Robert Steele: Honoring Martin Luther King RECAP

Civil Society, Corruption, Counter-Oppression/Counter-Dictatorship Practices, Cultural Intelligence, Ethics, Government, Law Enforcement, Officers Call, Peace Intelligence, Policies, Threats

This web site honors Dr. Martin Luther King by pointing to specific links beginning with the first in isolation: he was assassinated by his own government. Truth & Reconciliation are the order of the day, but the reconciliation cannot begin until the truth is known to the full public.

Review: An Act of State–The Execution of Martin Luther King, New and Updated Edition

Review: Al On America

Review: Improper behavior–when misconduct is good for society

Review: Nobodies–Modern American Slave Labor and the Dark Side of the New Global Economy

Review: Public Philosophy–Essays on Morality in Politics

Review: Teaching to Transgress–Education as the Practice of Freedom

Review: The Power of the Powerless–Citizens Against the State in Central-Eastern Europe

Robert Steele: Citizen in Search of Integrity (Full Text Online for Google Translate)

See Also:

Continue reading “Robert Steele: Honoring Martin Luther King RECAP”

Jim Rogers: The Economy Is Being Juiced Up Before the Election, Watch Out for 2013

03 Economy, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government

 

Jim Rogers

Jim Rogers: The Economy Is Being Juiced Up Before the Election, Watch Out for 2013

“2013 and 2014 are what I am most worried about because this year everybody is trying to just get through the next election…Everybody is going to do their best to get us through the election. Watch out for 2013, Rogers told ET Now.

Read full article.

Phi Beta Iota:  Do not fail to explore his three year trip around the world in a four-wheel drive.   Map, videos, etcetera.

Patrick Meier: Crisis Mapping Shows Henry Kissinger Wrong in Cambodia, Spatio-Historical Analysis Illuminated

Advanced Cyber/IO, Civil Society, Collective Intelligence, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government, Media
Patrick Meier

How Crisis Mapping Proved Henry Kissinger Wrong in Cambodia

Crisis Mapping can reveal insights on current crises as well as crises from decades ago. Take Dr. Jen Ziemke‘s dissertation research on crisis mapping the Angolan civil war, which revealed and explained patterns of violence against civilians. My colleague Dr. Taylor Owen recently shared with me his fascinating research, which comprises a spatio-historical analysis of the US bombardment of Cambodia. Like Jen’s research, Taylor’s clearly shows how crisis mapping can shed new light on important historical events.

. . . . . . .

In particular, Owen’s analysis shows that:

Click on Image to Enlarge

“… the total tonnage dropped on Cambodia was five times greater than previously known; the bombing inside Cambodia began nearly 4 years prior to the supposed start of the Menu Campaign, under the Johnson Administration; that, in contradiction to Henry Kissinger’s claims, and over the warning of the Joints Chiefs of Staff, Base Areas 704, 354 and 707 were all heavily bombed; the bombing intensity increased throughout the summer of 1973, after Congress barred any such increase; and, that despite claims by both Kissinger and Nixon to the contrary, there was substantial bombing within 1km of inhabited villages.”

Phi Beta Iota:  This is very exciting stuff.  The public does not read nor think well, in large part because the rote “teaching” was designed by Carnegie and Rockfeller to create obedient factory workers able to follow instructions.  Visualization–including spatio-historical analysis but also including advanced visualization as well as the simple visualization for flag officers (red, yellow, green), could be the next revolution in education.  At a minimum it will demonstrate that experts know nothing and elites cannot be trusted.

Bert Laden – The Story Continues

07 Other Atrocities, 08 Wild Cards, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Director of National Intelligence et al (IC), DoD, Government, IO Deeds of War, Military, Officers Call
Bert Laden

Another SEAL Book, Another Version, Colonel Mustard With A Mallot in the Music Room?

Gordon Duff, Senior Editor

Veterans Today, 12 January 2012

The Murdoch papers are carrying a new version of the bin Laden saga.  This one contains much of the fiction of the last 25, leaving out much as well.  Nothing is new, just a set of lies with some reason for them to be retold.  We know what that reason is, nobody takes a word of it seriously anymore, not the first stories, not the sea burial, not the execution of the world’s most valuable intelligence asset.

Read full article.

Continue reading “Bert Laden – The Story Continues”

Marcus Aurelius: Defense “Strategy” & “Budget” — Ignorant Duplicitous Theater + META-RECAP

Budgets & Funding, Commercial Intelligence, Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government, Military
Marcus Aurelius

Various media pieces on defense.

Gutting defense
Obama to shrink armed forces
The President’s Risky Defense Strategy
President Obama’s defense strategy rests on shaky assumptions
Obama military strategy: Is it bipartisan enough?
U.S. right to focus on Asia
The battle for the Pacific will reshape the world
Military fighting force strategy set, but what will it mean?

Big Bat USA:  4% of the force (the infantry) takes 80% of the casualties and receives 1% of the budget.  This FACT alone gives the lie to all of the above pontifications.  Both the US Government and the US media are inept and misrepresenting reality to the American people.  99% of the Pentagon budget is fraud, waste, and abuse–the policy is based on ideology rather than reality; acquisition is broken–we simply transfer money from the taxpayer to the corporations without thinking about it; and operations are mostly theater.  We do not have a strategy–we have a collection of criminally insane people posturing for the public and getting away with it.  For those who lived through the same thing in the 1970′s, remember the movie King of Hearts?  There are only two candidates that are both informed and honest on this matter:  Ron Paul and Robert Steele.

See Also:

Chuck Spinney: Bin Laden, Perpetual War, Total Cost + Perpetual War RECAP
Chuck Spinney: Israel To Bomb Iran Soon + RECAP
DefDog: Defense Contractors Start the Big Lie Again–Jobs PLUS Winslow Wheeler Defense Budget Facts RECAP
DefDog: Over-Stating China – Close Down PACOM + RECAP
Defense Science Board to DoD: Get Brain + RECAP
Dr. Russell Ackoff on IC and DoD + Design RECAP
G.I. Wilson: Killer Drones, Moral Disengagement, + War Crimes RECAP
Marcus Aurelius: SecDef to McCain on Sequester + RECAP on DoD Fraud, Waste, & Abuse
Marcus Aurelius: US at Permanent “War” + War RECAP
Reference: American Soft Power is Vanishing + RECAP
Reference: Cutting the Defense Budget + RECAP
Reference: Invisible Empire New World Order DVD + RECAP
Reference: On WikiLeaks and Government Secrecy + RECAP on Secrecy as Fraud, Waste, & Abuse
Robert Steele: Cutting the US Military Budget – and Firing the Civilian and Uniformed “Leaders” Betraying the Public Trust + RECAP
Robert Steele: Global Trends 2030 – Gaps + RECAP
Search: cost of corruption + Corruption RECAP
USA National Military Strategy 2011 + RECAP

Winslow Wheeler: National Security Misrepresentation

Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government, IO Impotency, Non-Governmental

It's Not Just the Politicians Who Have Cheapened the Defense Debate

Winslow Wheeler

I recall from early in my career when Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-AZ) took to the floor of the Senate to attack the allegedly scurrilous report that the B-1 bomber would cost as much as $60 million a copy: in truth, it turned out to cost $200 million per copy.  I also remember when Sen. Dale Bumpers (D-AR) opposed keeping battleships in the Navy because of their “teak deck:”  In peacetime, the Iowa class battleships did lay wood on top of their 7.5 inch thick steel decks.  No one needs to be reminded that Congressman Buck McKeon (R-CA) and Leon Panetta (formerly D-CA) have termed any further cuts in the defense budget to be “catastrophic:” If returning to 2007 levels of defense spending is so terrible, why did Donald Rumsfeld and Robert Gates not tell us back then?
Such outrageous statements are so ignorant that you have to assume the politicians knew they were full of baloney when they made them.  They probably assumed no one would check up on them or that such bunkum “will go around the world while the truth is still pulling its boots on.”  (Thank you, Mark Twain.)
Think tanks have been a part of the Washington scene since at least the end of World War II.  People expect them to have competent research and logical analysis behind their comments.  That can be a perilous assumption.  A recent example occurred just after Christmas when the Director of the Heritage Foundation's Center for Foreign Policy Studies invoked the name of a chief architect of the F-15 and the F-16 (and more) in a commentary to promote the F-22 and the F-35.  The willfulness of the ignorance is something that senators Goldwater and Bumpers and today's Pentagon budget boosters would recognize.
There are other characteristics of the debate on the F-22 and the F-35 that need to be recognized as badly misinformed, especially that either one is an asset to our air forces.
Four of us worked with that genius who, among many other things, had a fundamental role in two of the most successful fighter designs in recent aviation history, Col. John Boyd.  We took profound offense at the ignorant and misleading assertion that he had anything but derision for the F-22 and the thinking behind the F-35.  In response, we wrote a commentary–not just on the aircraft but also on the depths to which the Washington debate on these subjects has sunk.
Find our comments at any of the websites that follow, and below:
Time magazine's Battleland blog at

Descent into Ignominy

The Heritage Foundation Then and Now

By Thomas Christie, Pierre Sprey, Chuck Spinney & Winslow Wheeler

Almost 30 years ago, in 1983, The Heritage Foundation stepped forward as a thoughtful, independent thinking participant in the then-raging debate over Ronald Reagan's defense budget increases. In one of its major policy publications, Heritage published an insightful analysis with an unambiguous conclusion: “The increased spending secured by President Reagan should afford significant improvements in force size. It does not.” (See Agenda '83: A Mandate for Leadership Report, Richard N. Holwill, ed., The Heritage Foundation, 1983; see chapter 4, p. 69 of “Defense” by George W.S. Kuhn.) The analysis was crammed with data and straightforward logic as it made the case for real reform in America's overpriced, underperforming defense budget.

Since then, Heritage has come a long way in defense policy analysis, all of it downward.

Read full indictment.

Phi Beta Iota:  The corrupt government is surrounded by thousands–perhaps tens of thousands–of corrupt second-string piglets.  While most people are good people trapped in a bad system, the net result is that everyone lies and the public trust is betrayed.  The truth at any cost lowers all others costs.  2012 is the year in which we battle for the soul of the Republic.

Marcus Aurelius: Paul Pillar on Intelligence & Policy

Corruption, Cultural Intelligence, Government, IO Deeds of War, Peace Intelligence
Marcus Aurelius

Think Again: Intelligence

I served in the CIA for 28 years and I can tell you: America's screw-ups come from bad leaders, not lousy spies.

Paul Pillar

Foreign Policy, Jan/Feb 2012

“Presidents Make Decisions Based on Intelligence.”

Not the big ones. From George W. Bush trumpeting WMD reports about Iraq to this year's Republican presidential candidates vowing to set policy in Afghanistan based on the dictates of the intelligence community, Americans often get the sense that their leaders' hands are guided abroad by their all-knowing spying apparatus. After all, the United States spends about $80 billion on intelligence each year, which provides a flood of important guidance every week on matters ranging from hunting terrorists to countering China's growing military capabilities. This analysis informs policymakers' day-to-day decision-making and sometimes gets them to look more closely at problems, such as the rising threat from al Qaeda in the late 1990s, than they otherwise would.

On major foreign-policy decisions, however, whether going to war or broadly rethinking U.S. strategy in the Arab world (as President Barack Obama is likely doing now), intelligence is not the decisive factor. The influences that really matter are the ones that leaders bring with them into office: their own strategic sense, the lessons they have drawn from history or personal experience, the imperatives of domestic politics, and their own neuroses. A memo or briefing emanating from some unfamiliar corner of the bureaucracy hardly stands a chance.

Read rest of article.

Phi Beta Iota:  Brother Pillar avoids the obvious – the excessive influence of the banks, military-industrial complex, and the Zionists, among others.  CORRUPTION is our greatest enemy.  Both parties are corrupt, and a third party (or Americans Elect) is not the answer–we need to restore the INTEGRITY of the entire process from election through governance through accountability.

See Also:

Review: Intelligence and U.S. Foreign Policy – Iraq, 9/11, and Misguided Reform

2010: Human Intelligence (HUMINT) Trilogy Updated

Journal: Politics & Intelligence–Partners Only When Integrity is Central to Both

Journal: Reflections on Integrity UPDATED + Integrity RECAP

noble gold