Source: Prison Planet
Paul Joseph Watson
It’s the end of the Internet as we know it
Lieberman characterized fears that the US government would use such powers to censor political content as “total misinformation,” yet goes on to admit that the purpose behind the agenda is to mimic China’s ability to “disconnect parts of its Internet in case of war,” adding, “we need that here too”.
Paul Joseph Watson
It’s the end of the Internet as we know it
The secret behind SOPA, the so-called anti-piracy bill
which is today the target of an unprecedented backlash with Wikileaks
and other major websites ‘going dark’ to protest the legislation, has
nothing to do with piracy or copyright theft – it’s about the formal
effort to mimic Communist China’s system of Internet censorship.
But don’t take our word for it, listen to what Joe
Lieberman, co-sponsor of PIPA, SOPA’s sister version in the Senate, said
about the purpose behind the US government’s efforts to control the
Internet under the guise of cybersecurity.
Lieberman characterized fears that the US government would use such powers to censor political content as “total misinformation,” yet goes on to admit that the purpose behind the agenda is to mimic China’s ability to “disconnect parts of its Internet in case of war,” adding, “we need that here too”.
Of course, Communist China’s “war” is not against foreign terrorists or hackers, it’s targeted against people who dare to use the Internet to express dissent
against government atrocities or corruption. China’s system of Internet
policing is about crushing freedom of speech and has nothing to do with
legitimate security concerns as Lieberman well knows.
Having largely failed in his bid to use fears over cyberwarfare, bearing in mind it was the United States and Israel who launched the Stuxnet attack,
to achieve the ultimate goal of Internet control, Lieberman has
returned with the same agenda only under a different guise – the Protect
Intellectual Property Act – of which he is the co-sponsor.
Whether the justification is cybersecurity or
anti-piracy, the end game remains the ability to seize control over the
Internet and shut down websites on a whim.
Indeed, this is merely the act of legally codifying what
is already taking place. Lieberman himself was instrumental in having
the whistleblower website Wikileaks shut down when Amazon axed Wikileaks from its servers after being pressured to do so by Lieberman’s Senate Homeland Security Committee.
In addition, the Department of Homeland Security has already seized dozens of websites merely for linking to copyrighted material,
despite the fact that such material isn’t even hosted on the website
itself, a process the Electronic Frontier Foundation has criticized as,
“Blunt instruments that cause unacceptable collateral damage to free
speech rights.”
The DHS has also seized websites for no ostensible reason, including a popular music blog that was shut down for over a year on charges the DHS now admits were completely false.
While the likes of Wikipedia and Google have commendably
protested against SOPA and PIPA, the big ISPs and domain name companies
are firmly behind it. Indeed, the global authority over all .com domain
names, VeriSign, recently demanded the power to terminate websites deemed “abusive” when ordered to by government without a court order or any kind of oversight whatsoever.
Although massive protests by the likes of Wikipedia and Google have delayed a vote on SOPA, the bill is set to return to the House floor next month.
The ultimate end game of SOPA is not merely about
handing the federal government the power to shut down websites. Once
such powers are granted, the only way to police such a system would be
to require all website owners, and eventually anyone who posts any form
of content on the Internet, to require permission from the state to do
so. This will take the form of an individual Internet ID for every user –
again part of Lieberman’s favored Chinese-style system – which can be granted or revoked at the discretion of the authorities.
The so-called “National Strategy for Trusted Identities in Cyberspace,”
created by NIST under the auspices of the U.S. Commerce Department,
purports to offer an “identity ecosystem” under which Americans will be
able to protect their information not with passwords but with a “single
credential” stored on a smart card, a cell phone, a keychain fob or some
other kind of gadget. This will then be used to access a myriad of
data, including tax returns, health information, bank accounts and more,
amounting to a passport for your entire life.
Under such a system, the state will be able to create a far friendlier environment for controlling the flow of information, Bill Clinton’s proposed ‘Internet Ministry of Truth’ will flourish, and Hillary Clinton’s concerns about “losing the infowar” will be addressed.
This is the true secret behind SOPA, it’s another step
towards abolishing anonymity and creating an infrastructure under which,
just as in the physical domain, every act of commerce, communication or
exercise of freedoms will first have to be approved by an authority
figure before it is allowed to take place.
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Paul Joseph Watson is the editor and writer for Prison Planet.com.
He is the author of Order Out Of Chaos. Watson is also a regular
fill-in host for The Alex Jones Show and Infowars Nightly News.