Winning back our liberty: the ‘commercial’ threat

Commercial encroachment on the freedoms and liberties of Canadians is a very real and immediate threat to us all.  Yet, this is hardly ever seriously discussed among the ‘core’ of conservative and pro-freedom thinkers.

Why?

It seems that the ‘government’ types and ‘corporate’ types of freedom fighters (in our current, non-violent use of the expression) do not talk much – even regard each other with a significant degree of suspicion.  This could, perhaps be because they usually come from such very different backgrounds and usually do not share common educational base or many leisure-time interests.  Even their language is so different, they don’t ‘get’ each others’ message.

That is a pity, because each side is only getting a part of the picture….  and, what was that thing about ‘divide and conquer’?

John Perry Barlow, the co-founder of Electronic Frontier (and a former lyricist for ‘The Grateful Dead’) has very perceptively analyzed the corporate threats to freedom of speech in his 1994(!) article, The Economy of Ideas.

“Notions of property, value, ownership, and the nature of wealth itself are changing more fundamentally than at any time since the Sumerians first poked cuneiform into wet clay and called it stored grain. Only a very few people are aware of the enormity of this shift, and fewer of them are lawyers or public officials.”

Barlow explains how, traditionally, people protected their ‘ideas’ through physical control over the means of expressing these ideas:  a book is a tangible object which can physically be controlled, an inventor ‘owned’ the ‘idea’ in the form to holding the right to produce objects which made ‘use’ of this idea in the very particular product she/he invented, and so on.  The ‘idea’ itself, once expressed, was ‘in the public realm’ and everyone had access to ‘learn it’:  that generates progress.

This has all changed:  now, ideas can spread without a physical vessel one could control, it is now ‘the ideas themselves’ which are the valuable bit.  Barlow makes the case that corporate interests will, if allowed, protect their investment in their ‘ideas’ and that could involve significant curbing of our freedom of expression.

He wrote this in 1994 – and what he warned of is already coming true.

‘Protection of their intellectual properties’ has permitted, for example, the entertainment industry to successfully lobby governments to legalize really, really invasive ‘digital locks’ on their ‘products’.

Here is just one such example, where the corporate world is permitted to treat its customers as criminals by default, and curb their individual rights in the name of protecting their product:

Far from being simply a mechanism to prevent copying, these ‘digital locks’ often include ‘executable code’ which, without the computer owner’s knowledge or permission, install themselves very, very deeply into the computer (at times, removing the ‘lock’ may damage the computer on which it had been installed), search all the files on the hard drive and report all this information, via an internet connection the ‘lock’ itself initiates, back to the company that put the lock on.

This, ostensibly, is to make sure that there are no other ‘stolen files’ on the computer. In reality, it permits that corporation full access to every program, every bit of data, every file, every picture on your computer – and the laws that permit the corporations to install this on your computer without your knowledge do not, even a little bit, address what this corporation may or may not do with all the stuff it found on your computer. That is, frankly, quite frightening!

But that is just the tip of the iceberg – in just one industry!

Please, don’t call ‘Godwin’s law’ one me now, but, I will mention ‘THE OLYMPICS’!

Everyone just shrugged their shoulders and blamed ‘The Chinese Government’ for the zeal with which the names of any business which did not pay protection money was not ‘an Olympic Sponsor’ were covered up:  from sticky tape over faucet brand marks to sheets covering the name of a nearby hotel.  The media treated it as some sort of a ‘cute Chinese thing’. But, it was not a ‘Chinese thing’, nor was it ‘cute’!

It was an IOC (International Olympic Committee) thing.  The IOC claims that without this draconian censorship, it could not make money.

SO!?!?!?!?!?!

Why should anyone’s desire to make money outweigh people’s rights and freedoms?

But, that was China – it could never happen here!

Well, actually…

The Vancouver 2010 Olympics are an example in how corporate interests strip people of liberty!

The IOC has demanded that Vancouver create a ‘buffer zone’ around the Olympic Venues where all speech, signage, logos, symbols and any other means of communication be strictly controlled.  And, since it’s ‘The Olympics’, the various levels of government complied.

They passed a series of bylaws which not only made it illegal to display the brand-name of a ‘non-sponsor’, but also where any sentiment which was not ‘celebrating the Olympics’ was forbidden from being expressed!  Public and private property!

Oh, and driving on some public roads would also be illegal for mere ‘citizens’ (similar ones are planned for the 2012 Olympics:  that makes it a pattern, not a ‘cute Chinese thing’)….and if you happen to own an aerial sight-seeing company – well, you’ll be forbidden from earning a living, because it ‘needs to be controlled’ during the Olympics, too.

If, for example, you were to put up curtains which were made of a fabric that said ‘Olympics Suck’ in your window, you could have ‘officials’ enter your property and remove the offensive curtains, without a warrant and without your permission:  then, you could be charged a financial fine ($10,000 per day) or tossed in jail or both!

This is Canada?

Under pressure, the Vancouver city council has attempted to soften the harshest bits of these oppressive laws:  at least, the bits that look the most oppressive.  But, I don’t know how much of an improvement the latest version of is….  Now, they have pretty much handed the right to decide what forms of expression will and will not be censored to ‘The Olympic Sponsors’ – the corporations propping up this oppressive organization!

If this is not an ‘Olympic Sponsorship Scandal’, I don’t know what you could possibly call it.

Some people say that it’s not that big a deal – that it’s only a temporary limit…  They miss the point:  nobody must ever have the right to put a limit on the freedom of speech, the most basic of our rights without which none of the others are possible.  If someone can put a ‘temporary limit’ on it, then someone else can put another ‘temporary limit’, and another, and another…and before we realize it, the ‘limit’ will be a permanent one….

Yes, these are just two ‘highly visible’ instances….but, there are too many to document is a simple blog.

John Perry Barlow maintained that the biggest threat to freedom of speech in the future will be from ‘corporate censorship’.

I think he is right.

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‘Hoodwinked: The Spy Who Did Not Die’

I have never done a book review before.  I don’t know how to go about it, so, please, indulge me.

The book in question is Lowell Green‘s ‘Hoodwiked:  the spy who didn’t die’!

Where to start…

Being the opinionated person I am, the best starting point seems to be the conclusion:

The book is brilliant.  Everyone should go out and read it!  NOW!!!

(Is that too direct?)

Political junkies in particular (and, I suspect a few of my readers do have at least a tiny interest in politics) will have fun with the quirky interpretation Mr. Green throws on some of the background events in the shadows of perhaps the most important cultural event of the second half of the 20th century – the start of the Cold War and descent of the Iron Curtain!

It is well written.

It is well researched.

There are no internal inconsistencies (at least, not that I noticed on a first read – and, that one’s a biggie for me!).

The characters seem very human, very real.  They get inside your ‘monkeysphere’.

The writing style is particularly effective in making this historical novel ‘come alive’!

What am I talking about?

Imagine an established journalist and blogger (!) is contacted by a mysterious man, who has followed his the journalist’s work and now trusts him to tell ‘his story’ – his time is short and he does not wish to take it into the grave with him.  Then, ‘mystery man’ sends our narrator a set of recordings in which he recounts his life (yes, a narration within a narration – it is symmetry, as the story contains mystery within mystery…).

His story starts in pre-WWII Belarus (White Russia:  our protagonist is White Russian, just like Marko Ramius) and skillfully paints the atmosphere of fear and despair as Stalin’s ‘black crows’ terrorize the population.  I have grown up behind the Iron Curtain, but in a much, much ‘milder’ time.  Nothing as intense as what was happening in Belarus then.  But, during the description of the ‘dreaded knock’ on the door (the secret police never rang the bell – they knocked) – I was transported back into my early childhood, where I feared ‘the knock’.  I was too young to appreciate the full meaning of it, but, growing up a child of a dissident, I could taste the fear.  OK – you may think me a wuss, but… now, safe for decades, I still have an unreasonably high level of adrenalin pumped into my veins whenever a neighbour (thinking it less disruptive) knocks on my door instead of ringing the bell.  The description of this atmosphere is exactly right on – even if my experiences pale in comparison, the dread he describes is real.

Then, the Nazis invade.  Our ‘mystery man’ gets stuck in a nightmare.  His appearance (pale, blond and blue-eyed) and education mean the Nazis don’t target him for extermination and turn him into their slave, instead.  As he witnesses the genocide – with horrible, unbelievable cruelty, he grew numb.  But, he was the archetypal survivor – so he found a way to survive, and more.

Again, Mr. Green’s narrative captures the atmosphere so well, it is frightening.  Without going into long-winded personal tangents, let me just say that the narrative of this part of the story is so gripping, his protagonist so believable (without crossing over that ‘manipulative’ line), I am completely ‘sold’ on the veracity of the story!  Of course, the ‘journalist’s’ frequent footnotes (something he employs throughout the novel) which verify (or not) the facts, as presented in the narrative, is a mightily effective tool in making you identify with the ‘journalist’ narrator:  hearing the story, checking the facts, slowly but surely becoming convinced that the recordings are ‘the real thing’.

The move from Belarus to the Canadian Embassy is a little abrupt – actually, it is perhaps the ‘weakest’ point in the story.  But, the narrative style saves the day:  our ‘journalist’ may doubt the narration here, but it is within the realms of what could be explained by ‘mystery man’s’ human weakness and potential ‘fibbing’ to hide something personal…

Once in Ottawa, the ‘real action’ takes place:  espionage, Hoover, Mackenzie King, beautiful women, murder, flight… a ‘historical mystery’ interpreted in a new, radical way!

I dare not write more, for fear of giving it all away and spoiling the fun.  Let me just say that, up to and including the epilogue, I am left baffled as to (and eager to figure out) how much of this IS true, and how much is fiction.

I think it’s time for me to follow up on some of the footnotes – and other things!

What is ‘Fascism’?

Thank you for indulging me in a purely fun philosophical musing on the nature of thought and existence…which, if I am not mistaken, established a consensus that my own existence is defined by ‘being annoying’ rather than by ‘thinking’ … implied feedback loop, and all – and don’t go saying that it’s an infinite loop…   :0)      

So, please, let me move now to other topics:  less abstract, but hopefully no less thought provoking….  I promise to stay as annoying as ever! 

Children say the ‘darndest’ things…and ask the toughest questions.  Except that I didn’t realize this one would be a ‘tough question’.   

After all, ‘everyone’ knows what ‘fascism’ is, right?  Jackboots and swastikas and Italian right wing dictators – images of WWII appear before our eyes and we know EXACTLY what ‘fascism’ is.  Except…when I got asked this question, I found verbalizing the answer was nowhere as easy as my mental picture made me think it would be. 

Italian fascism (under Mussolini) was a ‘right wing’ dictatorship.  So were the ‘fascist’ dictatorships that plagued South America.  So, many people think that ‘fascism’ is a synonym for a right-wing dictatorship.  Except that it isn’t…  Yes, we also think of Hitler’s Nazi Germany as being a ‘right wing dictatorship’ – except that … it wasn’t.   

Not exactly, anyway.  The word ‘Nazism’ is a short form of ‘national socialism’ – and that is decidedly a ‘left wing’ terminology.  And even a cursory look at the policies instituted in Nazi Germany will demonstrate that Hitler’s dictatorship was ‘left wing’ in practice, as well as in name.  He nationalized many industries, and established more of a ‘nanny state’ than constitute most of today’s western socialist’s wet dreams.  He even said his two idols were Lenin and Stalin…  So, how could Nacism also be ‘fascist’? 

Some reading and thinking shows that the definitions and descriptions vary, based on the time and social climate and political views of the commentator…yet there are always a few features that are common across the definitions/descriptions.  Now, here are my own little observations: 

1.         In its deepest core, fascism is the ‘dictatorship of the majority/privileged minorities’.   

It does not matter if the government is left-wing, right-wing, or whatever.  It invariably ‘clips the wings’ of its citizens, and makes them feel special for it!  How?  By either turning ‘wing-clipping’ into a matter of ‘national identity and pride’, and justifying it in the most reasonably-sounding terms, at first… and the ‘moral majority’ is either ‘impassioned’ or ‘guilted’ into supporting them…and tramples down anyone who does not ‘run with the flock’….  After all, if your wings have been clipped, you can either ‘run with the flock’ or ‘be trampled’ – because soaring high in the skies is no longer an option and the very desire for it will be vilified. 

As such, fascism elevates the rights of groups over the rights of individuals who make up these groups.  This feature is the unmistakable mark of ‘fascism’. 

2.         Fascism often gains control gradually and insidiously. 

Remember, even Hitler was voted into power…  So how can fascism gain control ‘gradually and insidiously’?  By becoming indispensable to the individual, to force its citizens to ‘go along’ with things…  It does this by appealing to a call for unity (be it racial, social, religious or ‘under attack by an outside enemy’) and by forcing the citizens to ‘buy-in’ into government sponsored social programs to such an invasive degree, the citizens will no longer be able to exist independently (either because these services become government monopolies, or because the citizens no longer know HOW to take care of themselves).   

Anybody see the ghost of a ‘nanny state’? 

These are my ever-humble (or is that ‘never-humble’?) opinions….though this ‘sketch’ seems rather ‘rough’, in need of refinement. 

So, please, how would YOU define fascism?