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Resistance See other Resistance Articles Title: It’s Payback Time! The cyberwar begins The headlines are ablaze with news of the war no, not that war, or that war, or even this war Im talking about the cyberwar being waged against the enemies of WikiLeaks, not only the American and Swedish governments, but also the corporate collaborators who have done their best to drive WikiLeaks into the ground. A group of computer-savvy warriors for truth and justice, who call themselves Anonymous, have brought down the internet operations of MasterCard, , and FinancePost (the Swiss that abruptly terminated WikiLeaks account), as well the site of the Swedish prosecutors office and that of the odious feminist lawyer, Claes Borgstrom, who is fronting for the CIAs sex-smear-frame-up of Julian Assange. This cyberwar, which was started by the US, has two sides going at it, but youd never know that from reading the news accounts in the legacy media. Take this typical story from USA Today, headlined Pro-WikiLeaks cyberattacks show growing threat, which avers: The attacks Wednesday were part of a recent series by supporters and enemies of WikiLeaks, said Gunter Ollmann of Internet security firm Damballa. Its like a Wild West shootout
and weve had these different organizations being caught in the crossfire, he said. Last week, WikiLeaks servers were knocked offline by people angry over its release of diplomatic and military information that critics said could embarrass the government and even risk lives, he said. Who are these people who are angry at WikiLeaks random patriots? Sean Hannity? Sarah Palin? Joe Lieberman? Of course not: its these guys, i.e. employees of the US government whose online aggression is illegal and unethical. WikiLeaks, youll recall, was brought down by a series of powerful denial-of-service (DOS) attacks undoubtedly launched by US government thugs. WikiLeaks supporters are now firing back, and for daring to defend themselves are deemed a growing threat by such arbiters of online etiquette and Just War Theory as the editors of USA Today. A similar case of self-imposed blindness permeates the reporting of the Washington Post, which described the attacks on MasterCard, Visa, et al, as follows: The online attacks are part of a wave of support for WikiLeaks that is sweeping the Internet. Twitter was choked with messages of solidarity for the group, while the sites Facebook page hit 1 million fans. Late Wednesday, Operation Payback itself appeared to run into problems, as many of its sites went down. It was unclear who was behind the counterattack. Its unclear only to those whose vision is blurred by State-worship. For the rest of us, its all too clear who was and is responsible for the online thuggery directed at WikiLeaks and its supporters. The same people who believe they have a God-given right to carpet-bomb civilians and murder Naturally, our online spooks have a cover story, albeit not a very convincing one, dutifully trotted out by the Los Angeles Times: A group called Anonymous temporarily disables the websites of Visa and MasterCard after they said they would no longer handle donations to WikiLeaks. A rival patriotic hacker, the Jester, fights back.
Meanwhile the Jester has claimed responsibility for taking down WikiLeaks website several times since it posted its first batch of confidential State Department cables on Nov. 29. The Jester, who describes himself as a patriotic hacker with a military background, claims other like-minded hackers have approached him to help. Were supposed to believe that a single private individual, who claims to be ex-military, and who tweets TANGO DOWN! every time he hits his target, is responsible for bringing down WikiLeaks. Those who fall for this story are like those children who really believe you cant see them if they hide their face behind their fingers. Well, peek-a-boo, Mr. Government Employee I see you! And so does anybody else with an ounce of sense. Like all government employees, however, these Pentagon hackers are engaged in work that is neither productive nor useful even to themselves and their masters, because WikiLeaks is stronger now than it has ever been if strength on the internet is measured in terms of accessibility. In response to what is clearly a government-mandated campaign to destroy them, their supporters have harnessed the technology to evade and indeed make a complete mockery of the enemy. As this rather technical but fascinating piece concludes: If suppressed content automatically goes viral, the Internets construction basically guarantees that that content will have a home for the rest of time. If you attack DNS support, people will tweet raw IP addresses. If you take down the BGP routes to web content, people will put up more mirrors, or switch to overlay networks to distribute the data. You cant burn down the Library of Alexandria any more it will respawn in someones basement in Stockholm, or Denver, or Beijing. Which is precisely why the US government fears and loathes not only WikiLeaks, but the Internet itself, and is now making an effort futile, as explained above to control it. Its a realm entirely beyond Washingtons power to regulate and suppress and we cant have that! This is why theyre trying to make an example of WikiLeaks, and Assange, and thats why they will ultimately fail. Furthermore, their efforts to do so will boomerang and cause their ultimate downfall, as Assange explains in his brilliant essay, "State and Terrorist Conspiracies." [.pdf] Assange likens authoritarian and neocorporatist regimes to conspiracies, with various branches that communicate with each other and yet must maintain enough secrecy to stave off growing opposition to their schemes. To threaten this essential element of all such regimes secrecy is to cause the ruling elite to clamp down and restrict information flow even within its own apparatus, lest a dreaded leak seeps out. And that course is fatal, as Assange explains: Literacy and the communications revolution have empowered conspirators with new means to conspire, increasing the speed [and] accuracy of the their interactions and thereby the maximum size a conspiracy may achieve before it breaks down. Conspirators who have this technology are able to out conspire conspirators without it. For the same costs they are able to achieve a higher total conspiratorial power. That is why they adopt it. For example, remembering Lord Halifaxs words, let us consider two closely balanced and broadly conspiratorial power groupings, the US Democratic and Republican parties. Consider what would happen if one of these parties gave up their mobile phones, fax and email correspondence let alone the computer systems which manage their subscribes, donors, budgets, polling, call centers and direct mail campaigns? They would immediately fall into an organizational stupor and lose to the other. An authoritarian conspiracy that cannot think is powerless to preserve itself against the opponents it induces. When we look at an authoritarian conspiracy as a whole, we see a system of interacting organs, a beast with arteries and veins whose blood may be thickened and slowed until it falls, stupefied; unable to sufficiently comprehend and control the forces in its environment. This recalls the key insights of Ludwig von Mises and Friedrich von Hayek, the libertarian theorists of the Austrian school, whose critique of socialism was that imperfect knowledge dooms efforts by central authorities to regulate business and fix prices. Our rulers, however, have other ideas. Armed with computer technology, and the hubris of scientism which purports to wear the mantle of science they think they can get around the inherent limitations of the human condition, and control the uncontrollable. What they didnt take into account was that such hubris induces opposition and so the first cyberwar has begun. It is a war the US government, with all its resources, cannot win, because the nature of the technology the weaponry has defeated it before even the first shot was fired. And make no mistake: that first shot was fired by Washington, not Assange an act of aggression our puffed-up rulers will live to regret. The more the government clamps down and tries to hide its secrets, the more vulnerabhttp://freedom4um.com/cgi-bin/postarticle.cgile it will become until that glorious day dawns when its blood is so thickened and slowed that it falls, stupefied, unable to sufficiently comprehend and control the forces in its environment. Assange is a thinker, as well as a doer: he long ago perfected the theory of which WikiLeaks is the practice, and you would do well to investigate what he has to say in his seminal 2006 essay [.pdf]. I cant resist quoting the wonderful introduction, which puts the WikiLeaks fight in perspective: To radically shift regime behavior we must think clearly and boldly for if we have learned anything, it is that regimes do not want to be changed. We must think beyond those who have gone before us, and discover technological changes that embolden us with ways to act in which our forebears could not. Firstly we must understand what aspect of government or neocorporatist behavior we wish to change or remove. Secondly we must develop a way of thinking about this behavior that is strong enough carry us through the mire of politically distorted language, and into a position of clarity. Finally must use these insights to inspire within us and others a course of ennobling, and effective action. Words to inspire, as well as inform. One last thing: these hactivists have been denounced as nihilists, and anarchists (as if the two terms are synonymous, which they are not), but this is just regimist propaganda designed to scare people into accepting an ever-tightening tyranny that is reacting in a way that seals its own doom. It is not nihilism to oppose our rulers and their new world order of client states and perpetual war: it is patriotism of the highest order, patriotism in the service of liberty. They think they can stop the rising tide of rebellion by arresting a 16-year-old boy in the Netherlands but can they arrest the over 40,000 people who have recently downloaded the Low Orbit Ion Cannon, the hi-tech weapon of choice that brought down MasterCard? Of course not. They rule by fear, and smear but only if we let them. Of course, Antiwar.com does not endorse illegal acts, nor do we urge people to engage in them. But this war, Cyberwar I, was started by the Powers That Be and now let them fight it, even as they realize that they cannot win.
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#1. To: F.A. Hayek Fan (#0)
The problem of course with all of Justin's giddiness is that he still does not fully comprehend the psychotic mindset of the people we are opposing. They ARE psychotic enough to cut off their nose to spite their face. Once we sift through the noise we are left with the following: By shutting down the entire Internet by disabling the backbone they can effectively end the Internet as we know it. That would be an extreme move, but to maintain power and control they would, will, do it if they have to. It is the "logic of power". What Justin appears to assume is that we are dealing with reasonably sane, although evil, governments. The fatal flaw in that reasoning is that THEY ARE NOT sane.
That's right. You are the only one that sees it. Everyone else is an idiot who hasn't been blessed with your insight (eyes rolling). By shutting down the entire Internet by disabling the backbone they can effectively end the Internet as we know it. That would be an extreme move, but to maintain power and control they would, will, do it if they have to. It is the "logic of power". What Justin appears to assume is that we are dealing with reasonably sane, although evil, governments. So your opinion appears to be that in order to ensure that the internet does not get shut down that no one should do or say anything that might make the government upset and if someone does then they are CIA operatives. Sorry, I'm not buying into that. I neither believe that Assange is a CIA operative nor do I believe that the government will be able to shut down the internet.
Oh, I don't necessarily think he is CIA. No, more likely MI-6 or Mossad. Did I say that? NO. I said Justin didn't get it, nor do the terminally naive - such as yourself. Psychotics, by definition, do not think the same way a sane person does. The sane mind does not contemplate murdering 1 - 2 million people in Iraq and another 2-3 million in Afghanistan and then write it off as "the cost of doing business" and maintaining and expanding their power. Sane minds do not bring down large skyscrapers in a staged event to provide political justification and motivation to commit even more murders. And intelligent people do not have to resort to personal attacks to make a counter point.
NO. I said Justin didn't get it, nor do the terminally naive - such as yourself. Well now you've clearly gone too far. Raimondo is quite likely the most savvy gadfly on the net today. And he maintains his credibility by writing the most hard hitting exposes with complete documentation and links to back it up, and he avoids wild eyed speculation colored by his own prejudices, i.e. Israel isn't really run by Jews-I don't know what they are but I know what they aren't! (Sound familiar, Mister I have Jews in my family woodpile?) But, what about this? ___________________________ The Zen Buddhists who tried to convert me 40 years ago assured me that one could be a Jew, Christian or any other religion AND a Buddhist. It sure as Hell doesn't mean a thing for you to put up that smokescreen between us and Ben Gurion. For you to label another as "terminally naive" for the crime of disagreeing with you is the pinnacle of chutzpah. Why don't you try to match Raimondo's excellent research and documentation and offer support for your silly yenta bitch assertions instead of substituting the Jewish tactic of browbeating critics (not one but TWO in the same thread) into submission? I mean, when you aren't high five-ing yourself for your compilations of plagiarized (unattributed) content or basking in the compliments from those who don't know any better you're trying to take the Alpha position through insults and intimidation. This is what you believe to be a scholarly or intellectual pursuit? Go figure. You wrote: "One has to explain things carefully to buckie - in small words." I've had disagreements with buck and I know that he's an articulate and intelligent poster with an excellent command of the language. Therefore, you're either stupid or you're a goddam liar who'll stoop to any level to try and silence those who point out your silliness to you.
Oh, spare me. Your irrational rambling is your own pathos, and I have nothing to be apologetic for. Ben Gurion was, like most of the leading Zionazis, a War Criminal, and religion really has little to do with it. Lust for power and his psychotic babblings do. Zionism is to religion as Fascism is to freedom. However, your vendetta is at best a distraction. Good day.
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