Tarot card: The (blasted) Tower or The Tower of Babel: karmic blowback; as a man sows, so shall he reap; fruta amarga
The world really does seem to be weirding out lately, on many fronts. Recently, from "leaks" and now a documentary presented on Brazilian television, we learn that our Communications Security Establishment Canada hacked into computers run by Brazil’s Mines and Energy Ministry. Since Canada and Brazil - last time I checked - are supposed to be friends, this is a most unfriendly kick in the cahones. The Brazilians seem hopping mad, at least. (Do you blame them? This is exactly the kind of behavior Steven Harper gets on his high horse about when it's China's or Russia's government that's engaged in industrial espionage on their "friends". "Do what I say, not what I do.." - right.)
Various hypotheses have been proposed concerining the rationale for such behavior (not evident!) The following Maclean's magazine article is informative and looks at things from several hypothetical angles. It is definitely worth the effort of reading..
canadas-snooping-on-brazil-and-the-economics-of-cyber-espionage/
The author of the article takes a somewhat contrarian tack and argues that Canada was in reality paying some kind of "debt" to American intelligence agencies. But what really caught my attention was a fascinating remark from one of the talking heads interviewed for the article. Get a load of this:
"And why, then, did the Americans want to snoop on Brazil’s mining
sector? Probably, just because they could, says Wark. Metadata
collection analysis, which makes it possible to get a picture of the
volumes and networks of telephone, email and Internet traffic across the
globe, has given so called signals-intelligence agencies such as CSEC
and the NSA enormous powers. The NSA, in particular, has amassed
tremendous capabilities, and it has shown a propensity to test the
limits of its new tools. “They probably weren’t interested in the
content [of whatever they would find at the Brazilian Mining and Energy
Ministry],” says Wark, “they wanted to see what they could do.” And they
entrusted their junior partner, Canada, to carry out the task: Regular
burden-sharing among allies." (emphasis added)
The oft-reported hubris of the engineer, technician, magnate, empire.. One does "it" just because one can (and to hell with consequences). Here the cult of gigantism, the vertigo of power, the identification with what is mighty (and the inevitable inflation that goes with it - megalomania)
The bigger they are, the harder they fall..
The dude on the left (ancient flying reptile) is extinct, one notes. (The one in the middle makes up in arrogance and uber-hubris for small size.. and so is in trouble also.)
Of course, there is the more conventional interpretation of the government's hacking into the Brazilian Mining Ministry. It, though, offers little, if any, comfort: Canada's federal system is totally subservient to corporate interests, particularly those of the petrochemical industry, centered in Steven Harper's home province of Alberta. This interpretation, too, makes sense if one studies how the Harper government has attempted to defund, control or it other ways denigrate the work of serious climate change scientists. Coming to grips with climate change would mean switching to other sources of energy than petroleum.. Again, the Harper government has taken great pains to gut federal agencies who deal with protecting the environment in some way, reducing their staffs till they become ineffectual puppets, rubbing stamping whatever is put before them. (Shades of late, great Rome - sumus novi romani?)
The gods blind those they would destroy - Sophocles
Hubris /ˈhjuːbrɪs/, also hybris, from ancient Greek ὕβρις, means extreme pride or arrogance. Hubris often indicates a loss of contact with reality
and an overestimation of one's own competence, accomplishments or
capabilities, especially when the person exhibiting it is in a position
of power.
wikipedia Hubris
Some additional insight into the psychology of hubris is provided by no less a luminary than Aristotle.
"Aristotle
defined hubris as shaming the victim, not because of anything that
happened to you or might happen to you, but merely for your own
gratification.[4]
Hubris is not the requital of past injuries—that is revenge. As for the
pleasure in hubris, its cause is this: men think that by ill-treating
others they make their own superiority the greater."
You see a lot of contemporary populism in this!
An investigation of the theme of Transparency in the Canadian Federal Government. Non-partisan: Power corrupts and Absolute Power corrupts absolutely. Our model: the muckracker journalists.
Showing posts with label surveillance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label surveillance. Show all posts
Thursday, October 10, 2013
Wednesday, April 25, 2012
Decline and fall of Canadian Science: the muzzle
Canada, land of the free, right? Well, maybe.. maybe..
Take a look at this latest piece of "Orwellian" NewsCrafting on the part of the Harper government. This is so wacky, I could not possibly make it up. I simply don't have enough imagination.
"Hundreds of researchers from around the globe arrived in Montreal this week to attend the International Polar Year Conference, but those scientists working for Environment Canada were also accompanied by so-called "media relations contacts" tasked with monitoring and recording interactions with the press"
Climatologist Andrew Weaver compared this to Stalinist era science policy in the Soviet Union: scientists who were allowed to attend international conferences were accompanied by a "minder" to monitor their statements. Get off track and your career is kaputsky.. And now, wonder of wonders, we seem to have a acquired a modified version here in good ol' freedom lovin' N. America. This is like duh, too weird to be true. But weirdly, it is..
Aside: The Harper government has taught us one thing: expect the unexpected / attendre l'inattendu.
It gets so bizarre - there's no other word for it! - that even published results - sic! - are being censored:
"The groups noted that last fall Environment Canada had prevented David Tarasick from speaking about his ozone layer research, which had been published in the journal Nature, and that earlier the Privy Council Office had stopped Kristina Miller, a researcher at Fisheries and Oceans, from granting interviews about her work on sockeye salmon decline in B.C., findings previously published in the journal Science"
From a purely logical point of view, why censor published work (unless, of course, you figure the public is too stupid to read technical works)?
http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2012/04/24/scientists-muzzling-canada.html
Internal blog link (previous related article):
http://transparencycanada.blogspot.ca/2012/03/decline-and-fall-of-canadian-science.html
Take a look at this latest piece of "Orwellian" NewsCrafting on the part of the Harper government. This is so wacky, I could not possibly make it up. I simply don't have enough imagination.
"Hundreds of researchers from around the globe arrived in Montreal this week to attend the International Polar Year Conference, but those scientists working for Environment Canada were also accompanied by so-called "media relations contacts" tasked with monitoring and recording interactions with the press"
Climatologist Andrew Weaver compared this to Stalinist era science policy in the Soviet Union: scientists who were allowed to attend international conferences were accompanied by a "minder" to monitor their statements. Get off track and your career is kaputsky.. And now, wonder of wonders, we seem to have a acquired a modified version here in good ol' freedom lovin' N. America. This is like duh, too weird to be true. But weirdly, it is..
Aside: The Harper government has taught us one thing: expect the unexpected / attendre l'inattendu.
It gets so bizarre - there's no other word for it! - that even published results - sic! - are being censored:
"The groups noted that last fall Environment Canada had prevented David Tarasick from speaking about his ozone layer research, which had been published in the journal Nature, and that earlier the Privy Council Office had stopped Kristina Miller, a researcher at Fisheries and Oceans, from granting interviews about her work on sockeye salmon decline in B.C., findings previously published in the journal Science"
From a purely logical point of view, why censor published work (unless, of course, you figure the public is too stupid to read technical works)?
http://www.cbc.ca/news/technology/story/2012/04/24/scientists-muzzling-canada.html
Internal blog link (previous related article):
http://transparencycanada.blogspot.ca/2012/03/decline-and-fall-of-canadian-science.html
Friday, November 18, 2011
Do YOU have a shadow?
This one is a little too bizarre to be true but then, with the Harperites, you never know..
Cindy Blackstock is a small, middle aged, non-radical, non-separatist aboriginal activist working for children's rights and services on reservation (a Federal jurisdiction). For some unknown reason she managed to get herself on someone's surveillance list. When she showed up for a meeting with the feds, she found herself barred from access and even had a security guard assigned to watch over her while her colleagues conferred with the feds. Why? What was her crime?
The only thing anyone can come up with to date: a complaint with the human rights commission accusing the feds of willfully underfunding child welfare services on First Nations reserves.
http://wmtc.blogspot.com/2011/11/cindy-blackstock-another-victim-of.html
To get to the bottom of things, Ms Blackstock filed under the freedom of information act. She discovered that she had a thick dossier. As Professor Papillon, an expert on Aboriginal autonomy issues, argues, it is normal that government employees attend meetings relevant to their area of expertise and take notes. Check the audioclip from CBC radio program, The Current, 17 nov, 2011:
http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/episode/2011/11/17/govt-surveillance-of-native-youth-advocate-cindy-blackstock/index.html
What is not normal, though, is that Ms Blackstock alone be singled out. Files released under the freedom of information act contained verbatim notes of Ms Blackstock's presentations at meetings but not those of other activists. Ms Blackstock seems to have grown a tail! Shades of the MacCarthy anti-communist "witch hunts" back in the 1950s and early 1960s in the USA..
Another expert, appearing on The Current, Tom Powers, himself a Conservative party strategist, and who worked with aboriginal affairs also found the behavior of the government puzzling. And this on the part of a government who ran on a platform of responsible democracy and transparency! What, oh what, is the world coming to?
Just wondering. Have you done something to find youself with a tail, an extra shadow. Have I got one for posting these blogs..
Cindy Blackstock is a small, middle aged, non-radical, non-separatist aboriginal activist working for children's rights and services on reservation (a Federal jurisdiction). For some unknown reason she managed to get herself on someone's surveillance list. When she showed up for a meeting with the feds, she found herself barred from access and even had a security guard assigned to watch over her while her colleagues conferred with the feds. Why? What was her crime?
The only thing anyone can come up with to date: a complaint with the human rights commission accusing the feds of willfully underfunding child welfare services on First Nations reserves.
http://wmtc.blogspot.com/2011/11/cindy-blackstock-another-victim-of.html
To get to the bottom of things, Ms Blackstock filed under the freedom of information act. She discovered that she had a thick dossier. As Professor Papillon, an expert on Aboriginal autonomy issues, argues, it is normal that government employees attend meetings relevant to their area of expertise and take notes. Check the audioclip from CBC radio program, The Current, 17 nov, 2011:
http://www.cbc.ca/thecurrent/episode/2011/11/17/govt-surveillance-of-native-youth-advocate-cindy-blackstock/index.html
What is not normal, though, is that Ms Blackstock alone be singled out. Files released under the freedom of information act contained verbatim notes of Ms Blackstock's presentations at meetings but not those of other activists. Ms Blackstock seems to have grown a tail! Shades of the MacCarthy anti-communist "witch hunts" back in the 1950s and early 1960s in the USA..
Another expert, appearing on The Current, Tom Powers, himself a Conservative party strategist, and who worked with aboriginal affairs also found the behavior of the government puzzling. And this on the part of a government who ran on a platform of responsible democracy and transparency! What, oh what, is the world coming to?
Just wondering. Have you done something to find youself with a tail, an extra shadow. Have I got one for posting these blogs..
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