1. The Internet Clampdown
ne saving grace of alternative media in this age of unfettered
corporate conglomeration has been the internet. While the masses are
spoon-fed predigested news on TV and in mainstream print publications,
the truth-seeking individual still has access to a broad array of
investigative reporting and political opinion via the world-wide web. Of
course, it was only a matter of time before the government moved to
patch up this crack in the sky.
Attempts to regulate and filter internet content are intensifying
lately, coming both from telecommunications corporations (who are
gearing up to pass legislation transferring ownership and regulation of
the internet to themselves), and the Pentagon (which issued an "Information
Operations Roadmap" in 2003, signed by Donald Rumsfeld, which
outlines tactics such as network attacks and acknowledges, without
suggesting a remedy, that US propaganda planted in other countries has
easily found its way to Americans via the internet). One obvious tactic
clearing the way for stifling regulation of internet content is the
growing media frenzy over child pornography and "internet predators,"
which will surely lead to legislation that by far exceeds in its purview
what is needed to fight such threats.
2. "The Long War"
This little piece of clumsy marketing died off quickly, but it gave
away what many already suspected: the War on Terror will never end, nor
is it meant to end. It is designed to be perpetual. As with the War on
Drugs, it outlines a goal that can never be fully attained -- as long as
there are pissed off people and explosives. The Long War will eternally
justify what are ostensibly temporary measures: suspension of civil
liberties, military expansion, domestic spying, massive deficit spending
and the like. This short-lived moniker told us all, "get used to it.
Things aren't going to change any time soon."
3. The USA PATRIOT Act
Did anyone really think this was going to be temporary? Yes, this
disgusting power grab gives the government the right to sneak into your
house, look through all your stuff and not tell you about it for weeks
on a rubber stamp warrant. Yes, they can look at your medical records
and library selections. Yes, they can pass along any information they
find without probable cause for purposes of prosecution. No, they're not
going to take it back, ever.
4. Prison Camps
This last January the Army Corps of Engineers gave Halliburton
subsidiary Kellogg Brown & Root nearly $400 million to build detention
centers in the United States, for the purpose of unspecified "new
programs." Of course, the obvious first guess would be that these
new programs might involve rounding up Muslims or political dissenters
-- I mean, obviously detention facilities are there to hold somebody.
I wish I had more to tell you about this, but it's, you know...
secret.
5. Touchscreen Voting Machines
Despite clear, copious evidence that these nefarious contraptions are
built to be tampered with, they continue to spread and dominate the
voting landscape, thanks to Bush's "Help America Vote Act," the
exploitation of corrupt elections officials, and the general public's
enduring cluelessness.
In Utah, Emery County Elections Director Bruce Funk witnessed
security testing by an outside firm on Diebold voting machines which
showed them to be a security risk. But his warnings fell on deaf ears.
Instead Diebold attorneys were flown to Emery County on the governor's
airplane to squelch the story. Funk was fired. In Florida, Leon County
Supervisor of Elections Ion Sancho discovered an alarming security flaw
in their Diebold system at the end of last year. Rather than fix the
flaw, Diebold refused to fulfill its contract. Both of the other two
touchscreen voting machine vendors, Sequoia and ES&S, now refuse to do
business with Sancho, who is required by HAVA to implement a touchscreen
system and will be sued by his own state if he doesn't. Diebold is said
to be pressuring for Sancho's ouster before it will resume servicing the
county.
Stories like these and much worse abound, and yet TV news outlets
have done less coverage of the new era of elections fraud than even 9/11
conspiracy theories. This is possibly the most important story of this
century, but nobody seems to give a damn. As long as this issue is