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The Internet "pushing"the Revolutions

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This is a great article taken from Al Jazeera and written by a senior member of the World Wide Hacking Group --- Anonymous .
I have thought for a long time that the Internet could change the Planet and allow the people to have far greater control over how they are treated .
This is proving a faster process than I guessed and the revolutions in North Africa and the Middle East have quite possibly been hugely assisted by the use of the Internet to bring protesters together and make best use of forces that are literally spread all over the planet .
I trust you are given the same opportunity to start afresh in the not too distant future . It may take time but you will live to see how incredibly bad you have been treated and particularly since the KGB took the complete control of your country from the very late nineties .
I trust you find the article compelling to read and you understand its full implications .

The tendency to relate past events to what is possible in the present becomes more difficult as the scope of the geopolitical environment changes. It is a useful thing, then, to ask every once in a while if the environment has recently undergone any particular severe changes, thereby expanding our options for the future.

Terminology, let alone our means of exchanging information, has changed to such a degree that many essential discussions in today's "communications age" would be entirely incomprehensible to many two decades ago.

As the social, political and technological environment has developed, some have already begun to explore new options, seizing new chances for digital activism - and more will soon join in. It is time for the rest of the world to understand why.

Service denied

When a release by WikiLeaks revealed the depravity of just how corrupt and horrid the Tunisian government really was, it prompted Tunisians to step up active dissent and take to the streets en masse for the first time.

In response, a loose network of participants within the international Anonymous protest organisation attacked non-essential government websites - those not providing direct services to Tunisians - at the prompting of our contacts.

Several such sites were replaced with a message of support to the Tunisian people, while others were pushed offline via distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks, involving thousands of computer users who request large amounts of data from a website simultaneously, overwhelming it.

Other assistance programmes followed, even after the deposed Ben Ali fled the nation that reviled him, with Anonymous and other parties working with Tunisians - both in-country and abroad - to provide the nation's people with the tools and information resources they needed to begin building up new, reasonable political institutions capable of ensuring a freer civic life.

Our "Guide to Protecting the Tunisian Revolution" series - a collaboration between hundreds of veterans of traditional revolutionary movements as well as practitioners of "new activism" - were disseminated both online and in print; aside from tips on safety during confrontation and the like, these also explain how to establish secure yet accessible networks and communications for Tunisians, as well as instructions on establishing neighbourhood syndicates capable of uniting in common cause.

Already, such organisations are being established across Tunisia, just as they will be established elsewhere as the movement proceeds.

The seeds of cyber revolution

Anonymous is a means by which people across the globe can assist in the hard work being performed by the Tunisian people - who have long taken issue with their government, but first began protesting in earnest after a fruit vendor set himself ablaze in response to police cruelty.

The Anonymous movement itself grew out of message boards frequented mostly by young people with an interest in internet culture in general - and Japanese media in particular; in 2005, participants began "attacking" internet venues as a sort of sport, and in the process honed their skills in a way that proved useful in "information warfare".

In 2007, some users proposed that the Church of Scientology be exposed for its unethical and sometimes violent conduct, sparking a coordinated global protest movement that differed from anything else seen, and which still continues today.

The Australian government was later attacked for introducing new internet censorship laws, and in the meantime, those within Anonymous who see the subculture as a potential force for justice have launched other efforts while also building new strategies and recruiting individuals from across the globe - some of whom hold significant positions in media, industry, and the sciences.

For great justice

In the meantime, there are obstacles to overcome. Those within the Tunisian government who seek to deny liberty to "their" people are easy enough to deal with; the greatest threat to revolution comes not from any state but rather from those who decry such revolutions without understanding them.

In this case, the idea that a loose network of people with shared values and varying skill sets can provide substantial help to a population abroad is seen as quixotic - or even unseemly - by many of those who have failed to understand the past ten years, as well as those whose first instinct is to attack a popular revolt rather than to assist it.

Elsewhere, a number of US pundits decided to criticise the revolution as possibly destabilising the region; many of whom once demanded the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan - and greeted every Arab revolt as the work of President Bush - but now see nothing for themselves in the cause of Arab liberty.

Some have even portrayed the movement as the work of radical Islamists - yet most cannot find Tunisia on a map.

Suffice to say that the results of our efforts are already on display and will become more evident as Tunisians use our tools and resources to achieve their greatest triumph. Those who wish to assist and are competent to do so can find us easily enough; the Tunisians had little trouble in doing so.

Although we have made great progress in convincing individuals from across the world to join our efforts in Tunisia, other campaigns, such as those taking place in Algeria and Egypt - both of which have seen government websites taken down and/or replaced by Anonymous, more must be done before the movement takes the next step towards a worldwide network capable of perpetual engagement against those who are comfortable with tyranny.

The revolution will be broadcast

Whatever effort is required, such a goal is not only possible, but rather unambitious.

There is a reason, after all, that those of us who have seen the movement up close have dedicated our lives to what it stands for, and have even violated the modern Western taboo of believing in something.

I have been involved with Anonymous in some capacity or another for about six years.

Looking back at my writing over that time, I have found that my predictions, while always enthusiastic, nonetheless turned out to have been conservative; when Australia became the first state to come under attack by this remarkable force, I proposed that we would someday see such allegedly inevitable institutions begin to crumble in the face of their growing irrelevance.

Someday turned out to be this year.

Today, I predict that Anonymous and entities like it will become far more significant over the next few years than is expected by most of our similarly irrelevant pundits - and this will, no doubt, turn out to be just as much of an understatement as anything else that has been written on the subject.

The fact is that the technological infrastructure that allows these movements has been in place for well under a decade - but phenomena such as WikiLeaks and Anonymous have already appeared, expanded, and even become players within the geopolitical environment; others have come about since.

This is the future, whether one approves or not, and the failure on the part of governments and media alike to understand, and contend with the rapid change now afoot, ought to remind everyone concerned why it is that this movement is necessary in the first place.

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Interesting .
I tried to write another message but it was cancelled and the words Service Denied appeared .
You are being hacked I think .

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My point was that I cannot use the English version . It has been disabled .
They possibly did not think I would Post using the Russian version !!!
But it means I cannot read anything if the reply is not in English .
Somebody is playing games

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Raymondo, are you back?
Where have yoy been?
In Egypt?
Made a Revolution?

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Am coming soon to Russia .
But First , Belarus , I think !!!!!!!!!!!!

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found another Larisochka?

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Whom do The New York Times and The Guardian work for?

Bill Keller, an editor with The New York Times, has recently published an article titled "Dealing With Assange and the WikiLeaks Secrets." In the article, the author wrote how the newspaper was working with secret cables. From what the article says, it seems that Russia appears to be a real stronghold of  freedom of speech.
Keller wrote: "Because of the range of the material and the very nature of diplomacy, the embassy cables were bound to be more explosive than the War Logs. Dean Baquet, our Washington bureau chief, gave the White House an early warning on Nov. 19. The following Tuesday, two days before Thanksgiving, Baquet and two colleagues were invited to a windowless room at the State Department, where they encountered an unsmiling crowd. Representatives from the White House, the State Department, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the C.I.A., the Defense Intelligence Agency, the F.B.I. and the Pentagon gathered around a conference table. Others, who never identified themselves, lined the walls. A solitary note-taker tapped away on a computer."

The next meetings would take place in the form of daily conference calls. "Before each discussion, our Washington bureau sent over a batch of specific cables that we intended to use in the coming days. They were circulated to regional specialists, who funneled their reactions to a small group at State, who came to our daily conversations with a list of priorities and arguments to back them up. We relayed the government's concerns, and our own decisions regarding them, to the other news outlets."

"The administration's concerns generally fell into three categories. First was the importance of protecting individuals who had spoken candidly to American diplomats in oppressive countries. We almost always agreed on those and were grateful to the government for pointing out some we overlooked..."That sometimes meant not just removing the name but also references to institutions that might give a clue to an identity and sometimes even the dates of conversations, which might be compared with surveillance tapes of an American Embassy to reveal who was visiting the diplomats that day."

"The second category included sensitive American programs, usually related to intelligence. We agreed to withhold some of this information, like a cable describing an intelligence-sharing program that took years to arrange and might be lost if exposed. In other cases, we went away convinced that publication would cause some embarrassment but no real harm.

"The third category consisted of cables that disclosed candid comments by and about foreign officials, including heads of state. The State Department feared publication would strain relations with those countries. We were mostly unconvinced.

Keller wrote that in all of his publications he was guided by his patriotic feelings. He was printing only the things that were good for America. If an editor of a Russian newspaper said that he or she was discussing publications with unsmiling people on Lubyanka or Smolenka, the liberal community of Moscow would not be thrilled with such a story.

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Keller threw dirt at Assange, who had given him that sensational news. Keller portrayed him as a dirty tramp, who incidentally found a diamond on a dump. The Guardian journalists Harding and Lee developed the same line. They misused the dispatches in three different ways. They were printing them partially, covering up those whom they needed to cover up. They printed them under misleading headlines and exposed them to the public at well-chosen moments. The result of all that was so amazing that WikiLeaks publications raised concerns and suspicion with a number of Russian conspiracy theorists, particularly Nikolai Starikov and Mikhail Leontiev. If it wasn't for Assange's reckless wisdom, who handed over the cables to, among others, the Russian Reporter, WikiLeaks would have worked against Russia indeed, rather than against the US imperial ambitions, as Assange saw it.

It is hard to overestimate the role of Luke Harding, the under-expelled British journalist, a specialist for the informational war against Russia. It was Harding, who was responsible for editing the Russian WikiLeaks dossier for The Guardian. It was him who gave catchy headlines (e.g. - "Russia is a Mafia State"). "The heavily edited cables about the outlooks on life of a well-known political activist (MOSCOW 002632) was turned into a material about Gunvor company and the "Kremlin corruption,"" Vitaly Leibin said. It was Harding, who covered up corrupt officials from Western companies and their partners in Kazakhstan.

In addition, Harding was diligently "whacking" Lukashenko - either at his heart's will or at the will of Western financial circles. The day before the election in Belarus, Harding published the toughly censored 06MINSK641 cables in The Guardian. For the headline, he chose the phrase about Lukashenko's personal wealth worth $9 billion. The journalist deleted the details that explained where the slanderous data were coming from. If the explanation had been preserved, the Belarusian readers and voters would only burst with laughter. Below is the explanation that had been hidden from the public eye:

"Employees of the Czech Embassy delivered the list of 50 top oligarchs of Belarus to the US economic attache. The Czechs found that list - it was published in a Smolensk newspaper. The name of the newspaper is not known, but its email is vozduhu@yandex.ru. The embassy believes that the list was most likely made by the United Civil Party, an opposition party of Belarus.

To put it in a nutshell, the list was made out of thin air and published in a local newspaper in Smolensk. And they used that for a catchy headline before the election! There can be many other examples found to prove the misuse of the WikiLeaks cables against Belarus. However, The Guardian has never published the cables from Vilnius about the arrest of a delivery man who was carrying black money to Belarus opposition activists. The newspaper has not published the cables from the Minsk embassy either. The cables were about the visit of opposition leader Milinkevich: "He came to ask for money." Harding has not written anything about the fact that the Americans saw Lukashenko as "the eventual successor to Cuban leader Fidel Castro as the next Papa' of the anti-West block." Here is how a US ambassador described him: "Lukashenko is the ideal anti-globalist leader -- he is young (51 years old), energetic, bold, and he sits at the helm of a growing, stable (for now) economy in the heart of Europe."

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The Guardian, the left stronghold of Western imperialism, stands up against Iran too. Cable 09BAKU695 contains a detailed debriefing of an Iranian dissident, a young teacher from Teheran, a receiver of Western grants. It is clear that he angrily condemned ayatollahs, and his criticism of that regime was published in full. The dissident is an honest man, and he shared his views about opposition with Americans. These are realistic and pessimistic views.

He described opposition as disorganized mosaic of many groups, without any administration and goals. According to him, Mousavi is stubborn and not charismatic, Karroubi is bold, but has a few organized allies. The role of Rafsanjani is purely tactical and a short-term one. "The people do not consider him legitimate, that is why he cannot become a long-term leader." Anglo-American newspapers omitted all those observations not to ruin the impression of the Iranian opposition.

In cable 09BAKU687, an American contact in Iran explains the reason why the opposition had failed to win the Turki-speaking Azeris in the north-west of the country.

He said that "Tabriz residents are "very pragmatic"; while not afraid of protesting per se, they will only do so in favor of a tangible end result that they feel is clearly in their interest. He asserted that many Tabrizis saw the election and subsequent fallout as a power struggle within the Tehran regime which had little to do with them or their felt interests. He explained that "no matter who wins,(many Tabrizis) feel that there will be no change" in language, cultural, and government hiring policies that discriminate against Azeris. He depicted these as by far the most powerful regional political issues, outweighing desire for greater regional autonomy and other issues. While acknowledging that both Moussavi and Karroubi had made campaign statements endorsing liberalization of language policies, XXX said that these statements were perceived as lip service, and that "(de facto) Tehrani" Moussavi in particular was not regarded as credible on this issue, given his earlier attitudes on the issue when he was Prime Minister."

According to the ambassador, other sources share a similar point of view. The residents of Tabriz, i.e. Iranian Azeris, seek larger recognition of their language. They do not have many other ambitions.

Western newspapers omitted all of that important analysis not to undermine the image of the Iranian opposition.

I am not sure about human rights issues, but The Guardian always stands up to defend BP. In cable 07BAKU1268 The Guardian deleted the remarks from an Azeri businessman, who said that BP was violating laws and forcing up prices. In cable 08BAKU671 they deleted a critical phrase about BP: "Consortium members believe that BP failed the question about settlements, which cost consortium members billions of dollars and strengthened the positions of the Azeri state oil company." Readers will not know that according to Azeris, BP came into conspiracy with Gazprom against the interests of Azerbaijan.

Cable 07ASTANA919 from Kazakhstan misses the part which says that Western companies offer bribes. "From 1998 to 2003 the company paid $5.2 million for purchasing influence among Kazakh officials." Cable 09ASHGABAT1633 from Ashkhabad misses the details that throw shade on the bright image of Berdymuhammedov's family: "Older sister Aynabat was a central figure in bribery case at the language institute. Her son was connected with corruption when he helped Turkey's ERKU company to receive construction orders. President's nephews often appear in especially lucrative deals."

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In Cable 07DUSHANBE1420 The Guardian deleted a reference to the fact that a sacked Tajik official was an American agent: "He was a partner of our embassy and a first-class source of information about the Tajik government."

In Cable 07MOSCOW1770 Harding removed the name and the position of the source who fully justified Khodorkovsky. A person reading the cable may think that they are reading the words from an informed and objective outsider. As a matter of fact, the source is Khorodkovsky's lawyer Yuri Schmidt, who is supposed to whitewash the imprisoned oligarch.

There are tens and hundreds of such examples. For this reason, The Guardian and The New York Times try to slander Julian Assange. He didn't accept it. In his interview with SBS Dateline, Assange said: "Our agreement with them was that they would redact information for ‘Cablegate', based on just one criteria, which was the protection of individuals from unfair incarceration, or any type of execution ... and for no other reasons."

He said: "The Guardian has been redacting all sorts of things ... for very different reasons. For instance, the Guardian has been redacting claims about particular companies who are corrupt. Now this is presumably to do with their paranoia about libel suits in the UK being made by these rich and powerful."

This doesn't sound very convincing. Let's assume that The Guardian is afraid of a libel suit. What stops them from printing a heavily edited dispatch if they could hand over the original, unedited, dispatch to the WikiLeaks website?

Russian Reporter

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Service denied

It could happen if you posted too fast. There must be no less than 60 sec between two posts. Take your time! :playful:

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found another Larisochka?

What's bad in trying to find your destiny even if she lives in Belarus? We should be proud of Raymondo's energy and love for life. Such gentlemen with young hearts and ability to move so rapidly from one frost-bitten part of Eastern Europe to another one are a real treasure in this world  full of motionless microbs who can only work, sit at the computer and watch TV.
Good Luck, Captain Fantastico!

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Thank you Marina ,
I don't mind people having a joke against me .
That amazing incident in Donetsk was truly mind blowing  and one day will be a remarkable chapter in a great book I will write .I will never identify her because she is a sad person and someone who knows no better .
Far more interesting is whether the revolution will spread into Russia , perhaps through Belarus .
I hope it does and that the people of Russia begin to taste freedom and a real purpose in living .

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Raymondo написал(а):

I hope it does and that the people of Russia begin to taste freedom and a real purpose in living .

What is real purpose for living??? Today Cameron admitted in Kuwait that UK were pursuing they interests and doing so they were actually supporting Caddafi  and the likes. What can be more proving my point? By agreeing that UK for them-self can bend its own democracy principals for so called "peace in the Middle East" , and we know that it means BP oil interest and arms trades in the region, you shall agree that the same applies to Russians, isn't it? People in Russia, or Belarus', or any country in this case, will get up and go when they will be no longer able to bear the way they are being govern. And it can happen not only in Belarus, but in the UK as well...

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Russian Lavender ,
I smiled at your very typical Russian comments towards political and economic  disasters .Blame everybody else but yourselves !!!
Let me first tell you about Gadaffi , Libya and the UK .
It was about 6 years ago that we let Libya come in from the cold . And "We" essentially means the UK .
It is generally known that Gadaffi has not been mentally stable for many years and possibly his whole life . His State has always been repressive and  appalling but financed from huge Oil revenue . We did everything possible to try and move his perspective toward internal improvements but our key priorities were  to prevent a lunatic like him developing his own nuclear weapon capability and to stop him sponsoring Terrorism and running a Dictatorship that was on a par --- in terms of Danger --- with Iran and North Korea .
We did a deal with him . He became "respectable" by giving up control in those two key areas and had sanctions lifted .
And the whole world became a better place . And don't ever forget that .
Since then ,  our trade with Libya is far behind countries like your own , though strangely it is Italy who has been doing the most trade with Gadaffi . And if you pause for a moment and remember how corrupt Berlusconi is --- I have been publishing this assertion for years ,  and the tip of that truth is becoming clear to everybody now -- this fact becomes less surprising .Incidentally , Russia does much more business with Libya than the UK .
So first get all of your facts prepared and checked .
Then get into the real world about using armaments as an instrument of foreign sales . If we simply stop selling arms to every regime that stinks of corruption , we  would have 55000 people without a job .
Meanwhile , the rest of the world ,  with Russia at the top of the list ,  would benefit and die laughing at the stupidity of the British .

Your more general other point is based on comparing two States such as Russia and the UK .
The differences between them are so huge that comparisons are  simply pointless and only used by people still locked into old style Communist or even Soviet mentality.
They are not even frankly worthy of comment.
If you cannot see that or are  not prepared to accept the facts , we have no further grounds for future sensible discussion .
However , both of us will watch events and wonder if the Winds of Change will sweep into more European countries like Azerbaijan , Uzbekistan and Belarus --- all vicious and corrupt dictatorships . Then we will finally see if the Russian people have the character and courage to stand up and be counted .

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Raymondo написал(а):

I don't mind people having a joke against me .
That amazing incident in Donetsk was truly mind blowing  and one day will be a remarkable chapter in a great book I will write .

Far more interesting is whether the revolution will spread into Russia , perhaps through Belarus .

Do not worry, we understood what you meant, but your marriage intentions make our mood a little playful to tease you.

P.S. When will we see your book?

Отредактировано никто (2011-02-23 19:03:11)

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