Glenn Greenwald and the Irrelevance of Electoral Politics by Suzie Dawson

in #life7 years ago (edited)

"The system is itself exacerbating the size of its own existential threat, every single day."

Hey all :)

Well... pretty amazed to see that my first little introductory post yesterday got such an incredible response. Thank you so much for all your outreach and well wishes, it really made my day.

As promised, I'm going to start posting some of my historical work here. To make it special for you, and unique to Steemit, I will include a short introduction to contextualise how each article came about. The below piece is from November 2014. It was written at a really precarious time for me. I was still in New Zealand, and being heavily targeted by the government for my journalism and activism. My crusade against the GCSB - New Zealand's NSA - had landed me in particularly hot water and the ruling party - led by an ex-Member of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (yes, a US bankster, whose nickname was 'The Smiling Assassin', ruled New Zealand) - had just won reelection.

They won despite Edward Snowden, Julian Assange, Glenn Greenwald, Laila Harre (my predecessor, the previous Leader of the Internet Party) and others having held a massive webcast event called 'The Moment Of Truth' to reveal mass surveillance being carried out against New Zealanders. The incredibly corrupt national media had concealed the true revelations of the event (that there were secret NSA facilities on New Zealand soil) and instead spun lies about Kim Dotcom as a diversion. In the wake of the election, I was being targeted more heavily than ever as the government felt untouchable due to having successfully clung to power. In the months prior to the Moment of Truth, I had begun looking really hard at some of the Snowden source documents for the first time. I discovered in them something that actually proved that the NSA didn't care about elections. The NSA knew full well that no matter which party was in power, the international military networks would be able to maintain their supremacy.

I sent that snippet of the Snowden document in question to Glenn Greenwald, who referenced it in one of his New Zealand interviews and in many of his international speeches thereafter. So I wrote the below article, referencing it, and supplying a lot of supporting information.

In light of everything we have all witnessed since the 2016 US general election, it seems really timely to remind people that below the surface of the Reality TV of electoral politics, the intelligence agencies continue to maintain their chokehold on power, and on society at large.

So without further adieu, here is the article I wrote back in 2014: Glenn Greenwald and the Irrelevance of Electoral Politics.

Be sure to let me know what you all think of it!

(For those who asked, yes in the coming days/weeks I will be posting more details about how I came to be seeking temporary asylum in Russia, as well as my Snowden files analysis work and other noteworthy stuff. I will also at some point begin posting videos to dTube once I work out how!)

Love,
Suzie

GLENN GREENWALD AND THE IRRELEVANCE OF ELECTORAL POLITICS

On 17 September 2014, three days before the New Zealand general election, Pulitzer-Prize winning journalist Glenn Greenwald gave an interview that, were it properly analyzed and circulated globally, should turn geopolitics on its head and destroy the critics who claimed he was taking a political “side” in his appearance at ‘The Moment of Truth‘.

Greenwald’s answers to leading Kiwi political commentator and new media aficionado Russell Brown get to the heart of the largest conceivable electoral issue: one that makes it clear our politicians are little more than reality TV stars in a projected fantasy; an illusion of democracy and governance that masks our true rulers.

The resulting conversation gives further context to the revelations of the warrant-less spying and mass-surveillance activities of the GCSB, New Zealand’s equivalent of the NSA:

Brown: …it’s not as if these activities have only taken place under governments of the right.

Greenwald: That’s a really important point. The GCSB is a long-standing agency, it’s a lot like the NSA. The NSA has grown more or less steadily regardless of whether there’s a Democratic or Republican administration, and of course currently in the United States there is a Democratic President who is perceived as more on the left than the right, and yet the NSA has grown dramatically over the last six years. These agencies really do exist outside the democratic process. They are in a sense their own autonomous beasts and election outcomes really don’t determine the extent to which they continue to grow, unfortunately. That’s part of the problem.

In pointing out that the surveillance/police state has continued to grow under the ruling parties of both political wings of most nations, Greenwald and Brown smash the left-right paradigm that divides us in one fell swoop, and soon move on to the crux of the mattter;

Brown: So what drives that growth?

Greenwald: I think that one of the things that has happened is that military structures in general have insulated themselves from the political process. And the kinds of claims that are made to justify their growth, whether putting people in fear of terrorism or other kinds of threats, are very powerful tools. No politician wants to be seen as making the country less safe, or to be vulnerable to claims that they stood in the way of the security of citizens. And these agencies are very good at manipulating public discourse to make sure that they’re continually fed greater authority and greater budgetary support – and just generally allowed to operate without much interference from political officials.

If the above were all there were to it, we could easily conclude that politicians are inept and more concerned by their own image than in performing effective oversight, and that this is evident in both the left and right political spheres.

Greenwald’s words, while enlightened and enlightening, are often written off as just being the opinion of one man.

But it doesn’t end there. Greenwald soon references disclosures made by Edward Snowden – specifically, documents containing the words of NSA officials themselves.

Greenwald: There is a document that we published maybe four or five months ago. It was an interview that was done internally at the NSA with the official in charge of foreign partnerships. And they asked him, why is it that for example in Europe, where you have wildly disparate swings in the election outcomes, from the right to the left, it doesn’t really affect the partnerships that we have with these countries’ intelligence agencies?

And he said, that’s because virtually nobody in the political process, anyone outside of the military structure, even knows these partnerships exist.

More conclusions: politicians aren’t just vain and inept, they’re in the dark and most are ostensibly happy to stay there.

Although Greenwald’s next reference is to New Zealand Green Party co-leader Russel Norman, a man who has repeatedly pressed the issue of illegal spying and mass surveillance and is the opposite of the caricature of a stereotypical obtuse, morally-disengaged parliamentary representative, it further corroborates our theories;

Greenwald: You had the Green Party leader here in New Zealand say in an interview that I watched that he was on the committee that oversees the GCSB and yet he learned far more about what the agency does by reading our stories than he did in briefings. They really have insulated themselves from the political process and have a lot of tools to ensure that they continue to grow and their power is never questioned.

Conclusion: if not already willfully blinded by their own greed, ego, ambition, our politicians are blinded by lack of access to information required in order to make conscientious governance decisions and effectively pursue the oversight duties to which they are supposedly tasked.

The net effect for the intelligence agencies is a general immunity from political processes and from oversight; and therefore an immunity from the entire principle of democracy that, especially in the so-called “First World”, we are raised to believe is not only our societal framework and environment but an inalienable right.

Ironically the document Greenwald referenced is also an interview – not by one man with a perceived agenda, but by the NSA themselves.

In it, the “Deputy Assistant for SIGINT Operations” is asked if “foreign intelligence relationships” are “usually insulated from short-term political ups and downs”.

The Deputy Assistant answers:

NSA: For a variety of reasons, our intelligence relationships are rarely disrupted by foreign political perturbations, international or domestic.

Perturbations is a hell of a word. But what on earth does it mean?

Perturbations

So it means aggravations. Disturbances. But it also means;

Perturbations2

Anxieties. Deviations. That lead to…

Perturbations3

…discoveries! Knowledge. Evolution.

And how does this occur? What is the impetus, what are the tell-tale signs?

Perturbations4

So it all comes down to physics and the laws of attraction. Physics is a hell of a thing to fear, or to try and avoid. Should we really want to? If new planets and solar systems can be discovered by perturbances, why are perturbances undesirable? Why are they something to be “insulated from”?

Sounds a lot like “business risk” language – for in commerce and industry, innovation can be perceived as a threat to profitability, for its ability to disrupt the status quo. This is what spawned ”Risk Management” and “Change Management” as managerial pathways.

Thus it seems our intelligence agencies, always pitched in public as critically-important mechanisms that exist to defend the rights of citizens and protect their countries, are in fact commercial enterprises motivated not by moral principles but by business “risk”.

There is undeniable environmental evidence all around us that the interests of traditional business and the interests of the planet and humanity as a whole, are not in alignment.

With chaos and war all around the globe, we are left to wonder how important money or the economy will be, if our lack of innovation means there are no environmental resources left to sustain us.

The entire concept of money being more important or valuable than humanity is oxymoronical – without humanity or the planet there can be no money, no economy.

Greenwald shedding light on the utter subversion of our electoral process and the irrelevance of our politicians, is the start of a conversation that desperately needs to be had.

For while promises of political change can be so alluring – as we saw with the rise of Obama and even with attempts by smaller, new paradigm efforts like The Internet Party – if the systems they aspire to and operate in prevent them from ever achieving the core objectives of democracy then they are rendered utterly irrelevant.

As I write this, Twitter has inserted an ad into my timeline from the Bank of New Zealand. “Success as an adult hinges on being good with money” it begins.

No.

Success as an adult hinges upon, when required, acting against your own immediate interests to ensure that your planet and future generations of your race – the human race – can continue and survive.

The ability to evolve, to learn, to grow, to live and to sustain life within our natural environment is more important than the ability to earn money within a manufactured construct.

Acting democratically is not about one vote every three or four years, or aspiring to enter a system which has been fundamentally corrupted.

It is about a true commitment to the consent of the governed; one which requires them to be informed and actively involved in achieving their own outcomes.

The greatest risk to electoral politics appears to be business and the greatest risk to business is not “perturbations” – it is itself.

For in its obsession to protect itself from perceived “risk”, the system is itself exacerbating the size of its own existential threat, every single day.

Written by Suzie Dawson

Twitter: @Suzi3D

Official Website: Suzi3d.com

Journalists who write truth pay a high price to do so. Suzie lives in exile in Russia with her children and due to her status as an asylum seeker is unable to seek conventional employment. If you respect and value this work, please consider helping to support Suzie’s efforts via credit card or Bitcoin donation at this link. Thank you!

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Thank you for posting this. I also follow you on Twitter now too. I look forward to reading more.

I know you are going to go big here on Steemit - that is the best first post I've ever seen - keep them coming!

Wow, huge praise, thank you so much!!

Not that you asked and going on your header image I'm sure you are on to all this, but to get more views on your next post I'd suggest making sure your top image is a really eye catching 16x9 picture, and your heading and first line are attention grabbing, just like a newspaper headline

Hey, I was totally lost as to what the best header dimensions were etc so thank you for that tip it's really helpful!

Highly rEsteemed!

People like Greenwald, Snowden and Assange should be following your lead and making this their new platform, an un-censorable "Twitter."
And also a way for "Exiles" to recover their wealth.

SteemON @suzi3d!

Imgur

Thank you for sharing!!

Why isn't Wikileaks on Steemit? Considering the Shenanigans of Twitter and Facebook... seems like a natural fit.

Welcome to a fellow kiwi, and thanks for sharing a great article.

If you put "kiwi" as one of your tags, other kiwis will more likely see it. And this info needs to be seen by more people! (You can edit and change tags, all except the first one. Maybe replace "blog" or "steemit" - some people get upset when articles not directly about steemit have that tag.)

With cheetah, if you add a link to Steemit on your original article, before posting on Steemit, cheetah will know that it's your work and you're not plagiarising and should be happy.

Hey and thank you for the tips!! Much appreciated.

Re adding the Steem link - do I add the link to my Steemit post? Or just to Steemit in general? And where do I add it? Just in the body section of the article, or in the comments?

It's a bit of a Catch 22 - you can't use the link to the post till the post is up, so I've used the link to my Steemit blog before. And I'd put it in the article itself, not the comments. It's the fact that you can edit the article itself that proves it's you.

Hey! I tried your trick with my latest post and it seems to have worked: https://steemit.com/kiwi/@suzi3d/fvey-vs-kim-dotcom

No robot visitor!

I agree wholeheartedly with @sift666. You're a rock star. Keep 'em coming.

Too kind!!! I'm just me. But very exciting to think that people enjoy my articles. Thank you!

Great suzie... miss you from aceh :D

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