Posts Tagged ‘politics’

Alex Jones Tv: Cybersecurity Measures Will Mandate Government “ID Tokens” To Use Internet 1/4

Thursday, July 8th, 2010

Cybersecurity Measures Will Mandate Government “ID Tokens” To Use The Internet

Paul Joseph Watson & Alex Jones

http://www.prisonplanet.com/

Monday, June 28, 2010

The move to shut down and regulate the Internet under a new government-controlled system has accelerated into high gear with the announcement that the government’s cybersecurity strategy revolves around issuing Internet users with ID “tokens” without which they will not be able to visit websites, the latest salvo against web freedom which, in combination with Senator Joe Lieberman’s ‘kill switch’ bill, will serve to eviscerate the free Internet as we know it.

Under the guise of “cybersecurity,” the government is moving to discredit and shut down the existing Internet infrastructure in the pursuit of a new, centralized, regulated world wide web.

It is important to stress that “cybersecurity” has nothing to do with protecting the infrastructure of the United States and everything to do with taking over the Internet. Cybersecurity is about attacking non-compliant Internet users, not defending against hackers. Non-compliance equates as using the Internet as a political tool to dissent against the policies of the U.S. government. Having already tried and failed in flooding the web with paid disinformation agents, the government is now turning to its only recourse, exploiting hyped or outright staged cyberattacks as an excuse through which to implement an Internet 2 system controlled and regulated solely by the authorities.

We are constantly told that the Internet needs to be subject to government control because cyberterrorists could hack in and bring down the national power grid. However, the vast majority of the U.S. power infrastructure is not connected to the Internet. It will only be connected to the Internet if the government accelerates the implementation of “smart grid” technology, so in this sense, the government itself is leaving the power grid more vulnerable to hackers by its own programs.

Threats against computer networks in the United States are grossly exaggerated. Dire reports issued by the Defense Science Board and the Center for Strategic and International Studies “are usually richer in vivid metaphor — with fears of ‘digital Pearl Harbors’ and ‘cyber-Katrinas’ — than in factual foundation,” writes Evgeny Morozov, a Belarus-born researcher and blogger who writes on the political effects of the internet.

Morozov notes that much of the data on the supposed cyber threat “are gathered by ultra-secretive government agencies — which need to justify their own existence — and cyber-security companies — which derive commercial benefits from popular anxiety.”

Should the government go ahead and try to exercise the powers it is now on the verge of acquiring, we’d expect to see the Internet shut down for a few days in order to prevent some kind of contrived cyberattack blamed on terrorists. Sure, there will be problems, but large corporations will raise little dissent safe in the knowledge that the Lieberman legislation gives them immunity from civil lawsuits and also ensures they are reimbursed for any costs incurred if the Internet is shut down for a period of time.

After a series of shutdowns, the government will simply demand that every corporation or individual who wants to operate a website first obtain a license and an individual Internet ID. Such licenses will be revoked for anyone who engages in “hate speech,” which is now so broad a term that it encompasses offending anyone on the Internet.

The result will be a sterile and regulated Internet which more closely resembles cable TV than the true open source, outpost of free speech that we have come to know and love.

This exact strategy was outlined in a paper published by Obama’s cybersecurity co-ordinator Howard Schmidt, which was compiled with the aid of the National Security Council.

The strategy revolves around, “The creation of a system for identity management that would allow citizens to use additional authentication techniques, such as physical tokens or modules on mobile phones, to verify who they are before buying things online or accessing such sensitive information as health or banking records,” reports the FInancial Times.

Duration : 0:10:59

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Alex Jones Tv: Cybersecurity Measures Will Mandate Government “ID Tokens” To Use Internet 2/4

Tuesday, June 29th, 2010

Cybersecurity Measures Will Mandate Government “ID Tokens” To Use The Internet

Paul Joseph Watson & Alex Jones

http://www.prisonplanet.com/

Monday, June 28, 2010

The move to shut down and regulate the Internet under a new government-controlled system has accelerated into high gear with the announcement that the government’s cybersecurity strategy revolves around issuing Internet users with ID “tokens” without which they will not be able to visit websites, the latest salvo against web freedom which, in combination with Senator Joe Lieberman’s ‘kill switch’ bill, will serve to eviscerate the free Internet as we know it.

Under the guise of “cybersecurity,” the government is moving to discredit and shut down the existing Internet infrastructure in the pursuit of a new, centralized, regulated world wide web.

It is important to stress that “cybersecurity” has nothing to do with protecting the infrastructure of the United States and everything to do with taking over the Internet. Cybersecurity is about attacking non-compliant Internet users, not defending against hackers. Non-compliance equates as using the Internet as a political tool to dissent against the policies of the U.S. government. Having already tried and failed in flooding the web with paid disinformation agents, the government is now turning to its only recourse, exploiting hyped or outright staged cyberattacks as an excuse through which to implement an Internet 2 system controlled and regulated solely by the authorities.

We are constantly told that the Internet needs to be subject to government control because cyberterrorists could hack in and bring down the national power grid. However, the vast majority of the U.S. power infrastructure is not connected to the Internet. It will only be connected to the Internet if the government accelerates the implementation of “smart grid” technology, so in this sense, the government itself is leaving the power grid more vulnerable to hackers by its own programs.

Threats against computer networks in the United States are grossly exaggerated. Dire reports issued by the Defense Science Board and the Center for Strategic and International Studies “are usually richer in vivid metaphor — with fears of ‘digital Pearl Harbors’ and ‘cyber-Katrinas’ — than in factual foundation,” writes Evgeny Morozov, a Belarus-born researcher and blogger who writes on the political effects of the internet.

Morozov notes that much of the data on the supposed cyber threat “are gathered by ultra-secretive government agencies — which need to justify their own existence — and cyber-security companies — which derive commercial benefits from popular anxiety.”

Should the government go ahead and try to exercise the powers it is now on the verge of acquiring, we’d expect to see the Internet shut down for a few days in order to prevent some kind of contrived cyberattack blamed on terrorists. Sure, there will be problems, but large corporations will raise little dissent safe in the knowledge that the Lieberman legislation gives them immunity from civil lawsuits and also ensures they are reimbursed for any costs incurred if the Internet is shut down for a period of time.

After a series of shutdowns, the government will simply demand that every corporation or individual who wants to operate a website first obtain a license and an individual Internet ID. Such licenses will be revoked for anyone who engages in “hate speech,” which is now so broad a term that it encompasses offending anyone on the Internet.

The result will be a sterile and regulated Internet which more closely resembles cable TV than the true open source, outpost of free speech that we have come to know and love.

This exact strategy was outlined in a paper published by Obama’s cybersecurity co-ordinator Howard Schmidt, which was compiled with the aid of the National Security Council.

The strategy revolves around, “The creation of a system for identity management that would allow citizens to use additional authentication techniques, such as physical tokens or modules on mobile phones, to verify who they are before buying things online or accessing such sensitive information as health or banking records,” reports the FInancial Times.
http://www.infowars.com/cybersecurity-measures-will-mandate-government-id-tokens-to-use-the-internet/

Duration : 0:10:37

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Fighting To Save Public Access TV in Tampa

Friday, January 22nd, 2010

Once again, John Russell and Mark Adams step up to the plate to defend our ever eroding civil rights.

Hillsborough County taxpayers were contractually promised in return for use of their property to run cable, a voice in the television medium… and that voice is public access television.

Cable subscribers support Public Access television through a monthly fee associated w/ their cable bill. So, what IS THE PROBLEM?

The problem is that Public Access TV and its programs has been a thorn in the sides of many Establishment politicians, through the unfiltered voice that Public Access TV provides.

The false rationale that we just cannot afford Public Access television operating for over 20 years, in such “lean times” because of the Florida Legislature’s Tax Cuts and associated decreased revenue to the county, is pure NONSENSE.

It is purely an ALLOCATION issue. Where the funds are going, and as Rose Ferlita so clearly pointed out in her arguments, the generosity to areas that disproportionately “augment” private business enterprise e.g., sports authority beneficiaries, does not demonstrate a magnitude of benefit to justify the level in increased expenditure and are therefore… inappropriate when other services are being left… HIGH AND DRY!

As Mark Adams details in his presentation, the only decrease is in the rate of increase in revenues to the county. The actual revenues for this year and next year are in nominal terms, HIGHER… NOT LOWER!

See link to County Budget Summary here…

http://www.hillsboroughcounty.org/managementbudget/budgets/adopted/fy0607/publications/budsummary.pdf

Jim Norman gives a circuitous discourse on the value of investing in the recruiting of sports events to Tampa. Comm. Norman uses the investment made by West Palm Beach in his argument which is inappropriate from a number of perspectives. WPB has no professional sports teams, no comparable venues so from a standpoint of desirability is non-competitive w/ Tampa Bay when marketing its assets to nationally recognized sporting events.

A true test would likely be to cut marketing dollars for a year or two and see if there was a dramatic drop off in attracting sporting events of this nature to Tampa in comparison to WPB.

In reality, WPB offers little in the way of competition to Tampa when competing for large, nationally recognized sporting events… given Tampa’s professional sports and college teams, their associated venues, hotel and recreational accommodations. Ferlita trumps Hagen and Norman here…

This vote is purely political, and while I may have gotten the sequence of Commissioner Higgenbotham’s phone call wrong in my address to the Commission,, the character of the discussion leading to the re-vote where Commissioners Higgenbotham and White changed their vote should remain open to further public scrutiny.

While some on our side may have cringed when I called the commissioners to account for their change of heart, please understand that these people are going to do, what they are going to do…

Giving them a pass on their actions, behavior and motivations demonstrated by the “character” of the vote, only emboldens they and their benefactors further, and does not bode well for the future. Considering the “filtering/censoring” currently undertaken at Hillsborough County Public Libraries re:Internet Access to sites such as Youtube, Facebook, Myspace and Equality Florida are examples. These are attacks on 21st Century political speech.

Circumstances call for courage in exposing the tentacles of the Establishment that are in large measure, all around us.

Free Speech was deemed important enough to enshrine in our Constitution, and what defines speech and “The Public Square” have, and will continue to change over time.

It is our responsibility to stand firm against the forces lurking in the shadows, (those who pull the strings!) and call them out into the open whenever possible.

This is one case where the evidence is about as clear as you’ll find it in the public domain.

Let’s hope that the Commissioners will see fit to sanction their own rehabilitation and find some funding to preserve the 21st Century Public Square in Tampa Bay.

Duration : 0:6:20

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