DefDog: Modern Leadership as Self-Deception & Public Lies

Cultural Intelligence
DefDog
DefDog

Important enough to reproduce in full.

Politics is mostly marketing, and power is mostly pursued by those who would abuse it. After centuries of highly consistent behavior patterns among elected officials, there is little point in getting angry about politicians, lying. This is a basic matter of tradecraft and daily routine, part of the job description, no different than stage makeup or ghostwritten speeches.So it makes sense for New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg to claim that the NYPD had stopped 14 terrorist attacks — it’s just plain good copy, a reliable, strong finisher for an otherwise pointless press conference. It’s also not true. The specifics are mundane and matter very little, because the most remarkable part of the story was Bloomberg’s response when some reporters later questioned the veracity of his sales pitch. Faced with a fact-by-fact rundown, and the unspoken implication that he had been caught lying, he was not concerned in the least.

Bloomberg put it simply: “We’ll never know.”

That’s not a very satisfying answer, but it is a strikingly pure statement of where the American social contract is at in 2012. How can you evaluate the track record of a global ecosystem that consumes billions of dollars in almost total secrecy? Where are the solid data points in a history that’s mostly planted evidence, product placements and calculated lies?

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Paul Craig Roberts: The Fiscal Cliff as a Diversion

Commerce, Commercial Intelligence, Corruption, Government, Law Enforcement
Paul Craig Roberts
Paul Craig Roberts

The Fiscal Cliff Is A Diversion: The Derivatives Tsunami and the Dollar Bubble

The “fiscal cliff” is another hoax designed to shift the attention of policymakers, the media, and the attentive public, if any, from huge problems to small ones. The fiscal cliff is automatic spending cuts and tax increases in order to reduce the deficit by an insignificant amount over ten years if Congress takes no action…

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Phi Beta Iota:  There is no fiscal cliff…..only an integrity chasm.

Pierre Cloutier: Rodriguez Tremblay on Five Pillars of US Inequality

03 Economy, 11 Society, Civil Society, Commerce, Commercial Intelligence, Corruption, Government
Pierre Cloutier
Pierre Cloutier

 The Five Pillars of the Growing Inequality in the U.S.

by Rodrigue Tremblay

1- First. The ideology of an open world market and the free movement of capital and companies

2- Second. A broken immigration policy

3- Third. A tax code skewed in favor of the very rich

4- Fourth. The Housing crisis, the Financial crisis and the Fed's policies to shore up large banks

5- Fifth. The waging of foreign wars financed with debt

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Owl: 70 Things That Will Go Wrong in a Disaster

Cultural Intelligence, IO Impotency, Law Enforcement
Who?  Who?
Who? Who?

70 Things That Can and Will Go Wrong in a Disaster

The first 25:

1. In an earthquake, there may be violent ground shaking; it will seem to last much longer than it actually does.

2. Fires will occur, caused by electrical shorts, natural gas, fireplaces, stoves, etc.

3. Fires in collapsed buildings will be very difficult to control.

4. The extent of the disaster will be difficult to assess, though this will be necessary to assure proper commitment of resources.

5. Emergency equipment and field units will commit without being dispatched. There will be an air of urgency and more requests for aid than units available to send.

6. Communications will be inadequate; holes will appear in the system and air traffic will be incredibly heavy.

7. Trained personnel will become supervisors because they will be too valuable to perform hands-on tasks.

8. Responding mutual aid units will become lost; they will require maps and guides.

9. Water will be contaminated and unsafe for drinking. Tankers will be needed for fire fighting and for carrying drinking water.

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Anthony Judge: Beware of Legality, Accountability, Marketability, Security! Be where the Four Hoarsemen of the Apocalypse are not?

Cultural Intelligence, Ethics
Anthony Judge
Anthony Judge

Beware of Legality, Accountability, Marketability, Security!

Be where the Four Hoarsemen of the Apocalypse are not?

Introduction
Being wary of “legality”
Being wary of “accountability”
Being wary of “marketability”
Being wary of “security”
Systemic implications of “horsemen” and “hoarsemen” and correspondences between them
Being wary of the Four Hoarsemen acting together
Being where and how “to be”?
Conclusion
References

Phi Beta Iota:  This is one of Anthony Judge's shorter and more poignant essays.  It is reproduced in full below the line, along with his links, and our on duty editor has added links to the Amazon pages of all the books that he cites.  In this essay, complicity is the opposite of integrity, the single word (integrity) most embedded across Phi Beta Iota the Public Intelligence Blog.  To read the essay at its source, click on the title above.

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Richard Falk: The Future of International Law and Human Rights

Cultural Intelligence, Ethics
Richard Falk
Richard Falk

The Future of International Law and Human Rights

An Interview With Richard Falk

by CIHAN AKSAN and JON BAILES

Richard A. Falk is professor emeritus of international law at Princeton University and an appointee to two United Nations positions on the Palestinian territories. He has authored, edited or contributed to 40 books, including The Great Terror War; The Costs of War: International Law, the UN, and World Order after Iraq; Achieving Human Rights; and International Law and the Third World: Reshaping Justice.

Read questions and answers.

Cihan Aksan and Jon Bailes are the editors of www.stateofnature.org. The following is a chapter from their new book of interviews, Weapon of the Strong: Conversations on US State Terrorism (Pluto Press, 2012).

Weapon of the Strong analyses the forms of US state terrorism through exclusive, never before published interviews with leading commentators and theorists. The interviews explore the different aspects of state terrorism: its functions, institutional supports and the legal and moral arguments surrounding it, and consider specific case studies in Europe, Latin America and the Middle East.”

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