Title: The Judge Explains Why We Have A 1ST Amendment To Newt Gingrich Source:
Daily Paul URL Source:http://www.dailypaul.com/node/151310 Published:Dec 5, 2010 Author:. Post Date:2010-12-05 23:26:22 by farmfriend Keywords:None Views:316 Comments:26
He is a tri-lateral commission member. But, I want to point out something: Gingrich believes the NSA (according to your video) wants Wikileaks website eliminated.
It is impossible. And more than that, he is another motherfucker against the US Constitution.
I hear Gingrich plans to run for POTUS. All of these GOP charade performers, Palin, Huckabee and Romney suck the same ol' government operation.... where do any of these same so-called political leaders suggest or identify the US Constitution other than stripping it down?
As for Manning, he is toast and he violated his own oath. But as for Assange, I toast him in the spirit of information dissemination.
Newt wrote the Introduction to Alvin Tohfler's "Third Wave" futurist transformation tome. Newt's a Fabian Socialist.
Third Wave is the post-industrial society. Toffler would also add that since the late 1950s most countries are moving away from a Second Wave Society into what he would call a Third Wave Society. He coined lots of words to describe it and mentions names invented by him (super-industrial society) and other people (like the Information Age, Space Age, Electronic Era, Global Village, technetronic age, scientific-technological revolution), which to various degrees predicted demassification, diversity, knowledge-based production, and the acceleration of change (one of Toffler's key maxims is "change is non- linear and can go backwards, forwards and sideways"). In this post-industrial society, there is a lot of diversity in lifestyles ("subcultures"). Adhocracies (fluid organizations) adapt quickly to changes. Information can substitute most of the material resources (see ersatz) and becomes the main material for workers (cognitarians instead of proletarians), who are loosely affiliated. Mass customization offers the possibility of cheap, personalized, production catering to small niches (see just-in-time production).
The gap between producer and consumer is bridged by technology using a so called configuration system. "Prosumers" can fill their own needs (see open source, assembly kit, freelance work). This was the notion that new technologies are enabling the radical fusion of the producer and consumer into the prosumer. In some cases prosuming entails a "third job" where the corporation "outsources" its labor not to other countries, but to the unpaid consumer, such as when we do our own banking through an ATM instead of a teller that the bank must employ, or trace our own postal packages on the internet instead of relying on a paid clerk.
Aging societies will be using new (medical) technologies from self-diagnosis to instant toilet urinalysis to self-administered therapies delivered by nanotechnology to do for themselves what doctors used to do. This will change the way the whole health industry works.[citation needed]
Since the 1960s, people have been trying to make sense out of the impact of new technologies and social change. Toffler's writings have been influential beyond the confines of scientific, economic and public policy discussions. Techno music pioneer Juan Atkins cites Toffler's phrase "techno rebels" in The Third Wave as inspiring him to use the word "techno" to describe the musical style he helped to create.[citation needed]
Toffler's works and ideas have been subject to various criticisms, usually with the same argumentation used against futurology: that foreseeing the future is nigh impossible. In the 1990s, his ideas were publicly lauded by Newt Gingrich.