Now Max Blumenthal is now out with a post that ups the ante exponentially. For those who are not familiar with him, here is his bio from his page at The Huffington Post.
Max Blumenthal is a senior writer for The Daily Beast and contributor to outlets including The Nation, Al Jazeera English, Salon.com, Alternet, the Huffington Post, and the Washington Monthly. The winner of the USC Annenberg Online Journalism Award for his investigative print journalism, he has produced numerous widely-recognized video reports that have garnered hundreds of thousands of hits on Youtube. His book, "Republican Gomorrah: Inside The Movement That Shattered The Party," will be published by Basic Books in 2009.I emphasize his credentials, reputation and history, since without it one might suspect that the post that has just appeared — which clinches the argument over coordinated involvement — is conspiracy theory.
Read it at AlterNet
From Occupation to “Occupy”: The Israelification of American Domestic Security — The Israelification of America’s security apparatus, recently unleashed against the OWS, has taken place at every level of law enforcement.
by Max Blumenthal
I am not going to pull out any quotes to summarize this. It is an investigative piece that requires reading in full to do it justice. This is really a jaw-dropper.
Blumenthal's exposé accounts for what many have been wondering since we saw the police reaction to the protests, displaying tactics that had never been used so brazenly against American citizens before. Was this widespread unprofessionalism and a "few bad apples" gone rogue (remember the explanation for torture of prisoners in US control at Abu Ghraib), or was there something more going on here. Blumenthal explains what it is, and it is both shocking and alarming.
Senators are now speaking of the US as part of the "battlefield" in their defense of their indefensible passage of a bill giving the president authority to "disappear" US citizens within the United States and hold them indefinitely without recourse to the judicial process mandated in the US Constitution. Coupled with the Patriot Act and the submerging of the proposed total awareness program behing the wall of secrecy involving national security, the Constitution seems to be hanging by the thread of judicial interpretation. The present constitution of SCOTUS gives little comfort here. After Citizens United it is clear whose side they are not and it is not the 99%.
Given all this, it is easy to be a pattern emerging and a trend gaining steam. It is time to be concerned, very concerned. The noose is tightening. The US is swiftly turning into a total surveillance police state in which the government, controlled by and representing the interests of a plutocratic oligarchy, claims absolute power as a matter of "national security." We've heard that before elsewhere.
UPDATE: People Locked in Tiny Cages, Crying in Pain: What I Saw and Heard When the LAPD Threw Me in Jail for Exercising My Right to Protest the Oligarchy
by Yasha Levine at The Exiled
Don't believe the PR. There was nothing peaceful or professional about the LAPD's attack on Occupy LA -- or the way detainees were later treated....
There was nothing peaceful or professional about the LAPD’s attack on Occupy LA–not unless you think that people peacefully protesting against the power of the financial oligarchy deserve to be treated the way I saw Russian cops treating the protesters in Moscow and St. Petersburg who were demonstrating against the oligarchy under Putin and Yeltsin, before we at The eXiled all got tossed out in 2008. Back then, everyone in the West protested and criticized the way the Russian cops brutally snuffed out dissent, myself included. Now I’m in America, at a demonstration, watching exactly the same brutal crackdown…
Read Levine's entire report and tell me this wasn't borderline torture. However, it is not vastly different from treatment that some fairly large groups of anti-war protestors were subjected to in DC back then.
UPDATE: Prior to Violent Occupy Oakland Raid, OPD Trained Alongside Bahrain Military and Israeli Border Force by David Harris-Gershon at Tikkun Daily
UPDATE: Picked up by Raw StoryUPDATE: Prior to Violent Occupy Oakland Raid, OPD Trained Alongside Bahrain Military and Israeli Border Force by David Harris-Gershon at Tikkun Daily
David Harris-Gershon's work has recently appeared in The Jerusalem Post, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, Jewish Telegraphic Agency and elsewhere. His memoir, Shrapnel -– which chronicles the author's attempt to reconcile with the family of the Hamas terrorist who injured his wife in the 2002 Hebrew University bombing – is currently being shopped for publication.
Report: Israeli model underlies militarization of U.S. police
By Muriel Kane
UPDATE: Hundreds of OccupyLA Demonstrators Held for Days Without Charges on $5,000 Bail in Often Deplorable, Illegal, and Unconstitutional Conditions
by Ernest A. Canning, The Brad Blog | Report
by Ernest A. Canning, The Brad Blog | Report
7 comments:
the irony is that this is Israel....who apparently exists in direct opposition to nazi germany. Apparently they got infected by their own arch nemesis. What's that saying again...you live by the sword, you....
It is ironic, Mario. When Israel first developed its security forces, it was of necessity. Then....
OccupyIsrael FB page
How Occupy Israel influenced Occupy Wall Street:
How Israel’s Tent Cities Influenced Occupy Wall Street
Alex Gutman at Green Prophet
Inspiring. California has always been on the front edge of political change. It is fitting they should adopt the most advanced control technologies in the world developed by Israel where they have political rhetoric far more inflammatory than even used here. There people there regularly call for the annihilation of one another. The left and right here are both growing more and more radical so they must be firmly controlled to keep stability and unity.
Jeff Gates (author of 'Guilt by Association') at Criminal State.com which details interesting info regarding the influence of Zionist Israelis on American leaders. This former US Senate legal advisor seems to have very interesting insights which are expressed in another of his books dealing with ESOP plans to facilitate ownership/participation among corporate employees (an idea relatively heavily emphasized in the 1980-1990era to promote stock ownership)
A 2010 example of one article:
'Zionist Dominance in the Obama Presidency'
January 6, 2010 by Jeff Gates
http://criminalstate.com/2010/01/331/
While Max Blumenthal's article deals primarily with recent 'capture' of police forces across America, Jeff's site covers the 'capture' of American political leaders by AIPAC, ADF, and other such organizations. Could such relationships provide an important clue to the reasons why TPTB tend to ignore ideas/concepts promoted by MMT-advocates? They are very likely to more clever than most economists.
Can you guys stop with the Israel are Nazi Germany comparisons? It is seriously offensive. I know Holocaust survivors and for all its flaws, Israel remains the only semblance of democracy in the middle east and doesn't systematically round up their citizenry and carry out genocide.
Tom,
An observation I have here:
Back when Katrina hit LA, Bush took a lot of criticism that I felt was unwarranted for not having some sort of Federal level force go in there and take over the situation from (although his critics would not admit it) thoroughly corrupt and inept local/state govt authorities. Vice just have "Brownie" come in after the disaster and start crediting bank accounts.
This was a pretty big deal in defining a new set of expectations of the public as to what the public views as appropriate levels of Federal intervention into local issues. The lesson for the Feds out of that was that the public wants MORE federal involvement. Thank you deranged Kanye West.
I remember at the time thinking that this would lead to more Federal meddling in traditionally local issues going forward.
So coming out of that, having paid that political price, perhaps now the Feds have become more willing to "intervene" into situations that formerly have been left solely to the discretion of local authorities.
The bureaucrats know how to respond politically. "Give the people what they want" type of thing.
Resp,
Matt, I agree that striking a good balance among federal, state, and local is crucial in policy. It's a large part of what politics is about, and it's not a balance that is simple to achieve and also satisfy conflicting ideologies.
Take MMT, for example. We know it is not difficult to understand. I think that a lot of the failure to get it lies more on the side of ideology than stupidity.
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