Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Richard Falk's Blog - Judge for yourself

From AFP:

UNITED NATIONS — The United States on Tuesday demanded the sacking of a UN human rights expert for "noxious" comments claiming there had been a US cover-up over the September 11 attacks.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon condemned the comments by Richard Falk, UN special rapporteur on human rights in the Palestinian territories, as "an affront" to the victims of the 2001 Al-Qaeda attacks on New York and Washington.

The US ambassador to the United Nations, Susan Rice, called Falk's views "despicable and deeply offensive" and said she had registered a protest and called for his dismissal.


Really? Why does the mainstream media hype this and print out of context quotes to support the attack on Falk?

We decided to read Falk's Blog and see exactly what he said and why it was so viciously opposed.

Here is his original blog post. If you can't view it, we have reproduced it exactly here:

Interrogating the Arizona Killings from a Safe Distance


I spent a year in Sweden a few years after the assassination of Olaf Palme in 1986, the controversial former prime minister of the country who at the time of his death was serving as a member of the Swedish cabinet. He was assassinated while walking with his wife back to their apartment in the historic part of the city after attending a nearby movie. It was a shocking event in a Sweden that had prided itself on moderateness in politics and the avoidance of involvement in the wars of the twentieth century. A local drifter, with a history of alcoholism, was charged and convicted of the crime, but many doubts persisted, including on the part of Ms. Palme who analogized her situation to that of Coretta King who never believed the official version of her martyred husband’s death.

I had a particular interest in this national traumatic event as my reason for being in Sweden was a result of an invitation to be the Olaf Palme Professor, a rotating academic post given each year to a foreign scholar, established by the Swedish Parliament as a memorial to their former leader. (after the Social Democratic Party lost political control in Sweden this professorship was promptly defunded, partly because Palme was unloved by conservatives and partly because of a neoliberal dislike for public support of such activities)
In the course of my year traveling around Sweden I often asked those whom I met what was their view of the assassination, and what I discovered was that the responses told me more about them than it did about the public event. Some thought it was a dissident faction in the Swedish security forces long angered by Palme’s neutralist policies, some believed it was resentment caused by Palme’s alleged engineering of Swedish arms sales to both sides in the Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s, some believed it was the CIA in revenge for Palme’s neutralism during the Cold War, some believed it could have criminals in the pay of business tycoons tired of paying high taxes needed to maintain the Swedish maximalist version of a welfare state, and there were other theories as well. What was common to all of these explanations was the lack of evidence that might connect the dots. What people believed happened flowed from their worldview rather than the facts of the event—a distrust of the state, especially its secret operations, or a strong conviction that special interests hidden from view were behind prominent public events of this character.

In a way, this process of reflection is natural, even inevitable, but it leads to faulty conclusions. We tend to process information against the background of our general worldview and understanding, and we do this all the time as an efficient way of coping with the complexity of the world combined with our lack of time or inclination to reach conclusions by independent investigation. The problem arises when we confuse this means of interpreting our experience with an effort to provide an explanation of a contested public event. There are, to be sure, conspiracies that promote unacknowledged goals, and enjoy the benefit of government protection. We don’t require WikiLeaks to remind us not to trust governments, even our own, and others that seem in most respects to be democratic and law-abiding. And we also by now should know that governments (ab)use their authority to treat awkward knowledge as a matter of state secrets, and criminalize those who are brave enough to believe that the citizenry needs to know the crimes that their government is committing with their trust and their tax dollars.

The arguments swirling around the 9/11 attacks are emblematic of these issues. What fuels suspicions of conspiracy is the reluctance to address the sort of awkward gaps and contradictions in the official explanations that David Ray Griffin(and other devoted scholars of high integrity) have been documenting in book after book ever since his authoritative The New Pearl Harbor in 2004 (updated in 2008). What may be more distressing than the apparent cover up is the eerie silence of the mainstream media, unwilling to acknowledge the well-evidenced doubts about the official version of the events: an al Qaeda operation with no foreknowledge by government officials. Is this silence a manifestation of fear or cooption, or part of an equally disturbing filter of self-censorship? Whatever it is, the result is the withering away of a participatory citizenry and the erosion of legitimate constitutional government. The forms persist, but the content is missing.

This brings me to the Arizona shootings, victimizing both persons apparently targeted for their political views and random people who happened to be there for one reason or another, innocently paying their respects to a congresswoman meeting constituents outside a Tucson supermarket. As with the Palme assassination, the most insistent immediate responses come from the opposite ends of the political spectrum, both proceeding on presuppositions rather than awaiting evidence.

On one side are those who say that right-wing hate speech and affection for guns were clearly responsible, while Tea Party ultra-conservatives and their friends reaffirm their rights of free speech, denying that there is any connection between denouncing their adversaries in the political process and the violent acts of a deranged individual seemingly acting on his own.  If we want to be responsible in our assessments, we must restrain our political predispositions, and get the evidence. Let us remember that what seems most disturbing about the 9/11 controversy is the widespread aversion by government and media to the evidence that suggests, at the very least, the need for an independent investigation that proceeds with no holds barred.
Such an investigation would contrast with the official ‘9/11 Commission’ that proceeded with most holds barred.  What has been already disturbing about the Arizona incident are these rival rushes to judgment without bothering with evidence. Such public irresponsibility polarizes political discourse, making conversation and serious debate irrelevant.

There is one more issue raised, with typical candor and innocence, by the filmmaker, Michael Moore. If a Muslim group has published a list of twenty political leaders in this country, and put crosshairs of a gun behind their pictures, is there any doubt that the Arizona events would be treated as the work of a terrorist,, and the group that had pre-identified such targets would be immediately outlawed as a terrorist organization. Many of us, myself included, fervently hoped, upon hearing the news of the shootings, that the perpetrator of this violence was neither a Muslim nor a Hispanic, especially an illegal immigrant. Why? Because we justly feared the kind of horrifying backlash that would have been probably generated by Glenn Beck, Rush Limbaugh, Bill O’Reilly,  Sarah Palin, and their legion of allies. Now that the apparent perpetrator is a young white American, the talk from the hate mongers, agains without bothering with evidence, is of mental disorder and sociopathology. This is faith-based pre-Enlightenment ‘knowledge.’

What must we learn from all of this? Don’t connect dots without evidence. Don’t turn away as soon as the words ‘conspiracy theory’ are uttered, especially if the evidence does point away from what the power-wielders want us to believe. Don’t link individual wrongdoing, however horrific, to wider religious and ethnic identities. We will perish as a species if we don’t learn soon to live together better on our beautiful, globalizing, and imperiled planet. 

The media does not see fit to print statements like these from his post:

"What fuels suspicions of conspiracy is the reluctance to address the sort of awkward gaps and contradictions"

"What may be more distressing than the apparent cover up is the eerie silence of the mainstream media, unwilling to acknowledge the well-evidenced doubts about the official version of the events: an al Qaeda operation with no foreknowledge by government officials. Is this silence a manifestation of fear or cooption, or part of an equally disturbing filter of self-censorship?"

"If we want to be responsible in our assessments, we must restrain our political predispositions, and get the evidence. Let us remember that what seems most disturbing about the 9/11 controversy is the widespread aversion by government and media to the evidence that suggests, at the very least, the need for an independent investigation that proceeds with no holds barred."

"What must we learn from all of this? Don’t connect dots without evidence. Don’t turn away as soon as the words ‘conspiracy theory’ are uttered, especially if the evidence does point away from what the power-wielders want us to believe." 

The obvious reason for the overblown and irrational response to remarks like Falk's is that the people in power HAVE something to hide or fear. Is it the truth? Because that is all that is being sought.

 

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Is RIM giving countries 'back-door' encryption keys?




















Listen to interview with Christian Caryl who is a Senior Fellow at the Massachusetts Institute for Technology's Center for International Studies and a Contributing Editor to Foreign Policy magazine.

Ref: VOA Article

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

Two Keys

The ship in the photo is the U.S.S. Mauna Loa (AE-8), a munitions ship, taken in September 1944 as it left port in San Francisco, headed for the South Pacific. What you will not find in any record is that the Mauna Loa mysteriously vanished for a period of five days - from November 10th 1944 until November 15th 1944. When it left San Francisco, it was carrying a crate of cargo that was not part of the manifest of munitions out of Port Chicago. The crate was loaded at the Mare Island Navy Yard in San Francisco, and along with the crate was a Seaman named Peter Black, who was not listed as crew on the ship. Peter Black was not his real name either. He was there on a specific mission - to deliver the crate and its contents. Read the whole story here.

Tuesday, December 16, 2008

Bush Shoe Attack - Inside Job?

U.S. President George Bush had to quickly duck two flying shoes while at a press conference in Baghdad this week. Analysis of the video leads the LOST Gunman to believe that Bush had knowledge of the incident prior to the attack. "His ability to duck the shoes in such a quick way is inconsistent with his recorded reflexes" said Professor Caractacus Potts of M.I.T. Our own analysis of the videotape confirms that based on the velocity of the shoes and the good aim of the Iraqi journalist, there is little chance that Bush could have got out of the way in time without prior knowledge that the event was going to happen. Junior correspondent Abner Middleman of the Milwaukee Tribune says he overheard Bush earlier in the day talking about shoes and duck. Middleman said: "You can draw your own conclusions." Why would Bush create this attack on himself? Well, it's really a great way to end his presidency on a lighter note and what better place to do it? Remember - you read it here first.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Political Coup planned in Canada!

A political coup to bring down the recently elected Canadian Government is being planned by Liberal leader Stephane Dion, NDP Leader Jack Layton, and Separatist Bloc Quebecois Leader Gilles Duceppe. The Canadian Army is at the ready in preparations to deal with the anticipated violent clashes as a result of this unprecedented move. Prime Minister Stephen Harper may need to call on his U.S. and British Allies to assist if the situation escalates into a civil war. Factions in Western Canada are talking of their own rebellion and plans to fight the coup even if it means separation from Canada. Stay tuned as we get the latest news on the situation...