagination but none of the reasons for gathering this data are good.

There are reports already circulating that Census workers have violated trespassing laws to gather data and that people who have attempted to kick them off their property are being threatened with jail time and fines.

The Census is supposed to provide a count of people living in this country. But the questions on the census now go way beyond that. Among other things, they are asking people if they own guns, and how many they own. Some people are being asked what kind of toilets they have. What stocks they own. How much money they have in their bank accounts.

None of this is the government’s business, and the idea that the government may be able to get the GPS coordinates of every gun owner in the country is quite worrisome. Most people will probably provide this information because both Census workers and the Census forms say that you must answer or you could face jail time. The courts however have not agreed with this position.

The only data you really need to give the government is the number of people in your home. Take a look at the following video. You should find the information quite interesting.

When the Census workers come to your door, don’t answer it. And when you get your Census form in the mail, just give the government the bare minimum.

(INSERT (Sandra):  if the form requires you to fill in the form or face jail and a fine if you don’t, knowing that your name will go onto the census data base with this information, personally – – at least until my court case is settled – –  I am taking the position that the Government has seriously crossed the line.  It is operating way outside its boundaries.  Just as in my relationships with other people, I have to draw my line in the sand.)

There is no reason that any of us should assist the federal government in spying on us. The truth of the matter is that rather than us fearing the government, the government should fear the people. Under the Constitution, government workers are merely OUR employees.

By Jim Malmberg

In Canada, it is VERY PRUDENT to get out to next Saturday’s protest over the proroguing of Parliament. We need a massive effort, wherever the opportunity exists, to take back our Government.

Jan 132009
 

Glufosinate is to be phased out in Europe due to its hazardous nature.

The herbicide is classified as toxic for reproduction and can also cause birth defects.

 

Glufosinate is Bayer’s chemical, marketed under the trade name Liberty Link  (LL).  The better-known parallel is Monsanto’s  glyphosate, marketed under the trade name Roundup.

This is an interesting development around glufosinate.

Bayer has been working hard to force its GM rice onto international markets.   The GM crops are engineered to be resistant to a particular chemical  (the crop can be sprayed with it, and not die).   Bayer’s LL rice is resistant to a biocide that has now been banned in Europe.    From Wikipedia;:

“Glufosinate was included in a biocide ban proposed by the Swedish Chemicals Agency [1] and approved by the European Parliament on January 13, 2009.[2]

I tried to find the current regulatory status for glufosinate in Canada on Health Canada’s Pest Management Regulatory Agency (PMRA).  The page would not come up.

However, I found the licensing of various of Bayer’s GM grains.   (canola, sugar beets, corn, soybeans, rice).

http://www.hc-sc.gc.ca/fn-an/gmf-agm/appro/nf-an90decdoc-eng.php  

“  Health Canada has notified Bayer CropScience that it has no objection to the food use of glufosinate tolerant rice lines containing event LLRICE62”  and

“Canola (Brassica napus L.) line HCN92 was developed through genetic modification to be tolerant to glufosinate ammonium, which is the active ingredient of the herbicide Liberty®. The modification permits farmers to use the broad-spectrum herbicide for weed control in the cultivation of canola without damaging the crop.”

Some Canadian municipalities have banned the use of glufosinate. (Google brings up a number of sources for this statement.)  Our long experience with “Health Canada” and the PMRA’s subservience to the corporations leads me to believe that the only way Canadians will get rid of this problematic biocide is to protest more loudly.  And even then it won’t happen.  The industry is too entrenched in our bureaucracy.

There is a great listing of successful actions taken in other countries to force GM production out of universities, out of the food supply, out of Government, etc.  What a blast!    http://current.com/items/91837570_2009-gmo-bans-protests-and-legal-actions.htm 

20,000 Canadians showed up to protests over the proroguing of Parliament.  It gives me hope that we might get serious about what’s happening to our food supply.

You will see ( hyperlink)  where, “In July 2006, Bayer LL601, a similar rice variety that was not approved for commercial distribution or human consumption anywhere in the world, appeared in supermarkets worldwide.”

This is the same story for “Triffid GM flax.

Jan 062009
 

This morning, Judge Whelan decided the trial will not proceed tomorrow.

I told her I didn’t understand:

–  the prosecutor said he is prepared to go ahead.

–  I am representing myself

–  I am prepared

–  I want to proceed

–  (Apart from my own testimony) I need to be able to ask questions of the witness from Statistics Canada

No one has asked for an adjournment or postponement.

I don’t understand where the request to adjourn or to postpone is coming from.

It seems that she has the right, if she believes that there might be an actual or perceived miscarriage of justice, to stop the trial from proceeding at this time.  There was a side mention of “if this case goes to appeal”.  I understand that:  the judge will want to ensure that everything has been done according to hoyle, because her decision might end up being appealed.  Oh Lord, I hope not.

I am now to appear in court room #7 on Thursday, January 29th at 2:00 pm for “case management”.  The case management “slipped through the cracks”.

I requested that the Case management be done tomorrow or Thursday because all the facilities and judge would already be assigned and therefore available for this task.  I was told that the Judge was not available. 

Today, different occurrences make it unclear to me that it was ever intended that the trial would go ahead tomorrow.  Yesterday the court phoned to make arrangements for this “pre-trial” today (one day before the trial starts – I told them it was very short notice and that my time was fully booked, I really don’t have time to spare. I am trying to keep calm and don’t want to create unnecessary time pressures. I gave them the information they would need and asked if I had to attend.)  In the end I was told that the Judge wanted the pre-trial.  It was done by telephone connection this morning. 

During this pre-trial conversation Judge Whelan hammered on the question “What inconvenience will it be to you if the trial doesn’t proceed tomorrow?”.  I told her there was financial inconvenience and elaborated a bit.  She would not hear that.  And insisted on “Aside from that .”.   I said there was significant time inconvenience.  She didn’t accept that.  Repeatedly, “What inconvenience will it be to you if the trial doesn’t proceed?”.  Four times she asked the question and I responded.  (I’m thinking I don’t know what you want – but I do know:  they want me to be represented by a lawyer).  “Ms Finley you are not answering my question.”

And then she used the nice little phrase meant to disempower:  “you don’t even know … “. 

Brow-beating by the Judge.  Probably good training for me, for what might lie ahead. 

All it does is to make me more determined.  The justice system is paid for by citizens.  It’s actually our justice system.  If an average citizen can’t go in and defend themself after the government has laid charges against them, then something is very wrong with the design of the system.  First Nations people know that in spades.  It is no wonder that they are insisting upon their own, community-based justice. 

On the topic of the crown witnesses, I thought that Ivan Felligi, Chief Statistician until earlier in 2008, was to appear. I have prepared the questions to ask him.  The prosecutor, Barrie Miller, corrected to say that it is Anil Arora (he is the one who telephoned me from StatsCan back in May 2006.  We had a lengthy conversation that I tape-recorded, thank goodness!   And it’s not illegal to do that, if you’re not the government.)  I told Judge Whelan and Barrie that all I needed was to be able to ask questions, for example, “This (news report) dated (whenever) says (this).”  Is it an approximately accurate statement?”. 

But enough of all that for now!

You are so wonderful.  I am carried forward by your generosity of support and spirit.

Many thanks,

Sandra

Dec 222008
 

My letter to the Premier (#7) is my Christmas gift to the Great Sand Hills in western Saskatchewan.

Corporate influence.  Put it on the table, out in the open.  There is little sense in arguing on behalf of the environment or security of a natural gas supply, when the motivator is the money, not the environment and not minus 32 degree weather.

/Sandra

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

IMPORTANT ISSUES RAISED BY THE GREAT SAND HILLS

CONTENTS

(1)  GOVERNANCE

(2)  DRAINING THE BANK ACCOUNT

(3)  ENDANGERED SPECIES

(4)  RAISES THE ISSUE:  WHAT IS SACRED?

(5)  FALSE, FALSE ECONOMICS

(6)  THY WILL BE DONE  (your letter to the Premier of Saskatchewan)

(7)  MY LETTER TO THE PREMIER

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

(1)  GOVERNANCE

The work on the skullduggery in the Great Sand Hills is the work of citizens.  Even after the problems are brought to light, both parties keep their mouths closed on the very serious problems.

The Government does something only after they have been forced by public pressure.  My letter to the Premier lays out the reason:  revolving doors, conflicts-of-interest, and corporate funding. (Corporate funding of political parties is prohibited federally thanks to Jean Chretien; provincially it is acceptable for corporations to fund political parties.)

We need as many letters to the Premier and Minister of Environment as we can possibly generate (#6 below).  If only to address the problems created by Government that serves the corporations.

———————

(2)  DRAINING THE BANK ACCOUNT

It is minus thirty-two degrees in Saskatchewan today.  “Peak Oil” is past.  We are on the downhill side of the supply curve.

The infrastructure to heat our homes is largely based on natural gas.  We are DEPENDENT on natural gas for heat.  Under NAFTA we have to continue to export the same PROPORTION of our oil and gas to the U.S. as currently.   (Mexico refused to have this clause in their agreement with the U.S. and Canada.)  The pipelines being built today are not to serve Canadians.  There are no trans-Canada lines.  Only pipelines to Chicago and other places in the U.S.  The natural gas supplies are projected to deplete with greater and greater rapidity, before oil.

Unfortunately not everyone can afford to move to Hawaii.  It’ll get a little crowded there, too.

This sell-off of our main heat source is incomprehensible.  Gross ignorance.

Or “have to have it all today”.  Or “next generation” – – what the hell?

They’ll figure it out.”  “Technology” will provide the answers.  “Somebody else … ”  “Me, I like things the way they are.”  Two plus two, plus two, equals minus two hundred and twenty-two.

—————————–

(3)  ENDANGERED SPECIES

The inhospitable nature of the Great Sand Hills has made them a place of last refuge for species threatened by extinction.  To destroy that place so we can “develop” and export a natural gas supply that will last a short time, so we can put some coins in our pockets-full-of-holes is … (you fill in the blanks).

—————————–

(4)  RAISES THE ISSUE:  WHAT IS SACRED?

When a soul leaves its bones behind, if Blackfoot, it journeys to the Great Sand Hills to join Infinite Life.  Souls walking about in skin may not go there.

Think what happens to a society when nothing is sacred.  Water, for example.

Dependent … for life.  That’s what sacred is.  Some people still don’t “get it”.

Back in 2003 we learned about “fracking” (the man-induced fracturing of underground formations to release gas from natural pockets).  Which also happens to allow poisons to then seep into underground water supplies through holy pockets.  Voluminous amounts of potable water that the Government allows the oil and gas companies to poison AND to divert underground; the water is permanently lost to the rain-evaporation cycle.

In a desert.  More desert.

———————————

(5)  FALSE, FALSE ECONOMICS

Without thick hair I would be bald from pulling out my hair.  I may scream if I hear the growth mantra gush out of the mouth of one more incapable-of-thought idiot.  It doesn’t matter how much “technology” or “higher education” you have.  You cannot have continuous growth premised on consumption when the supply side is a finite resource.  It is apparent that you must shift to a different paradigm.

“Economic growth and development” is so obviously an idea that has to be replaced.  For the sake of our grandchildren, we cannot afford to be robots with programmed thinking that doesn’t adapt and change with reality.

History, for the sake of heaven, has ample example of civilizations that turned Eden into desert, then vanished on the wind.

The best way to ensure that you don’t have descendants is to cut down the last tree.  That’s been done by human societies a number of times over.  Trees aren’t even a finite resource – they are renewable.

———————————

(6)  THY WILL BE DONE  (your letter to the Premier of Saskatchewan)

Thy will be done.

Whose will?

I vote for our informed will, in service to common sense and the future we bequeath to our grand-children.

It CAN be our informed will.  IF there are enough of us.  Email addresses for the Premier and Environment Minister follow.

If you haven’t already, would you send a quick note to members of the Saskatchewan Government, at least to the Premier?  And ask anyone else you know who would be interested, to do the same? You don’t have to live in Saskatchewan.  These are national issues.

There is a window of opportunity now, before the Government announces its decision on the GSH.  It will be too late, after the decision is announced.

The United Church got 400 signatures in, during the last go-around.  Need something like that again!  The letters don’t have to say much.  The Govt just has to know that large numbers of people are watching.

The Honourable Brad Wall, Premier of Saskatchewan

E-mail: premier AT  gov.sk.ca

(Please provide your full name and mailing address as any response from the Premier of Saskatchewan will be delivered by Canada Post.)

Minister Environment, Nancy Heppner

Minister.ENV AT gov.sk.ca

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

(7)  MY LETTER TO THE PREMIER (Brad Wall)

(His response (already received): the letter “outlining (my) concerns and opposition to proposals for resource exploitation and development of the GSH”,  is referred to the Minister of Environment (Nancy Heppner) for detailed response.)

Dear Brad,

You would not have been privy to the volume of public pressure on the Government of Saskatchewan that led to the scientific study of the Great Sand Hills.  You were not in office at the time.

I can tell you how fiercely the battle was fought and over how many years.   The study did not come about easily.  There are large numbers of people with a substantial investment of time, expertise and interest.  The citizens of Saskatchewan have invested several millions of dollars now, in addition to time, to see that we do justice in the Great Sand Hills.

The Saskatchewan Party is in a vulnerable position vis-à-vis the Great Sand Hills, if I may speak frankly and to the point, as I did with the NDP when they were in power.

In the case of the NDP, Dwayne Lingenfelter went from Deputy Premier to Vice-President of Nexen.  TransGas, crown corporation, wholly-owned subsidiary of SaskEnergy, built a $9 million pipeline to the Great Sand Hills.  The number one and only listed customer of Transgas was Nexen.

SaskEnergy held a fraudulent press conference about “new discoveries” of natural gas in the GSH while Ron Clark was president.  I know because I phoned and spoke with the Executives of each of the 3 companies who were supposed to have found the new reserves.  And I spoke with an employee of Transgas who confirmed what the o&g Executives said.  “The Government is putting words in the mouth of the companies that they wouldn’t say  themselves.”  There were no “new finds”, except in newspaper reports based on the fraudulent information presented at the press conference.  (INSERT: I didn’t mention about the other revolving door between employees of the Dept of Environment (e.g. Larry Kratt, co-chair of SPIGEC, the Sask Petroleum Industry Government Environment Committee – and the industry’s high-paying jobs in Calgary.)

Elwin Hermansson courted the Petroleum Club.  In your case, you have been at least twice to Alberta to raise money for the SaskParty.  That creates debts to be repaid.

In conclusion, decisions made for political as opposed to scientific reasons, about the Great Sand Hills will be highly suspect.  And highly inappropriate, especially given the substantial investment of time and money by the people of Saskatchewan in the scientific study of the Great Sand Hills.

I say this, not to assert that the decisions WILL be politically and financially motivated.  I say it because I have always found prevention to be less painful for all concerned.

My note may sound coercive.  I think you will find it factual and in good faith.  I am motivated by the words of a senior doctor, recipient of an Order of Canada, at one of the GSH public meetings.  In the more than a decade since the last time the people of Saskatchewan had forced public meetings on the GSH, the Government had not made one step of progress in assembling the scientific data required for sound decision-making, and as had been agreed would be carried out.

As I understand political evolution in Canada, people are at the end of  their tether.  There is growing awareness of the failure of our system of governance to protect the things we value and need for the present and for future generations. Thanks to books and documentaries like “The Corporation” by UBC law professor Joel Bakan, people have a better understanding of the role of the large corporations in the undermining of good governance.  They will not put up with “partnerships” that serve corporate interests at the expense of the public good and for the enrichment of those who are motivated solely by money.

With due respect, I understand that there were different premiers in office at the time.

This matter is too important to pussyfoot around the issues.

I hope that the Government of Saskatchewan will follow the advice of the Scientific Study on the Great Sand Hills.

Yours truly,

Sandra Finley

Saskatoon SK  S7N 0L1

Dec 202008
 

CONTENTS

(1)  LOCKHEED MARTIN DOESN’T MANUFACTURE CLUSTER BOMBS?

(2)  NO, OF COURSE LOCKHEED DOESN’T MANUFACTURE CLUSTER BOMBS

(3)  LOCKHEED MARTIN HAS REFORMED ITS WAYS, NEW YORK TIMES

(4)  HOW GOVERNMENT BECOMES PROSECUTOR ON BEHALF OF LOCKHEED MARTIN

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

(1)  LOCKHEED MARTIN DOESN’T MANUFACTURE CLUSTER BOMBS?

Gail writes:

The Lockheed Martin site says that LM doesn’t manufacture cluster bombs. Is this new? Please advise.

(Link no longer valid  http://www.lockheedmartin.com/products/ATACMSBlockI/)

Sure enough, if you scroll to bottom of the above web page, you’ll find:

Lockheed Martin does not manufacture submunitions, “cluster bombs” or any other explosive warheads used in its missile, rocket or guidance systems.  Lockheed Martin does provide systems – such as ATACMS Block IA – that accurately deliver a variety of payloads which greatly reduce collateral damage due to their precision.  Ordnance is furnished by the military services that use Lockheed Martin’s delivery and guidance systems.”

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

(2)  NO, OF COURSE LOCKHEED DOESN’T MANUFACTURE CLUSTER BOMBS

RESPONSE to Gail:

Is this new?”    Yes, it is.   They manufacture(d) the dispensers (WCMD’s) and the cluster munitions (CBU’s) to go with the dispensers.   More explanation below.

They have removed the information on cluster munitions that used to be on their website.   The Source was:   http://www.lockheedmartin.com/mfc/index.html  but I can’t find “WCMD’s”, or CBU’s” there now.

The pages that did have WCMD/CBU information now all come up as  error pages, one after the other.   The message is one that indicates the pages did exist at one time.   Also, if you look around through their press releases, etc.  you will find reference to personnel who had positions in the WCMD or CBU units.   Lockheed Martin would have made the statement that they don’t manufacture cluster munitions and taken the info off their website because of the very recent International Treaty (December 2008)  to Ban Cluster Bombs.  It’s not a problem (for my trial) because the information exists in other places.  e.g.  http://www.designation-systems.net/dusrm/app5/wcmd.html     (Note:  I copied this page at  http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=2358  just in case the link stops working.   But not all of the information will display properly.)

There are millions of cluster bombs stock-piled, so maybe Lockheed Martin shut down the manufacturing recently, after the UN Treaty?  (The U.S. didn’t sign onto the treaty.  Lockheed Martin pretty well runs their foreign policy – – item #3 below.)

You have to be a lawyer to get the right answer.  The statement is  “Lockheed Martin does not manufacture submunitions…” .   One might ask, “Does Lockheed Martin SELL cluster bombs?”  And never mind all that.  Isn’t it wonderful that Lockheed Martin no longer manufactures cluster munitions!  Would I could believe them.  See #3.

For WCMD’s, CBU’s, and BLU’s :

(1)  The Dispenser is called a WCMD (Wind Corrected Munitions Dispenser).  It has a navigation system built into it.  “After release, the WCMD guidance corrects for launch errors and winds aloft, and computes the optimum flight path and submunition release point.  . has a stand-off range of about 10 miles.”

(2)  The cluster munitions (Lockheed Martin products) that go in the Munitions Dispenser are:

–  CBU’s  (Combined Effects Munition) , “a multi-purpose cluster bomb, consisting of 202 1.5 kg BLU-97/B CEBs (Combined Effects Bomblets)”.

They sell a number of CBU’s with various “payloads”.   The information from the Lockheed Martin site is still on this website:  http://www.designation-systems.net/dusrm/app5/wcmd.html    (Jan 2, 2011 the information is still there.)

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

(3)  LOCKHEED MARTIN HAS REFORMED ITS WAYS, NEW YORK TIMES

(Canadians should note that Lockheed Martin is one of the partners represented in the Security and Prosperity Partnership (SPP) negotiations among Stephen Harper, George Bush, the president of Mexico and big corporate “leaders”.  Think SPP; remember the police tactics at the Montebello summit.)

Also this from http://www.nupge.ca/news_2007/n22au07b.htm :

“Lockheed Martin executive Ron Covais, also present at the (SPP) forum, told Maclean’s magazine, in reference to the SPP talks,  “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.'”

(Like, put the census into Lockheed’s hands?  Remember the article circulated to you “News report Nov 01,  U.S. wants more information on Canadians”.  The report said that the Americans will introduce a visa system for Canadians to enter the U.S. if they aren’t given access to information on routine (all) Canadian citizens.  And, happy, happy, “”Canadian officials have said (Canada) will meet the new standard, “plus or minus a little,” by 2011.  But there’ll be tremendous pressure (from the U.S.) to get there faster.”)

Back to the quoted article  http://www.nupge.ca/news_2007/n22au07b.htm:

“The SPP is a disturbing mixture of government officials, big business, and the defence departments and defence industries. The initiative may be a secret to most Canadians, but not to the select few, and what an interesting crew they are!

Consider who attended the secret Banff meeting.   From Canada:

Stockwell Day, Federal Minister of Public Safety

General Rick Hillier, Chief of the Defence Staff

Gordon O’Connor, then Minister of Defence

Perrin Beatty, President, Canadian Manufacturers & Exporters

Thomas d’Aquino, Canadian Council of Chief Executives

Roger Gibbins, Canada West Foundation

Richard L. George, Suncor Energy Inc.

Peter Harder, Deputy Minister, Foreign Affairs

Fred Green, Canadian Pacific Railway

James Kinnear, Pengrowth Corporation

Sharon Murphy, Chevron Canada

From the United States:

Donald Rumsfeld, Former U.S. Defense Secretary

Rick Covais, President, Lockheed Martin

Admiral Tim Keating, U.S. Navy, Northern Command

James Schlesinger, former Secretary of Energy and Defense

Dan Fisk, Senior Director, National Security

Maj. Gen. Mark Volcheff, Director, Plans, Policy and Strategy, NORAD

Clay Sell, Deputy Secretary of Energy

From Mexico:

Geronimo Gutierrez, Deputy Foreign Minister

Vinicio Suro, Pemex, Mexican National Oil Co.

Eduardo Medina-Mora, Secretary of Public Security”)

——————

—   And now, to the New York Times article,

LOCKHEED MARTIN HAS REFORMED ITS WAYS:

http://www.nytimes.com/2004/11/28/business/yourmoney/28lock.html

The New York Times November 28, 2004

Lockheed and the Future of Warfare

In-Depth Coverage

By Tim Weiner

EXCERPT:

”  Lockheed says it has transformed its corporate culture. In the 1970’s, it was discovered that the company had paid millions of dollars to foreign officials around the world in order to sell its planes. In one case, Kakuei Tanaka, who had been the prime minister of Japan, was convicted of accepting bribes.

”Without Lockheed, there never would have been a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act,” said Jerome Levinson, who was the staff director of the Senate subcommittee that uncovered the bribery.  The antibribery provisions of that law, passed in 1977, owed their existence to the Lockheed investigation, he said. The last bribery case involving Lockheed came a decade ago, when a Lockheed executive and the corporation admitted paying $1.2 million in bribes to an Egyptian official to seal the sales of three Lockheed C-130 cargo planes.

Mr. Trice, Lockheed’s senior vice president for business development, says the company cleaned up its act at home and overseas since the last of the series of major mergers and acquisitions that gave the corporation its present shape in March 1995. ”You simply have to look people in the eye and say ‘we don’t do business that way,”’ he said.

There really is no need to do business that way any more — not in a world where so much of Lockheed’s wealth flows directly from the Treasury, where competition for foreign markets is both controlled and subsidized by the White House and Congress, and where Lockheed’s influence runs so deep. Men who have worked, lobbied and lawyered for Lockheed hold the posts of secretary of the Navy, secretary of transportation, director of the national nuclear weapons complex and director of the national spy satellite agency.  The list also includes Stephen J. Hadley, who has been named the next national security adviser to the president, succeeding Condoleezza Rice.

Former Lockheed executives serve on the Defense Policy Board, the Defense Science Board and the Homeland Security Advisory Council, which help make military and intelligence policy and pick weapons for future battles.

Lockheed’s board includes E.C. Aldridge Jr., who, as the Pentagon’s chief weapons buyer, gave the go-ahead to build the F-22.

None of those posts and positions violate the Pentagon’s rules about the ”revolving door” between industry and government. Lockheed has stayed clear of the kind of conflict-of-interest cases that have afflicted its competitor, Boeing, and the Air Force in recent months.

”We need to be politically aware and astute,” Mr. Stevens said. ”We work with the Congress. We work with the executive branch.” In these dialogues, he said, Lockheed’s end of the conversation is ”saying we think this is feasible, we think this is possible, we think we might have invented a new approach.”

Lockheed makes about $1 million a year in campaign contributions through political action committees, singling out members of the Congressional committees controlling the Pentagon’s budget, and spends many millions more on lobbying. Political stalwarts who have lobbied for Lockheed at one point or another include Haley Barbour, the governor of Mississippi and a former Republican national chairman; Otto Reich, who persuaded Congress to sell F-16’s to Chile before becoming President Bush’s main Latin America policy aide in 2002; and Norman Y. Mineta, the transportation secretary and former member of Congress.

Its connections give Lockheed a ”tremendous opportunity to influence contracts flowing to the company,” said Ms. Brian of the Project on Government Oversight. ”More subtly valuable is the ability of the company to benefit from their eyes and ears inside the government, to know what’s on the horizon, what are the best bets for the government’s future technology needs.”

SO who serves as the overseer for the biggest military contractors and their costly weapons? Usually, the customer itself: the Pentagon.

”These programs are huge,” said Dov S. Zakheim, the Pentagon’s comptroller and chief financial officer for the last three years, who recently joined Booz Allen Hamilton, the consulting firm. ”There is a historical tendency to underestimate their test schedules, their technological hurdles, the likely weight of an airplane and, as a result, to underestimate costs.  ”Because you have so few contractors, you don’t get the level of attention that the average citizen would think would be devoted to a program costing billions of dollars,” he said. ”With this massive agglomeration into a very small number of companies, you get far less visibility as to whether the subcontractors are effectively managed. Problems accumulate.”

”Twenty years ago, the complaint was, it takes so long to build things,”he said. Weapons designed in the depths of the cold war were built long after the Berlin Wall crumbled. That led some people, including George W. Bush while running for president in 1999, to suggest that the Pentagon skip a generation of weapons set to roll off the assembly line in this decade and concentrate instead on lighter, faster, smarter systems for the future.

That didn’t happen. It still takes two decades to build a major weapons system, and the costs are still staggering.

”The complaints haven’t changed 20 years later,” Mr. Zakheim said. The difference between then and now is the concentration of expertise, experience and power in a few hands, he said, ”and I don’t think the effect has necessarily been a good one.”

Mr. Stevens rejected that criticism. ”I can’t tell you the number of times I’ve heard ‘not progressive, not sophisticated, ponderous, slow”’ as terms used to describe Lockheed, he said. ”I see none of that.”

What he sees is a far grander vision. Lockheed, he said, is promising to transform the very nature of war. During the cold war, when Lockheed and its component parts built an empire of nuclear weapons, Mr. Stevens said, the watchword was: ”Be more fearful. ‘Deterrence,’ isn’t that Latin?  ‘Deterrere.’ Induce fear. Terrorize.”

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

(4)  HOW GOVERNMENT BECOMES PROSECUTOR ON BEHALF OF LOCKHEED MARTIN  (Death Merchant)

It’s not too hard to see the problem the Government has created by contracting-out to Lockheed Martin Corporation.

–  The Government has a large NON-COMPLIANCE problem because of out-sourcing to Lockheed Martin.  This posting has centred on Lockheed’s manufacture of weapons that contravene International Humanitarian Law (even before the UN Treaty to Ban Cluster Munitions).

I haven’t mentioned a word about the other very contentious aspect: privacy, sovereignty over and security of Canadian information, especially in the light of the American Patriot Act.

Now look what happens when the Government decides to enforce compliance.

There is no doubt in my mind but that I did the right thing in saying, “No” to the contracting-out.  Most people in the world would understand that what Lockheed Martin does is immoral;  that participation with Lockheed is participation in criminal activity.  And, Government assurances to the contrary, we are opening ourselves up to providing the American military direct access to the most comprehensive data base the Government of Canada has on its citizens.  Fascist states maintain comprehensive files on citizens and use fear tactics.

To enforce compliance with Canadian law, after the Government has contracted-out to Lockheed Martin:

–  it must use the threat, and then maybe the actuality of the prison system, to coerce a citizen who has done the right thing, into compliance.

–  the prosecutors (the whole judicial and penal system) end up defending the corporate interest, not the public interest.

–  I am not suggesting that the prosecutors WILL use the argument supplied by Lockheed Martin on its website, “Lockheed Martin does not manufacture submunitions, “cluster bombs” or any other explosive warheads … “.  But IF they did, they would also be using the lies of the corporate interest against the citizen.  You can see how slippery is the slope.  Statistics Canada doesn’t want to lose this court case.

Dec 112008
 

CONTENTS

  1. COMMENTARY
  2. WONDERFUL VICTORY!  CWB (CANADIAN WHEAT BOARD)
  3. SWAT TEAM RAIDS OHIO FOOD CO-OP.  I TALKED WITH JACKIE STOWERS.
  4. FOR NEWCOMERS:  ANOTHER MEANS FOR HANDING DATA OFF TO CORPORATIONS, “Govt fronts”.

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

(1)  COMMENTARY

Join in conspiracy with me.  We conspire:  when something is wrong we fight it.

Our conspiracy is all that matters.

There is no need to worry about other conspiracies.  Keep our energy focussed on our conspiracy.

By fighting what is wrong, our conspiracy will prevail.

————————–

We have

a.  Items  2 and 3,  Canadian Wheat Board and Ohio food co-op.  They are about FOOD.

b.  FOOD at a time when work is on Lockheed Martin and the Government, in preparation for a trial over the CENSUS.

 

How, in my weird mind, does  a. have anything to do with  b.?

The topic in 2008-12-06 is the threat posed by “massively organized information”. MOI.

MOI was a central factor in the success of Hitler’s campaign to exterminate a group of people.

IBM’s system of data storage on “punch cards” that could be mechanically sorted by Hollerith machines not only made a fortune for IBM, it enabled rapid identification of individuals based on selected characteristics.

“Herman Hollerith invented IBM”. ..  In 1879 he “accepted the invitation of his Columbia professor  to become an assistant in the U.S. Census Bureau.”  Census data was manually generated.  Imagine the time it took.  A new census would be underway before the last census results were reported.

Hollerith came up with the “idea of a card with standardized holes, each representing a different trait:  gender, nationality, occupation and so forth.  The card would then be fed into a “reader”.   …  Any desired trait could be isolated by simply sorting and resorting for data-specific holes.  … It was nothing less than a nineteenth-century bar code for human beings.”

“By 1884 a prototype machine was constructed …Hollerith patented it  … found it could be used in many more ways than just the census …”The clanging contraption could calculate in a few weeks the results that a man previously spent years correlating.”   Hollerith’s machine was used in the 1890 U.S. census.  Eventually Hollerith’s company became IBM.  The first overseas subsidiary was in Germany, for census work.

And so ..  on into IBM’s lucrative market for population data in Nazi Europe in the 1930’s and 1940’s.

From there to Lockheed Martin Corporation’s involvement in the Canadian (and American and UK) censuses.  I objected to being complicit with this corporation that makes its money from killing people.  I concentrated on cluster bombs because it should be easy in a court of law to prove that LM manufactures cluster bombs.  And that cluster bombs contravene International Humanitarian Law (IHL)(the laws of war) (may be more difficult to prove).  My email of Dec 8th was the news that Canada has signed onto the international treaty to ban cluster bombs.  Great!  that’s easier than IHL to prove.  Our signature on an International Convention to ban cluster bombs is meaningless if we simultaneously financially support one of the largest producers of cluster bombs.   You use economic sanctions to stop inhumane practices.

There is another, unexplored, side of LM.

I am indebted to Lisa for sending in stacks of information that put a name and the details to Lockheed Martin’s international surveillance systems.  That’s later in another email.

massively organized information”, surveillance systems, the amoral nature of corporations, the lessons from Nazi Europe — it is not too hard to figure out that we need to conspire to stop Lockheed Martin’s contracts for census work.

(I am reminded of the lesson in “Women Who Run With the Wolves”:  it isn’t smart to be naïve.  The wolves that are naïve and not vigilant end up infected, maimed or dead.)

But how does this about Lockheed Martin and population data connect to the food stories?

–        “here’s the good news”, victory for the Canadian Wheat Board and

–        “Now for the bad news”, SWAT team raids on the Ohio Food Co-op?

The relationship is that they are parts of the conspiracy:

–        What’s happening with the census (Lockheed Martin) is wrong.  Action: don’t comply.  Action:  plead “not guilty”.  Creates opportunity:  trial (public attention, spot-light on the issue.)

–        The illegal, undemocratic, and unethical steps taken by the Harper Government to get rid of the CWB are wrong.  I haven’t kept this network informed of the details of that on-going hard-fought battle.  Now there has been a very significant victory in the recent elections to the Board: four out of five of the elected positions went to pro CWB candidates!  Most of us have little idea of how great a victory this is, in the face of abuses of government power.  People banded together, fought hard and won back some ground.  (item #2)

–        Item #3, bad news  (SWAT team raids Ohio Food Co-op)  is so incredible that it’s hard to believe.   I tracked down a person, Jackie Stowers, to make sure.  It would be so nice if I could write Jackie off in some way — discredit her –  it would be more comfortable than believing the article.  Alas!  there’s nothing wrong with Jackie Stowers.  She works to connect people with local growers of naturally-raised and organic food products.

Why is Jackie’s story (SWAT team raid on her home) important? Other people have had the same happen to them. ..But it is happening in the USA.  We are in Canada.

Draw the parallel with Hitler’s expansion from Germany into other European countries.  His forces didn’t just arrive one day and take over.  The Hollerith machines were working at frantic speeds in many different countries well before the official arrival of the Nazis.  IBM had subsidiaries in those countries.  The President of IBM was delighted with the money IBM was making.

Our first communications to Statistics Canada over the out-sourcing of census work to Lockheed Martin were met with “The contracting-out is to a Canadian company (LM Canada), not an American company.”.  We called them on that piece of nonsense.  StatsCan (now headed by Mr. Munir Sheikh) also contradicted itself by saying, in other communications, that they were obliged to accept Lockheed’s tender because of NAFTA rules.  If the contract was truly with a Canadian company, NAFTA of course, would not apply.

IBM with its subsidiaries in various European countries. Population data collection for the Nazis, with no qualms.   Lockheed Martin with its subsidiaries in Canada.  Population data collection through the census gets into the hands of the American military.  Legitimately, from the American point-of-view.  They passed the Patriot Act.  On 26/11/2008 I sent the email to you “News report Nov 01,  U.S. wants more information on Canadians”.   … No.  You don’t let Lockheed Martin work on the Canadian census.    You stop it right now….  No.  WE put an end to it, because there ain’t nobody else who is going to do it for us.

The point is, and we know it:  the loss of democratic functioning in the U.S. doesn’t stop at the 49th parallel.

In Jackie Stowers’ Ohio world, people laughed at those who were concerned about the erosion of fundamental principles.  After the SWAT team’s arrival and walking off with the family’s food supply, computer, food co-op membership lists, cell phones, etc.  people are no longer laughing.

The good news is that an organization (sorry, I don’t know the name) contacted the Stowers.  The organization will most likely supply resources to help out.  Jackie met with them yesterday.

What happened to the Stowers is wrong. Our conspiracy is to fight wrong.  We are part of a huge conspiracy that is fighting wrong.  I am certain that the Stowers will win.  The key is that the battle has to be fought.

I wanted Jackie to know that there are many Canadians who stand shoulder-to-shoulder in support of her and her family.  I know that the more abuses that are allowed in the U.S., the more vulnerable we become in Canada.  With more people connected and working together on this continent, the fight against wrong will prevail.  We are in a giant tug-of-war.  We add more people to our side of the rope.

We build our strength through every wrong that is righted.

Just in case you missed it,  I repeat information that is important for Canadians to understand – the American “Bush” regime has to have access to oil.

  • Lockheed Martin and the census fits into the safeguards to ensure access.
  • Massively organized data to identify resistance to their claims on oil and gas.
  • The RCMP anti-terrorist squad sent to Dawson Creek and the Encana pipeline would have its “terrorists” locked away.
  • The  supply of oil exists in the more northerly areas of Canada, largely populated by indigenous people.  You can predict that there will be a large effort to gain compliance with the census from First Nations communities.  The carrot is “we have to have the population data in order to give you money”.

The safeguard for us is dispersed power.  Centralized power, centralized control of information is not healthy.

From 2008-12-06 and the video link below:  Author Edwin Black uses American daily oil consumption figures to establish the extent and consequences of American dependency on oil imports.  He makes the point that the Americans do not have a plan for a disruption in supply (European countries do).  The role of the Straits of Hormuz in the supply line become abundantly clear.

He does not mention the Tar Sands, nor the fact that Canada is now the number one oil supplier to the U.S.  I am left with the feeling that the American “Bush Administration”, contrary to Black’s statements, DOES have a strategy for oil security.  It lies in Canada.  Uneasiness about that comes with the Troop Exchange Agreement (signed Feb 14, 2008)  and the new “Canada First Defence Strategy”  (June 2008) in which Canada has “interoperability” and “compatible doctrine” with the U.S..

I can choose to know or choose not to know:  we are part of the strategy for oil and water security for the U.S.

Watch this video if you have any doubts about how serious the situation is.

Edwin Black at Western Automotive Journalists’ Symposium video (Be patient or bypass the introductory comments.)

(Link no longer valid)   http://video.google.ca/videosearch?hl=en&q=edwin+black&um=1&ie=UTF-8&sa=X&oi=video_result_group&resnum=4&ct=title#

———————————–

Most of you received the email about the RCMP anti-terrorist squad deployed to Dawson Creek because of the “incidents” on the pipeline.   It is important to put people associated with the police and military onto our distribution lists.  It was very easy, in the Encana case, to demonstrate that the police are being used to protect the interests of large corporations.  The “incidents” happen because ANY people, in ANY place – any sane person – will protect their families and loved ones from being poisoned to disease, infertility and death.  The Government is not regulating, in service to the corporations and “money”.  The RCMP is truly searching for THE VICTIMS, not the terrorists.  The RCMP anti-terrorist squad is looking in the wrong place for the terrorists.

Talking with people in the police and military, at every level, is the best insurance against a repeat of what happened to Jackie Stowers and her family.  We can spare ourselves from SWAT teams descending upon us.

In my mind, all of this is connected.

Edwin Black’s book “IBM and the Holocaust” is a great motivator for me to get as much press as possible for the trial.  Jackie Stowers’ story reinforces my motivation.

“Their” conspiracy will not win the day.  It won’t get off the ground.  “Our” conspiracy will win out.

Cheers,

Sandra

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

(2)  WONDERFUL VICTORY!  CWB (CANADIAN WHEAT BOARD)

Column #698   Farmers Show Strong CWB Support in Director Elections,  Paul Beingessner   08/12/08

One of the most contentious CWB director elections to date ended on Sunday, with a result sure to have the federal government gnashing its teeth. Supporters of the CWB’s single desk won four out of five of the districts holding elections. The exception was District Two, in Alberta. Three of the five elected directors are new to the board, as incumbents in these three districts were not eligible to run again.

In the four districts that elected CWB supporters, the margins of victory were large, with 60 percent of voters, on average, voting for single desk supporters. The largest margin fell to Bill Woods, in District Four. This was formerly held by Ken Ritter, who could not run again. Significantly, the two Conservative MPs whose ridings cover most of District Four are Agriculture Minister Gerry Ritz and David Anderson, the MP with responsibilities for the CWB. Both Anderson and Ritz have been vocal and aggressive opponents of the CWB, claiming that their own electoral victories showed that farmers want to see the single desk eliminated.

Woods took the district on the first ballot, with 63.4 percent of the vote. Wood’s main opponent, Sam Magnus, held several positions with the federal Reform and Conservative parties, including a stint on the national council of the Conservative Party. Magnus’ status within the party didn’t help him much as he garnered only 28.5 percent of total votes. If Ritz and Anderson have a vestige of honesty, these MPs will drop the pretense that their schemes to neuter the board are supported by a majority of farmers.

Several other points stand out from the election. The Conservative government continued its overt interference in the election, including pruning the voters list further and sending letters to a select group of farmers, telling them how they might obtain ballots.

The culmination of government interference came when five prairie MPs used their parliamentary expense accounts to send personal letters to farmers on the voters list, telling them to vote for anti-single desk candidates. One of these MPs was David Anderson. As Wood’s substantial victory demonstrated, this strategy failed miserably. Hopefully, when Parliament resumes in January, in whatever form it might take, Anderson will be required to account for this misuse of Parliamentary money, and to explain how he acquired the voters list. That list is supposed to be confidential to the candidates.

Another of the four MPs, Andrew Scheer of Regina-Qu’Appelle, used his expense account to send a personal attack on re-elected CWB director Rod Flaman. Flaman was Scheer’s Liberal opponent in the federal election. Scheer claimed that Flaman “shamelessly shirked his responsibilities to the farmers who elected him and spent the last year campaigning for federal office while collecting his CWB pay cheque”.

Apparently farmers trusted Flaman more than they trusted Scheer, whose closest connection to agriculture is being an insurance salesman in Regina. Flaman won the district with 60.3 percent of the vote on the third ballot.

Currently, the CWB board consists of fifteen directors, with ten elected by farmers and five appointed by the federal government. Eight of the ten farmer-elected directors support the single desk, but the directors appointed by the Conservative government in Ottawa line up directly with the government in its opinion of the CWB. The very strong showing by pro-CWB candidates calls into question the legitimacy of the directors appointed by the government. Clearly they do not represent the wishes of farmers who want the CWB to continue its current mandate. As such, their role at the board table should be minimized to any specific areas of expertise they might have. Obstruction is not considered an area of expertise.

On a positive note for those candidates who were defeated, the Saskatchewan government seems to have a home for anti-single desk defeated candidates in Enterprise Saskatchewan. The Agriculture Sector Team has a couple on its board, including the chair, Gerrid Gust. While the province has aligned itself with the federal government’s anti-board stand, maybe it’s time for the Saskatchewan Party to reconsider its support of a position farmers’ clearly do not support.

On a final note, the rate of return of ballots reached 54 percent, a very good return for a mail-in ballot. The Conservatives have yet to find a way to manipulate the voters list that will give them the result they want.

© Paul Beingessner

————————————–

(3)  SWAT TEAM RAIDS OHIO FOOD CO-OP.  I TALKED WITH JACKIE STOWERS.

Alarming: SWAT Team Raids Ohio Co-op

Fri Dec 5, 2008 6:51 am (PST)
http://www.crossroad.to/articles2/08/swat-team.htm

On Monday, December 1, a SWAT team with semi-automatic rifles entered the private home of the Stowers family in LaGrange, Ohio, herded the family onto the couches in the living room, and kept guns trained on parents, children, infants and toddlers, from approximately 11 AM to 8 PM. The team was aggressive and belligerent. The children were quite traumatized. At some point, the “bad cop” SWAT team was relieved by another team, a “good cop” team that tried to befriend the family. The Stowers family has run a very large, well-known food cooperative called Manna Storehouse on the western side of the greater Cleveland area for many years.

There were agents from the Department of Agriculture present, one of them identified as Bill Lesho. The search warrant is reportedly supicious-looking. Agents began rifling through all of the family’s possessions, a task that lasted hours and resulted in a complete upheaval of every private area in the home. Many items were taken that were not listed on the search warrant. The family was not permitted a phone call, and they were not told what crime they were being charged with. They were not read their rights. Over ten thousand dollars worth of food was taken, including the family’s personal stock of food for the coming year. All of their computers, and all of their cell phones were taken, as well as phone and contact records. The food cooperative was virtually shut down. There was no rational explanation, nor  justification, for this extreme violation of Constitutional rights.

Presumably Manna Storehouse might eventually be charged with running a retail establishment without a license. Why then the Gestapo-type interrogation for a 3rd degree misdemeanor charge? This incident has raised the ominous specter of a restrictive new era in State regulation and enforcement over the nation’s private food supply.

This same type of abusive search and seizure was reported by those innocents who fell victim to oppressive federal drug laws passed in the 1990s. The present circumstance raises the obvious question: is there some rabid new interpretation of an existing drug law that considers food a controlled substance worthy of a nasty SWAT operation? Or worse, is there a previously unrecognized provision(s) pertaining to food in the Homeland Security measures? Some have suggested that it was merely an out-of-control, hot-to-trot ODA agent, and, if so, this would be a best-case scenario. Anything else might spell the beginning of the end for the freedom to eat unregulated and unmonitored food.

One blogger familiar with the Ohio situation has reported that:

“Interestingly, I believe they [Manna Storehouse] said a month or so ago, an undercover ODA official came to their little store and claimed to have a sick father wanting to join the co-op.  Both the owner and her daughter-in-law had a horrible feeling about the man, and decided not to allow him into the co-op and notified him by certified mail. He came back to the co-op demanding to be part of it. They refused and gave him names of other businesses and health food stores closer to his home. Not coincidentally, this man was there yesterday as part of the raid.”

The same blog also noted that the Ohio Department of Agriculture has been chastised by the courts in several previous instances for its aggression, including trying to entrap an Amish man in a raw milk “sale,” which backfired when it became known that the Amish believe in a literal interpretation of “give to him that asketh thee, and from him that would borrow of thee turn not thou away” (Matthew 5:42)

The issue appears to be the discovery of a bit of non-institutional beef in an Oberlin College food service freezer a year ago that was tracked down by a county sanitation official to Manna Storehouse. Oberlin College’s student food coop is widely known for its strident ideological stance about eating organic foods. It seems that the Oberlin student food cooperative had joined the Manna Storehouse food cooperative in order to buy organic foods in bulk from the national organic food distributor United, which services buying clubs across the nation. The sanitation official, James Boddy, evidently contacted the Ohio Department of Agriculture. After the first  contact by state ODA officials, Manna Storehouse reportedly wrote them a letter requesting assistance and guidelines for complying with the law. This letter was never answered. Rather, the ODA agent tried several times to infiltrate the coop, as described above. When his attempts failed, the SWAT team showed up!

Food cooperatives and buying clubs have been an active part of the American landscape for over a generation. In the 1970s, with the rise of the organic food industry (a direct outgrowth of the hippie back-to-nature movement) food coops started up all over the country. These were groups of people who freely associated for the purpose of combining their buying power so that they could order organic food items in bulk and case lots. Anyone who was part of these coops in the early era will remember the messy breakdown of 35 pounds of peanut butter and 5 gallon drums of honey!

These buying clubs have persisted and flourished over the years due to their ability to purchase high quality organic foods at reduced prices in bulk quantities. Most cooperatives have participated greatly in the local agrarian economies, supporting neighborhood organic farmers with purchases of produce, eggs, chickens, etc. The groups also purchase food from a number of different local, regional and national distributors, many of them family-based businesses who truck the food themselves. Some of these food cooperatives have become large enough to set up mini-storefront operations where members can drop in and purchase items leftover from case lot sales. Manna Storehouse had established itself in such a manner, using a small enclosed breezeway attached to their home. It was a folksy place with old wooden floors where coop members stopped by to chat and snack on bags of organic corn chips.

The state of Ohio boasts the second largest Amish population in the country. Many of the Amish live on acreages where they raise their own food, not unlike Manna Storehouse, and sell off the extras to neighbors and church members. There is a sense of foreboding that this state crackdown on a longstanding, reputable food cooperative operation could adversely impact the peaceful agrarian way of life not only for the Amish, but homeschoolers and those families living off the land on rural acreages. It raises the disturbing possibility that it could become a crime to raise your own food, buy eggs from the farmer down the road, or butcher your own chickens for family and friends – bustling activities that routinely take place in backwater America.

The freedom to purchase food directly from the source is increasingly under attack. For those who have food allergies and chemical intolerances, or who are on special medical diets, this is becoming a serious health issue. Will Americans retain the right to purchase food that is uncontaminated by pesticides, herbicides, allergens, additives, dyes, preservatives, MSG, GMOs, radiation, etc.? The melamine scare from China underscores the increasingly inferior and suspect quality of modern processed institutional foods. One blog, commenting on the bizarre and troubling Manna Storehouse situation, observed that:

“No one is saying exactly why. At the same time the FDA says it it safe to eat the 40% of tainted beef found in Costco’s and Sam’s all over the nation. These farm raids are very common now. Every farmer needs to fully eqiped [sic] for the possibility of it happening to them. The Farmer To Consumer Legal Defense Fund was created just for this purpose. The USDA just released their plans to put a law into action that will put all small farmers out of business. Animals for the sale of meat or milk will only be allowed in commercial farms, even the organic ones.” December 3, 2008 7:09 PM

—————————————————————————–

Seems U.S. forgot to tell Navy Seabee Chad Stowers the Real War Is being fought here…and he’s the enemy: “When officers from the Lorain County Sheriff’s Office in Ohio arrived last Monday at the Manna Storehouse food cooperative in LaGrange with weapons drawn and trained on Jackie Stowers and her children, along with her in-laws, there was one member of the family missing. Jackie’s husband, Chad, is a U.S. Navy Seabee, helping in construction projects in the midst of combat in Iraq. He’s been there, separated from his family, for the last five months, supposedly protecting our rights from abuse—the sort of abuse that appears to be taking place on an ever-more-frequent basis at farms and food outlets around the country.”

 

UPDATE:  June 2011,   Court rules against food co-op

http://chronicle.northcoastnow.com/2011/06/08/court-rules-against-food-co-op/

 

UPDATE, November 2, 2011.  WHAT EVENTUALLY HAPPENED IN THE STOWERS’ CASE?

http://www.ohioconstitution.org/2009/10/09/manna-storehouse/

The Ohio Supreme Court rejected the appeal of the lower court’s decision.

 

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

(4)  FOR NEWCOMERS:  ANOTHER MEANS FOR HANDING DATA OFF TO CORPORATIONS, “Govt fronts”.

Email sent:  October 23, 2008

Subject:  Corporations in Governance – Nader video. Government use of word “Corporation”.

It’s more than Government serving corporate interests.  Governments are converting themselves to corporations.  . . .

(Oct 11, 2012.  The Government is doing what I feared, as spelt out.  I separated this out to make it easier to find – please click on http://sandrafinley.ca/?p=6838 )