Source: Boiling Frogs Post
James Corbett
TRANSCRIPT AND SOURCES:
James Corbett
TRANSCRIPT AND SOURCES:
With the National Defense Authorization Act, the Enemy Expatriation
Act, and other startling measures by the US government to crack down on
their own population making headlines around the world at the moment,
the idea of an American police state is becoming all too familiar a
tale. Less examined, however, are the international aspects of this
encroaching police state, a high-tech 21st century control grid which
adheres to no national boundaries and whose influence is increasingly being felt in countries throughout the so-called “free world.”
Just as the tracking, surveillance, pain-compliance and database
technology behind this control grid is manufactured and marketed by
multinational corporations who profess no loyalty to any nation state,
so too is the police state itself nothing more than an idea for the
consolidation and leveraging of power in the hands of a select few at
the apex of business, government and finance. This idea in turn can be
marketed, adapted and adopted from nation to nation, and that is the
exact process that has been developing for decades now.
Earlier this week I had the chance to talk to Andrew Gavin Marshall,
a writer and researcher who has been examining the institutional
framework for this consolidation of power, about the international
nature of the police state idea, and how it has spread around the globe.
The international nature of the police state is manifested time and
again by the implementation of virtually identical technologies,
programs or procedures in numerous countries, always presented as if it
were a spontaneous development, but often overtly modeled on the example
set by other countries or even expressly created through international
treaties and agreements.
One example of such coordination is the roll-out of increasingly
sophisticated surveillance technology by city governments and police
departments around the world for use in monitoring the public.
Spearheaded by IT companies like IBM, these advanced systems are marketed as “smart public safety”
initiatives and combine traditional surveillance technologies like CCTV
cameras with predictive analytics that claim to be able to detect
likely criminal actions before they even occur. In 2007, a PC World article
noted the deployment of IBM’s S3 surveillance system in Beijing ahead
of the 2008 Olympics even as it was being simultaneously installed into
Chicago’s policing infrastructure.
In 2003, a pilot policing project in the UK known as “Talking CCTV” gained international attention for its use of childrens’ voices to scold offenders caught littering or committing other violations. Earlier this year, talking lampposts with pre-installed CCTV cameras and microphones were introduced in the US.
Another aspect of this international policing agenda is seen in the
collection of biometric details, which are increasingly being used,
stored and even shared in international agreements that are seldom
reported on in the press.
In 2004, the US began the VISIT
program to digitally fingerprint and photograph international travelers
arriving at major airports. Spurred by industry lobby groups like the
International Air Transport Agency, countries around the world have been
urged to adopt similar measures. Japan implemented the same program of photographs and fingerprints at its own airports in 2007. In the UK, the BAA has tried on numerous occasions to implement fingerprint scanning of all passengers departing Heathrow, but the plans were struck down by the courts in March of 2008 for violating data protection laws.
Meanwhile, a 2009 conference
involving Canada, Australia, the US, the UK and New Zealand agreed that
the immigration and border services of all five countries would begin
sharing their fingerprint databases amongst each other. The European
Union already has a coordinated fingerprint database, called Eurodac,
which the UK joined last year.
One of the most startling examples of international coordination on
these issues relates to the worldwide implementation of biometric ID
cards and passports. A January, 2010 article on the subject entitled “ID Cards – intergovernmental cooperation in worldwide implementation”
exposed how the simultaneous, coordinated worldwide roll-out of
biometric ID was being harmonized behind the scenes by international
agreement and standardized according to guidelines laid out by the
International Civil Aviation Organization.
The standard, known as ICAO 9303,
defines the file formats and communication calls to be used in
photographs, fingerprints and iris scans contained on computer chips
embedded directly into the ID itself.
In 2010, Nathan Allonby, the author and researcher behind that article, appeared on The Corbett Report to talk about ICAO 9303 and its implications.
As Marshall, Allonby, and numerous other researchers note, the
internationalization of the police state is predicated on an
increasingly sophisticated technological control grid, a grid which
itself is predicated on international corporations acting in concert
through international agreements via international institutions like the
UN to implement a homogenous and interconnected system for tracking,
tracing and controlling the citizenry of the world regardless of
nationality.
While the picture painted by this information is necessarily bleak,
perhaps there is something to be learned from the way in which those
with a vested interest in consolidating such authority in the hands of
the few have worked together to establish this system.
Because, precisely as the international police state has come
together as the result of coordinated, concerted action on the part of
financiers, government officials, well-connected bureaucrats and
business leaders, so too can we only hope to defeat this system and
re-assert the principles of freedom and liberty by discarding petty
differences in the creation of a coordinated, concerted movement of free
people who refuse to give in to authoritarian control.