Was Snowden’s Anime Work Related To Propaganda?

Snowden has been described as an accomplished player of a video game called “Tekken,” a fight game.  In Language of Empire, I wrote about the use made of video-games by the military to desensitize adolescent males to violence and rehearse them in the mentality of the killers they will be trained to become.The US, of course, is not alone in using video games in this way. A recent piece in the Guardian describes the popularity of video-games among the world’s militaries.

That same piece describes the extent of US research into this new frontier of mind-control and brainwashing:

“By the late 1990s,” says Nick Turse, an American journalist, historian and author of The Complex: How the Military Invades Our Everyday Lives, “the [US] army was pouring tens of millions of dollars into a centre at the University of Southern California – the Institute of Creative Technologies – specifically to build partnerships with the gaming industry and Hollywood.”

It’s a toxic relationship in Turse’s opinion, since gaming leads to a reliance on remote-controlled warfare, and this in turn makes combat more palatable.”

Please note that by the late 1990s, the center of the US military’s partnership with Hollywood and the Gaming industry was Southern California. Please note that Ryuhana was established in 2002 ( accidentally wrote 2012 before) , next to the NSA in Fort Meade. Please note that after it folded up there in 2004, it moved to California.

ORIGINAL POST

In my previous blog post on Snowden, I pointed out that his career was essentially that of a spy and surveillance contractor, and not, as some at LRC have lamely tried to claim, that of a private-sector wunderkind.

The LRC claim was based solely on Snowden’s 2 year stint at a Japanese anime company.

However, as I noted in my previous blog, that company, Ryuhana, was sited next to the NSA when Snowden, whose parents were both in the service of the state, went to work for it.  The chances are that Ryuhana had some kind of government connection, since comics have long been a venue for state propaganda.

And why not? Comic strips are read more widely than any kind of opinion editorial. If editorial writing and reporting is closely monitored by the state, why wouldn’t comic book writing?

Hollywood, after all, has long been used to control the mass mind and many obvious propaganda films like “V for Vendetta” have had their origin in comics of some kind or in graphic novels.

“How the Government Turned Comic Books Into Propaganda” (Reason, Feb 28, 2013) describes how the government went to great lengths to ensure that war cartoons were not too simplistic.

“Unlike government titles charged with turning sewage treatment processes or Social Security benefits into the stuff of page-turning drama, this title featured government work in all its two-fisted, action-packed glory, with page after page of machine-gun strafing, saber disembowelings, and other vividly rendered war-time carnage. Issues like this one also featured dozens of actual black-and-white photographs of Marines in combat—hanging out in foxholes, poking enemy dead with bayonets, carrying their wounded brethren on stretchers.

In Government Issue, Richard Graham notes that while many commercial newspaper comic strips featured content depicting the war, including depictions of “Nazis as Teutonic buffoons and the Japanese as blood-drooling torturers,” the Office of War Information worried that such depictions were “too simplistic and could lead to over overconfidence” because they portrayed “the enemy as lazy and posing little threat.”

Perhaps that’s why on the cover of this Marine-approved comic, Prime Minister Tojo is depicted as a lively eight-legged sea-monster.”

But comics have their uses not only in demonizing the enemy in war-time. They can also be used to “sell” a country to its allies.

A piece at Japan Today, August 9, 2010 analyzed the American use of Japanese comics as the American military’s new Okinawa strategy:

The U.S. military has produced a four-part manga series in Japanese titled, “Our Alliance – A Lasting Partnership.” The BBC, Yahoo news and various other sources picked up the AFP story without any mention of the obvious – this is pure propaganda concocted for the sole purpose of brainwashing Japan’s youth into accepting the massive American military presence right in their backyard.

At a time where opposition to the 47,000 U.S. troops stationed in Okinawa and other parts of Japan has reach a tipping point, it seems the new U.S. strategy may be to simply outwait the more vocal older generations and instead focus on the younger generations who are already largely apathetic to such issues.

In the first issue of the comic (which can be seen at http://www.usfj.mil/manga), an American boy, Usa-kun (U.S.A.-kun), comes to Japan and befriends a Japanese girl called Arai Anzu (sounds like “Alliance when spoken by Japanese). He tells her he has come to defend her home because they
are “important friends.”

“It’s good to have a friend you can rely on to go with you,” the little girl concludes.

Typical of modern reporting, the media articles merely regurgitate the press release given to them without adding any neutrality to the story, submitting obediently and serving as mouthpiece to the story’s “source” – which in this case was just a phone call with no apparent follow-up or questions challenging the motives of the manga.

Some gems spewed by U.S. forces’ propaganda office rep, Neil Fisher, include explanations on how the cute bunny-like characters “explore and learn about the U.S. military in Japan and its role in the U.S.-Japan alliance.” He nearly gives away his hand when he admits the U.S. chose manga because it’s “a very common way of communicating in Japan,” or “It is read as much if not more than newspapers” and “A lot of people love manga… Manga is a very light-hearted way to carry information.”

This isn’t the first time the U.S. has used comics to infiltrate the minds of Japanese children. In 2008, amid heavy opposition to an American nuclear powered aircraft carrier being permanently stationed at Yokosuka just south of Tokyo, the U.S. handed out 26,000 copies to children and young residents of a 200-page comic staring an American navy hero. The comic depicted the U.S. navy servicemen as ideal neighbors at a time when safety concerns over nuclear energy and crimes committed by Americans stationed in the area were in the spotlight”

Given this history, Snowden’s “Ryuhana,” situated as it was right next to the NSA (2002-2004) at Fort Meade, in Maryland, might well have been actively involved in state propaganda and Snowden’s stint there, far from being anomalous, his first work for the surveillance state.

Snowden’s anime company sited next to NSA

The Japanese Anime Company Ryuhana where Snowden went to work in 2002 is being talked up on the LRC blog as an example of his work in the private sector.

Let’s see. In my previous blog, I showed that Snowden (and his parents) have been life-long employees/contractors of the state he claims to detest. He signed up, in turn, for the army, the special forces, the NSA, the CIA, and then for defense contractors tied to the CIA and the defense establishment (including Booz Allen). Some private sector poster boy. That is, out of a working life of about a decade, all but two years were spent sucking at the teat of the security state.

True, he was a webmaster at an (ostensible) anime company in 2002.

But, by 2004, the company had wound up its business.

That means it was open for business for all of two years. And guess where it was? At Fort Meade in Maryland, right next to the National Security Agency:

“Ryuhana closed in 2004 as the primary proprietors went off to college and opened a new business in California, according to the website. Other contributors to the site could not be reached for comment.

The defunct company listed an address in Fort Meade, Md., next door to the National Security Agency.”

(The Daily Mail, “I Like My Girlish Figure,” June 12, 2013)

Somebody really needs to check out whether this anime company had more going on with it than just cartoons.

Edward Snowden= Sophie Scholl….. Or You’re A Statist Fink

Update (June 13):

I saw this blog post suggesting that Snowden was worried by the surveillance state in 2006, because someone with the handle The TrueHOOHAh, whom the blog identifies with Snowden, comments at a site called arstechnica:

“NSA’s new surveillance program.
That’s the sound of freedom, citizen!”

on May 19, 2006.

May 2006 would be only two years after Snowden had signed up for the Special Forces and then the NSA, where he worked  as a security guard.

ORIGINAL POST

The otherwise admirable Jacob Hornberger, by a series of false equations, rhetorical overstatements, and misleading analogies arrives at the equation,

SOPHIE SCHOLL =   EDWARD SNOWDEN

Well, we applauded Sophie Scholl in “Mobs,” but just as  reductio ad hitlerum is a rhetoric of desperation, so too is such “sophi-stry.”

Asserting without evidence that every self-proclaimed act of whistle-blowing (endorsed by such notable organs of the state as The Guardian and The New York Times, mind you) must be the same as the resistance of the White Rose is merely an admission that you have no other arguments on your side except US  versus Them.

This is an appeal to the mob and demagoguery. I had hoped for more from Mr. Hornberger.

So for him… and for all the LRC cohorts who see any refusal to buy the latest creation of the intelligence services as a sign of “commies,” “Obamaites,” and government stooges…..let me, as none of those three, count the incredibly obvious differences between Sophie Scholl and Comrade Edward:

1. Sophie Scholl was the child of a principled family, with a history of political dissent. Her father and brothers were dissenters. Her friends at high school were chosen for their political opinions. She had a credible history of being a dissenter of conscience. Her father was imprisoned for a critical remark about Hitler.

1. Edward Snowden is the son of two officers of the US security state that he now proclaims he can’t abide.

His family lived all its life off of the state, with no evidence that they ever objected. His father belongs to the US coast guard; his mother is the chief deputy clerk for administration and information technology in the US Federal Court in Baltimore. Functionaries of the police state, dear reader, are not known to spawn dissenters.

Maryland – the environs of the capital of empire and site of all too-many judicial fixes, anthrax scares, CIA capers, and political assassinations – is as good as the belly of the beast.

In that belly, Edward was quite happy.

He joined no political parties, wrote no papers denouncing the empire, organized no protests.

In fact, he repeatedly sought employment in the security state and not in any innocuous (if there be such) part of it.

He enlisted in the US Army….and not in 2001, when he might be forgiven, since 9-11 had just occurred (whatever you think of that).

No. He enlisted in 2004 (2003 in some accounts) when the whole world had already marched against the Iraq war, when the evidence of torture and the use of Daisy Cutters and white phosphorus in Iraq was all over the internet.

At a time when the REAL equivalent of Sophie Scholl, Sergeant Samuel Provance, was outing his seniors in the army and facing genuine harassment rather than wall-to-wall coverage from the major media, Edward Snowden was signing up for the Army, and not just the Army, but the Special Forces.

By then special forces had already been proved to be involved in war crimes. But Edward the Dissenter was eager to join them.

2. Sophie Scholl’s brother was arrested in 1937 for participating in the German Youth Movement.

2. Edward Snowden’s sister is an attorney in Maryland who has not been arrested for anything.

3. Sophie Scholl was an avid reader, with a deep interest in philosophy and theology. She graduated from high school and wrote a paper entitled “The Hand That Moved The Cradle, Moved The World.”

3. Edward Snowden dropped out of school, got a GED, and studied computers at a community college. In other words, his principle interests were technical. Again, no obvious signs of philosophical objections to the state, or even interest in the question. To all appearances, a guy looking to make a good living the quickest way he could.

4. Sophie Scholl was a committed and public Christian who had developed a philosophical and religious objection to Nazism.

4. There is no public record of Snowden having any kind of principled philosophy of resistance to the state until his recent anointing by the spectrum of official activists in the US. [Correction: There are arstechica forum posts under the handle, the TrueHOOHA that express an awareness..and a distrust..of the surveillance state (see update at the top of the page).

5. Sophie Scholl took a job as a nursery school teacher, hoping to get out of working in the National Labor Service, at the time a requirement for anyone who wanted to go to University. In other words, she jeopardized an academic career for which she had great talent in order to be true to her principles.

5.Edward Snowden, as a computer expert, could easily have worked in the private sector, but chose to join the military. He was in the US Army Reserves for all of 4 months, long enough to break his legs and get discharged. Not long enough to face fire, do anything difficult, or get any awards. He didn’t even have the persistence to go back and finish his 14 week training.

Instead,  convinced of the goals of the US military (saving people from oppression), he went one better. He opted to join the National Security Agency as a security guard (a cushy and well-paying job needing not much in the way of expertise or hardship).

6. When her nursery teaching proved insufficient, Sophie Scholl reluctantly joined the auxiliary war service, although still in the innocent field of nursery teaching. Afterward, she enrolled in the University of Munich in Biology and philosophy. By then, she was already practicing passive resistance to the war and was a vocal and public part of a group of artists and writers who were struggling with moral questions about the individual’s duty under a dictatorship.

Sophie Scholl formed the White Rose after listening to an anti-Nazi sermon by the Catholic Bishop of Munster and after a long discussion of the issues in correspondence with her boyfriend.

6.  The only evidence we have that Snowden had any interest in privacy rights is the insistent repetition by The Guardian, the New York Times (known outlets of state disinformation) that he had stickers of the Electric Frontier Foundation and the Tor Project on his laptop.  This is very much the type of signalling used by Rolling Stone in its write up of Jacob Applebaum (one of the Wikileaks group). In that piece, “The Most Dangerous Man in Cyberspace,” there were the same type of pointed references to Applebaum’s liking for the movie “V for Vendetta”. Vendetta is a movie most likely intended to prep the public mind for the role of the hactivist-hero (think of Julian Assange or Anonymous) as the new mouthpiece for globalist propaganda, following the discrediting of the major newspapers in the wake of the Iraq War.

Apart from that, Tor encryption is known to have back-doors for the US government and allied corporations. It was likely pushed for just that reason, by Applebaum and his colleague at Wikileaks, Daniel Domscheit-Berg, an employee of Microsoft, a corporation with close government ties.

7. While in the University, Scholl and her circle started passing out pamphlets encouraging Germans to engage in passive resistance to Nazism. Passive resistance is completely consistent with the Christian principles in which the White Rose believed.

7.

Snowden’s only political engagement was to vote for Barack Obama in 2008 and then donate $500 to Ron Paul in 2012.

He left the CIA not because he had any differences of opinion about their mission or modus operandi.

He left to become a private contractor with Booz Allen Hamilton, a lucrative defense contractor, acquired by the Carlyle Group at a cost of $1 billion and a probable profit of $3 billion.

Booz Allen makes a healthy profit from promoting the security state. Edward was making money off of that.

Contractors of the state are paid a whole lot more than employees and have to conform to no rules. I need not remind you that the whole heart of the torture scandal of Abu Ghraib was the nexus of private contractors and CIA – precisely where Snowden chose to position himself.

As a system administrator for all of 4 months  at Booz Allen Hamilton, Snowden was stationed in high-priced Hawaii at a salary of $200,000 (by his account) or $ $112,000 (according to his bosses). He passed out no pamphlets objecting to torture, war, propaganda, or anything else, as far as I know.

8. Sophie Scholl’s boyfriend was also a resistor, with whom she had long impassioned discussions about moral questions.

8. Snowden’s girlfriend Lindsay Mills is self-described as a “world-traveling pole dancing superhero,” language  that is not only juvenile but bears the marks of an intelligence creation. Nothing is as likely to get hits as much as a “sex angle” of some kind.

Remember the Assange story and Julian’s “reputation”?  Whether you consider it good or bad,  it is likely to be riveting to the mass of young self-styled rebels.

Snowden admits he had a very “comfortable” life with her. No earnest discussion of moral conundrums have come to light so far.

However, well before his emergence as a latter-day Gandhi in June of this year, Snowden did approach a film-maker in January 2013. That was Laura Poitras, who happened to have written about a more credible NSA whistle-blower William Binney. Poitras is a recipient of a MacArthur Foundation “genius” award. MacArthur is one of several foundations (including the Ford Foundation and the Rockefeller) known to collaborate with the CIA, according to Frances Stoner Saunders (Who Paid the Piper? The CIA and the Cultural Cold War).

Poitras’ film “Bin Laden’s Body Guard” was funded by the Guggenheim Fellowship and by the Rockefeller Foundation.

Poitras also just happens to be a board member of the Freedom of Press Foundation, along with Glenn Greenwald, and – surprise! – old faithful Daniel Ellsberg.  She has also been involved with “surveillance teach-ins” with Jacob Applebaum.

And while Greenwald asserts that Poitras’s harassment by Homeland Security (she was detained and questioned at the border on many occasions) was for no reason at all, The Weekly Standard (admittedly a neocon outfit) reports, credibly, that there was reason for it, because some soldiers allege that she had foreknowledge of an Iraqi ambush and didn’t warn American soldiers about it.

[This is not to endorse any harassment of Poitras on that account. It’s merely to demonstrate that there’s a lot more going on here than a rerun of The White Rose.]

The Freedom of Press Foundation, which strongly supports Manning and Assange, was formed only in 2012. On its website, it endorses wikileaks, truthout, and some new outfits that I’ll check up on as soon as I have time.

To a cursory eye, it looks like a recently cobbled together effort.

Meanwhile, just in case you miss the point, Greenwald has been pushing Snowden as a “hero” and “whistle-blower” on his prominent blog at the Guardian.

It’s much the same way he pushed Julian Assange from his blog at Salon, making sure to let you know that if you had any questions about St. Julian, this qualified you for public branding as a totalitarian.

More About Greenwald’s Questionable Blogger Ethics

From www.thepeople’sview.net come more interesting revelations substantiating my hunch that Mr. Greenwald, conscience of the nation-‘n-all, ain’t as spotlessly disinterested as he would have us believe, and, no, that undisclosed Cato gig is the not only reason to believe that.

“The very same Glenn Greenwald who is accusing the SEIU of trying to use OWS’ language (heaven forbid!) for their own purposes (which, as a union, just happens to be supporting working people), penned another column earlier last week trying to sell (and promote) winter gear for the OWS protesters being disbursed by the notorious Firedoglake. But of course, Greenwald fails to mention that he stands to financially gain from donations to FDL, as the treasurer of FDL’s PAC, Accountability Now, and his company, DMDM Enterprises, is used to taking money for “administrative expenses” from Accountability Now.

An examination of FEC reports shows that Greenwald’s DMDM Enterprises received more than $40,000 from FDL’s Accountability Now from 2008-2010, and of course, we have no idea how much more he has received as salary as Treasurer. (For those interested, yes, I have been working on a story on this with some help, and it keeps getting pushed back for different reasons – but expect a campaign finance story on Greenwald, Hamsher et al. to drop soon).”

Of course, this doesn’t mean I subscribe to the politics of the blog on which this tidbit has been served up. But one doesn’t have to be an Obamite to worry about Greenwald.  Remember, he was also one of the strongest supporters of Julian Assange…which about says it all.

Trumpet-Blower Snowden Versus Whistle-Blower Binney….

The original NSA whistle-blower was William Binney (hat-tip to Scott Creighton).:

“Long before Edward the Great made his plans, all of this was exposed on international television on RT by another NSA whistle-blower, William Binney, former NSA crypto-mathematician, who apparently didn’t lie about his background… and where was the indignation? Where were all the Stand with Willy movements?

Where was FACEBOOK on this one? Where was Reddit?

He named the Narus devises, said they were sweeping up EVERYTHING from EVERYONE so it could be used in the future if the powers that be ended up not liking you are your particular agenda.”

One might ask the same question about Anna Hazare (in India). Where was his anti-corruption movement without Facebook? And what happened to Baba Ramdev, the man who was really leading an anti-corruption movement when Western intel decided it needed to step in and take control of the movement, as it has done in so many instances of revolution?

Mind you, I usually like what Greenwald has to say, even as I have been suspicious for a long time about why he says it and have come to distrust his version of controversial events (say, on the Bradley Manning case); noticed his tendency to lift other people’s ideas (mine included); his tendency to hyperbole and misrepresentation); and his failure to disclose his past ties to the Koch-funded Cato Institute when it was ethical to do so.

Look at his enemies, I told myself, biting my lip and unburdening myself only to the one or two others who were equally skeptical of the verbose civil libertarian….. like Douglas Valentine.

Only after conscientious independent activists like Mr. Creighton at Willy Loman show up the Greenwald-Snowden act for the media event it is, does an establishment outlet admit the truth:

Business Insider now concedes what anyone with any knowledge about the matter already knows – that Snowden isn’t telling us anything new.

There have been NSA whistle-blowers before of far greater credibility, only the establishment wasn’t yet ready to give them any air time.

Business Insider:

“His [the NSA whistle-blower’s] name is William Binney, a 32-year veteran of the secretive agency, and one of the best codebreakers in NSA history — who appeared in an Aug. 2012 video shot by Laura Poitras for The New York Times.

Binney detailed a top-secret surveillance program called “Stellar Wind” — the scope of which had never been public — which tracked electronic activities, including phone calls, emails, banking, travel records, and social media, and then mapped them to collect “all the attributes that any individual has” in every type of activity and build a profile based on the data.

“So that now I can pull your entire life together from all those domains and map it out and show your entire life over time,” Binney said in the interview.

From The Times:

“The decision must have been made in September 2001,” Mr. Binney told me and the cinematographer Kirsten Johnson. “That’s when the equipment started coming in.” In this Op-Doc, Mr. Binney explains how the program he created for foreign intelligence gathering was turned inward on this country. He resigned over this in 2001 and began speaking out publicly in the last year.

Another whistleblower named Thomas Tamm — an official with the Justice Department — also came forward after uncovering the Bush administration’s secret authorizations to intercept emails and phone calls inside the U.S. without warrants.”

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/edward-snowdens-whistleblower-binney-2013-6#ixzz2VvibEwas

Meanwhile Greenwald, dubbed a second Jefferson by the hilariously obsequious EconomicPolicyJournal, manages to interview his hero Snowden, without calling him out even when he echoes Binney:

“The most important thing NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden has said comes at the end of his interview with Glenn Greenwald. In the final minutes of his interview he makes clear that the infrastructure is in place to bring tyranny onto the people of the United States. Only a switch has to be flipped, he correctly calls it, “turnkey tyranny.”

As one commentator at EPJ, Dan Lind, immediately noted, these were Binney’s words:

“Wired Magazine
“The NSA Is Building the Country’s Biggest Spy Center (Watch What You Say)”
by James Bamford
03.15.12
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/03/ff_nsadatacenter/all/1


Sitting in a restaurant not far from NSA headquarters, the place where he spent nearly 40 years of his life, [William] Binney held his thumb and forefinger close together. “We are, like, that far from a turnkey totalitarian state,” he says.”

This mimicry and repetition of key-phrases of dissidents is one way in which the establishment co-opts the energy and attention of potential supporters.

The mimicry muddies the narrative (who said what when), diverts attention to the establishment’s chosen sock-puppet rebels, and makes sure that the status-quo is not disturbed in ways that might actually challenge the power of the elites.

Edward Snow-Job? (Updated)

uPDATE (jUNE 15)

I reread my posts and think that I’m far too cavalier in my language about Ellsberg and Greenwald (although not Assange). I do NOT mean that Ellsberg was NOT  a whistle-blower. Of course, he was. And a brave one. I mean that he has since then seemed to be used to endorse establishment positions. His role, I believe, was part of a “limited hangout” for the establishment. To what extent he is actually complicit in that role, I don’t know. I give him the benefit of the doubt. The establishment has many means at its disposable to make people amenable to playing its game.  I should clarify, again, it is not Ellsberg himself, but the role he is allowed to play that I find suspicious.

Same goes for Greenwald. He may well believe in Snowden.  He may well have WANTED to believe. But, in my opinion, his bona fides have been used in this case.

ORIGINAL ARTICLE

More manufactured “dissent” and intelligence-funded “revelations” that everyone already knows endorsed by that lovable mouthpiece, Glenn Greenwald…whose general point of view I otherwise endorse.

Notice Snowden’s props for Ron Paul, whose credibility has already been compromised.

Snowden joins the tediously long list of intel-manufactured whistleblowers, from old faithful Daniel Ellsberg to such recent star-turns as Julian of the Rothschilds, Bradley what’s-it, Brandon Multi-level Silver Marketer Raub, Madman Kokesh, the Non-Pauls, and all the other entertaining props and faux revolutionaries of NWO theater…

From Willy Loman:

“Obviously, I stand by my original theory on all of this… it’s part of an elaborate scheme by the intelligence complex themselves to create unrest or at least the narrative of unrest prior to the summer of discontent in America. The “hero” whistle-blower is actually a career NSA agent, former CIA spook who trained to be Special Forces (unconventional warfare)

He is breathlessly revered by the Guardian as the next best thing to happen to democracy since Daniel Ellsberg and Bradley Manning yet what he “leaked” is well known to anyone paying attention over the past few years.

The paper describes him as having a bumper sticker on his laptop that reads “I support Online Rights: Electronic Frontier Foundation” as well as having a copy of Angler, the biography of former vice-president Dick Cheney sitting on his hotel bed. Oh, the duality of the guy. Does anyone wonder how he was working at the NSA and the CIA for a company like Booz Allen Hamilton with an Electronic Frontier Foundation bumper sticker on his laptop?

Glenn Greenwald’s secret whistle-blower has exposed himself for reasons yet unknown. Well, I’ll tell you one of the reasons, they got sick of Greenwald doing all those interviews, now they got “their guy” front and center to take the spotlight off Glenn.

His name is Edward Snowden and by his own account he is a very high-paid employee of NSA contractor Booz Allen Hamilton. He’s been with them for at least 4 years working at the NSA facility in Hawaii.

According to a Guardian article which revealed his name, the guy is now hiding out in Hong Kong, which he readily offers up himself, in a “nice” hotel, sitting in his room with some kind of blanket hood over his head and laptop.

He claims he doesn’t want to live in a world like this… but it didn’t seem to bother him for 4 years while he was raking in $200,000 a year living like a king in Hawaii with his girlfriend.

The Guardian story is full of praise of this guy and they make sure to tell you to consider him a hero. Here’s our new hero’s background:

“In 2003, he enlisted in the US army and began a training program to join the Special Forces.”

“After that, he got his first job in an NSA facility, working as a security guard for one of the agency’s covert facilities at the University of Maryland. From there, he went to the CIA, where he worked on IT security. His understanding of the internet and his talent for computer programming enabled him to rise fairly quickly for someone who lacked even a high school diploma.

By 2007, the CIA stationed him with diplomatic cover in Geneva, Switzerland. His responsibility for maintaining computer network security meant he had clearance to access a wide array of classified documents.”

“He left the CIA in 2009 in order to take his first job working for a private contractor that assigned him to a functioning NSA facility, stationed on a military base in Japan” Guardian

Aside from the obvious sticky sweet nature of the Guardian article and the ham-handed props they adorned his hotel room with, he does give a few clues as to both his where-abouts and his mission:

“On May 20, he boarded a flight to Hong Kong, where he has remained ever since.”

“It is a plush hotel and, what with eating meals in his room too, he has run up big bills.”

“”We have got a CIA station just up the road – the consulate here in Hong Kong – and I am sure they are going to be busy for the next week. And that is a concern I will live with for the rest of my life, however long that happens to be.””  Guardian

So he’s in a plush hotel right up the road from the CIA station in Hong Kong “running up bills” on his credit card. That shouldn’t take the CIA or the NSA or ANYONE more than a few minutes with Google to figure out where he is.

Notice something else… MAY 20th

How does that factor into what I wrote the other day?

http://willyloman.wordpress.com/2013/06/09/manufactured-hero-the-nsa-whistleblower-exposed-as-career-nsa-cia-special-forces-trained-agent/

See also, this second Loman piece describing Facebook censorship of his article.

Rajat Gupta Trial: Nonsense sentence by Rakoff

So Rajat Gupta gets two years in the Federal penitentiary for gossiping about Goldman with a close associate.

Let me recount the ways in which this is a confused sentence.

If, as Judge Rakoff contends, what Gupta did was “disgusting” and a horrendous crime, then obviously two years is far too light a sentence. I mean, you can go to jail that long for a few traffic offenses or getting caught with some pot, neither of which any reasonable person would call depraved or “disgusting” behavior.

By giving Gupta only two years, Rakoff tacitly conceded that what Gupta did wasn’t really all that big a deal at all. He conceded that all the verbiage of outrage and offense was only so much moral puffery for the Occupy crowd, for whom a rich man is always guilty as charged.

And to be foreign and rich, now that really is a capital offense.

Let’s be honest.

What Bernie Madoff did was disgusting. What Job Corzine did, what Hank Paulson did, what Alan Stanford did – they were swindles and are disgusting.

What Gupta did (if he did do it) was something too trivial for this hooplah.

Except that it was an officer of a publicly-traded company who profited from the trading, you’ll say.

Except that he didn’t profit, I’ll reply.

And we don’t know if the guy even knew his good buddy Raj was trading on his words.

So, then, what we’re left with is a guy who said something to some other guy about something that was highly “confidential” but still being discussed at water-coolers round the country, a tip from which at least one Goldman board member, the very very waspy Byron Trott, later profited.

That sort of profiting, you’d think, would be insider-trading too, except, for some reason it isn’t. It never is when very very waspy people with monosyllabic Saxon names and Roman numerals behind them do it.

Everyone was talking about it.  Other Goldman board members were talking among themselves about it. How secret could it have been?

At least one of those board members, and maybe two or three, were known to talk about Goldman affairs outside school.

So Gupta wasn’t alone in what he did.

And what he did isn’t even regarded as a crime by dozens of learned economists from Milton Friedman to Murray Rothbard.

Over here, I am not a learned economist, so I can think straight, and sure, gassing about confidential stuff when you have a fiduciary responsibility to keep your lips zipped, is clearly unethical, and an infraction deserving a penalty.

But it’s an infraction against the folks to whom you owe that responsibility.

That would be Goldman Sachs.

Whose middle name, I can confidently assert, is not fiduciary responsibility.

In fact, Goldman Sachs’ business model for some decades has been insider-trading.

That is roughly what the commodity and bond business is built on.

At notorious gold trading firm J. Aron, Lloyd Blankfein, Gupta’s principal nemesis on the witness stand, was not famous for either fiduciary responsibility or squeaky clean ethics.

Neither was Gary Cohn, his bosom buddy.

In fact, for Blankfein to finger Gupta on the stand, is like Ted Bundy giving testimony against Shelly the Shoplifter.

It would be hilarious, except that it’s not. It’s pathetic and, yes, disgusting.

If Gupta broke Goldman’s rules, Goldman should be hauling him over the coals. Since when is it the government’s job to police Goldman’s corporate culture?

As for the idea that Gupta somehow cheated Goldman public shareholders, that too is laughable. There is good evidence to show that insider trading actually profits non-insider buyers. And non-insider sellers are surely selling voluntarily, are they not? No one puts a gun to their heads to do it, right?

What’s more, there’s nothing to show that having insider information leads to a successful trade. Many’s the punter who’s lost his shirt over what he took to be a sure thing.

Besides all that, why should anyone give a rat’s ass about Goldman shareholders?

How super-ethical can any shareholder in Goldman Sachs be, in the first place? Here’s a company so dirty it’s a by-word in the markets, yet you have investors that want to hold directors to such high standards  quite content to sink their money into this cess-pool.

Yeah. What a bunch of angels.

If Gupta really did do something that ripped off Goldman Sachs and its “little investors,” I for one would pin a gold medal on him.

The “little investors” knew that by buying Goldman they were subsidizing its graft and crime. But it didn’t matter, so long as they made money.

Why is that any less unethical than trading against Goldman?

In my book, it’s worse. Anyone who helped this firm, was profiting from its criminal actions and fueling them. Anyone who hurt it, was actually doing a public service.

I say, everyone who bought Goldman shares enabled its sleaze.  And profited from its insider-trading. And Goldman’s insider trading was of a scale that makes Raj’s Galleon look like the good ship Lollypop.

If Gupta truly did do something that was horrendous – say, defraud a company – he deserved ten years.

Personally, I think he deserves at least five for ever working for an organization like Goldman Sachs. Directing Goldman or McKinsey is not the hall mark of a man of integrity in my book. Resigning from them would have been. But the morality of crony capitalism not what’s at issue here, is it? If it is, then Bill Gates, Larry Page, Mark Zuckerberg and several thousands of other CEOs should be joining Gupta in the pokey.

The two years Rajat Gupta got shows that the whole trial was a contemptible charade and the figure at the center of it only a scapegoat to appease a crowd slavering for blood.

Rajat Gupta was right not to grovel.

He should chalk this down as experience, and then put up a real fight:

1. Refuse to reimburse Goldman

2. Appeal Rakoff’s absurd rulings.

3. Get his rich friends to help him run the biggest investigation possible into Goldman Sachs and its cronies.

4.  With his gold-plated Rolodex, he can sound out his government and corporate contacts to coordinate an investigation across the world. We have only seen the tip of the iceberg that is Government Sachs.

5. Finally, Gupta should counter-sue Sachs and its flunkies under international racketeering laws.

Rajat Gupta was an “uncle” to the son of his nemesis

Even the son of Anil Kumar, the man who “cooperated” to put Rajat Gupta in jail, thinks highly of “Uncle” Rajat.

Here’s a big selection of letters written in support of Rajat Gupta, from Bill Gates and Mukesh Ambani, to his daughters and wife.

The most interesting part for me was the section in Mrs. Gupta’s letter where she describes Goldman Sachs’ interactions with Gupta. Goldman CEO Lloyd Blankfein first wanted to kick Gupta out for wanting to consult for KKR (which other Goldmanites were doing).

Then, when GS got into trouble, Blankfein wanted him back.

Gupta – stupidly – went back, trying to be loyal to them.

They rewarded him for that loyalty by setting him up as a patsy when the sharks at the DOJ began circling.

Gupta -again, foolishly – trusted the system. The system did what it usually does. Chewed up the innocent (at least, relatively innocent) and rewarded the unscrupulous and powerful.

Blankfein hired a PR firm, took up gay rights activism, and came out smelling, if not like a rose, at least, somewhat less like a sewer.

Dobelli and Taleb discuss what makes for happiness

I saw this at Nassim Taleb’s “Fooled by Randomness” site:

Dobelli [Lucerne, Switzerland] Can you increase happiness by knowing your cognitive errors (and by
avoiding them)?

(A side note: I believe that happiness is not equal to the absence of disaster – or vice versa. It’s not a linear opposite. The two properties (happiness and unhappiness) are somehow correlated, but in a strange way. But that’s for the happiness researchers to figure out, for the Dan Gilbert types.)

Taleb [New York] Let me repeat my statement about small mistakes. You will not increase happiness by
increasing cognitive fitness and rationality. Happiness requires some wisdom about big things, but childishness with the small things.

Comment:

Rolf Dobelli, one of the genuinely brilliant minds of the business world, has shown himself at home in philosophy, fiction, business, and finance.

He has a great book out called “The Art of  Thinking Clearly” where I his talent for pithy aphorisms and philosophical analysis is, once again, on display.

I hope to read the book soon.  Any book that promises to make the task of managing the “monkey mind” easier has to be at the top of my “to do” list.

Here’s a brief account of the book, which has sold an amazing 500,000 copies and been translated into 25 languages.

Modest, yet outgoing,  with the intellectual equipment of a scholar and the conviviality of the bon-vivant, Dr. Dobelli also manages to be an approachable nice guy, a creature apparently found in more abundance in Switzerland than in certain other geographical locations.

Maybe his next book should be “The Art of Being a Good Guy.”

Seems like that would fill a huge vacuum, say, around the DC beltway and hinterland.

Dobelli’s comment about happiness is insightful. Happiness is not unrelated to being free of unhappiness, as he points out. But the two are by no means mutually exclusive, either.  There is asymmetry in the correlation.  It is non-linear.

Meanwhile, Taleb’s assessment also struck home with me.

The “childish small things” I fancy are animals and… soft toys.

I “rescued” a brown and white fluffy rabbit the other day, left right on top of the dumpster, hardly a stain on his synthetic fur, looking all forlorn, one ear up and one down, his nylon whiskers askew.

Wetted down with a damp towel and soap, then sun-dried,  he now has pride of place among the silent muses and “angels” I keep around me to guard that space of joy that no circumstance in life will ever take from me again.

Soft toys embody my love of story-telling, carried over from an idyllic childhood filled with books, music, imaginative play, and loving family. Even thinking back to it brings back a smile to my face, even in the blackest mood.

As a child, I would go to bed, telling stories to anyone who would listen, a patient, half-asleep sib or my weary parents, if I was lucky.

Otherwise, I had to content myself with the menagerie of teddy bears, giraffes,  tinker-bells, baby elephants, dolls, and stuffed dogs that were my imaginary playmates and the compliant actors in the tableaux I staged across my bedroom with pillows and sheets for building blocks.

I’ve no doubt anyone who came across me today, in one of my ventriloquist moods, animating a toy rabbit, would think I was crazy to enjoy make-believe at this age.

But, in fact, the older I get, the more I like fantasy, children’s stories, and theater.  There seems to be something of the gods in these things.

When I look out the window, on the other hand, all I see is that trivial, vulgar thing called, for some inexplicable reason, “real life” ….and, along with it, too many stunted beings who shrink with each passing second, yet glory in being called “grown ups.”

NBC video: Straining at gnats and swallowing camels

Talk about straining at gnats and swallowing camels.

While pedo-rape-romance “Fifty Shades” has got its author a spot on the 100 most influential people in the world, in Walmart and on every magazine and news outlet, without much criticism, NBC has pulled a video of female athletes at the London Olympics because of  alleged “porny” content.

If you think showing athletes in admittedly skimpy outfits doing what they do in slow-motion with music behind is “porny,” by today’s standards, you must come from another planet.

Or, perhaps there’s an agenda?  NBC is after all the major media.

Is this a way to defuse criticism about the pornification of culture? Concede the issue where it’s non-existent, so you one can let the real offenders fly under the radar?

Sort of like celebrating Ramadan in the White House but toning down the Christian accoutrements, on one hand, while slyly promoting anti-Muslim rhetoric and psyops on the other.