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Robocop Contract


CTV Channel 12 beams first PNTV broadcast to the sheeple

Let the deprogramming begin!

by John Lee
Pirate News
November 10, 2005

SEPTEMBER 911 SURPRISE VIDEO ARCHIVE

PNTV's first feature event, the shockumentary miniseries September 911 Surprise, is finally unleashed upon the sleeping masses, after 12 months of non-stop production. As uncensored All-American news, it's only allowed a Late Night time slot after midnight on Friday or Saturday. This is what patriotic America TV is supposed to look like, if the international Media Mafia were banned from USA.

Featuring the music video madness of Hollywood director John Lee, winner "Best Music Video" at Los Angeles Music Awards in 2005. Original music by John Lee with Counter Coup, Country Bumpkins and the Hogs, Immortal Technique with Wayne & Wax.

September 911 Surprise - Episode 1 now enters rotation schedule on CTV Channel 12. Watch CTV for the next installment of this shocking miniseries, September 911 Surprise - Episode 2.

Free video downloads from PNTV Broadcast 1:

September 911 Surprise - Episode 1

Also included:

Special Report - Robocop Spy Cam Scam


City of Knoxville Municipal Corporation says 'FUCK YOU' to Knoxville, Knox County, Tennessee and USA by outsourcing $100-million illegal Robocop Spy Cam contract to Australia and terrorist British Empire in violation of National Security Act

KNS and City Council lie to sheeple about nationality of REDflex Robocops

WARNING: Jew Karl Marx wrote the Communist Manifesto while living in London, England, for the Jewish banksters who now own the mortgages on every bankrupt "government" on Earth, including USA. Australia, a former prison colony of white slaves, is part of the British Commonwealth of over 50 nations, which is owned by the German Queen of England. "REDflex" Robocops is synonymous with RED Communism!

"Government control of Communications and Transportation."
-Communist Manifesto, 6th Plank, written by Karl Marx in London, England

Knoxville Traffic Cams - Just click on the to see a live camera view of traffic conditions. Click and hold your mouse down to move the map around. Courtesy of the Tennesse Department of Transportation.

"You will be happy to learn that the former head of the KGB (the secret police of the former Soviet Union), General Yevgeni Primakov, has been hired as a consultant by the US Department of Homeland Security."
-Al Martin, AlMartinRaw.com, Behind the Sceenes in the Beltway, "Get Ready for the USSA (The United Soviet States of America)," March 17, 2003

PNTV producer John Lee was unable to attend the City Council meeting for First Reading of its new multimillion-dollar tax increase contract for its illegal Robocop Spy Cam Scam, due to his attendance to accept Hollywood's award for Best Music Video of 2005. Instead, PNTV shall replay John Lee's protected speech to Knoxville City Council, when it originally passed its illegal Robocop Spy Cam Scam ordinance in 2005. Lee's footnoted lecture to Gangsta Gov't shall now be replayed on a regular basis on CATV, in its uncensored Late Night weekend time slot. The contract Resolution is not enacted until after its Second Reading.

"A resolution authorizing the Mayor to to execute and agreement with REDflex Traffic Systems Inc. for an automated red-light enforcement system to monitor, identify AND ENFORCE red light violations for certain intersections within the City of Knoxville. (Requested by Police Department.)"
City Council Agenda, First Reading, Resolution 11 E, November 8, 2005

"Knoxville City Council approved a contract Tuesday that will allow a private company to operate automated traffic enforcement cameras at intersections. The 6-3 vote came after extensive discussion about the proposed system's effectiveness, how best to distribute police resources and the wisdom of using a private corporation to help catch traffic violators. Once the system is implemented by Redflex Traffic Systems, the footage collected by the cameras will be reviewed by Knoxville Police Department officers who will make a determination as to whether citations will be issued, according to KPD officials. The three council members who opposed the measure, Joe Bailey, Steve Hall and Joe Hultquist, voiced concerns over a lack of conclusive data from other cities with Arizona-based Redflex contracts about the system's effectiveness. 'Where's the proof, where's the evidence?' Bailey asked. 'There's just so many unanswered questions.' Joe Bryson, however, described the proposal as 'the wrong thing at the wrong time' and said that many studies have shown that traffic crashes, injuries and insurance premiums have gone up in cities that adopted the Redflex system. 'Redflex is a troubled company hoping to make a quick buck here,' he said. Greg 'Lumpy' Lambert said the proposal was essentially a way 'to make a multinational corporation some money. It's not a good idea to turn over law enforcement authority to private companies,' he said."
-J.J. Stambaugh, Knoxville News-Sentinel, "Traffic cameras are a go - Council OKs pact to allow private firm to operate devices," November 9, 2005

"Over the last decade, the Redflex Holdings Group has established itself as a world leader in traffic management, road safety, defence, transport, security and communications products. Redflex Holdings consists of two distinct but complementary companies; Redflex Communications Systems and Redflex Traffic Systems. Each of the Redflex companies provides customers with technologically advanced solutions specifically tailored to meet their individual requirements. The Group is based in South Melbourne, Victoria, where it runs its own systems engineering operation as well as complex system integration and research and development programs. An in-house team of more than 135 professional engineers is supported by experienced managerial, financial and administrative personnel. Redflex Holdings employs more than 270 people in Australia and the USA, with offices and representatives located throughout the world. Redflex Holdings Ltd was listed on the Australian Stock Exchange in January 1997."
-REDflex Holdings Group, AUSTRALIA

"An Arizona-based company is due to receive the bulk of any revenues collected from its automated traffic enforcement cameras, according to the terms of its proposed contract with the city of Knoxville. The three-year agreement with Redflex Traffic Systems, scheduled for City Council members' consideration Tuesday, does specify that all camera-captured driving violations will be verified at the Knoxville Police Department's 'sole discretion.' Beyond that, however, the city should have little responsibility other than collecting its share of each $50 ticket. Redflex, which will retain ownership of all the equipment, would handle all operations and maintenance of the digital camera system at 15 city intersections. Under the contract terms, Redflex would receive 85 percent of all revenue generated each month, up to $4, 500 from each intersection. Any more monthly revenues from a particular site would be split 50-50 between the vendor and the city. Redflex, which was chosen by a city-appointed committee from among six companies' proposals, also would be entitled to 20 percent of all late fees received for delinquent fines. The selection committee members included KPD Deputy Chief Don Green, city traffic signal engineer Ernie Pierce, City Council member Marilyn Roddy, and Jim York, the city's deputy finance director. According to the company's Web site, Redflex is the largest provider of digital photo enforcement services in North America."
-Hayes Kickman, Knoxville News-Sentinel, "Contract for traffic cameras set for review - Proposed deal would give bulk of revenue to system manufacturer," October 2, 2005

RESOLUTION: REDFLEX TRAFFIC SYSTEMS, INC. – (REDLIGHT CAMERAS)

A Resolution authorizing the Mayor to execute an agreement with Redflex Traffic Systems, Inc. for an automated red light enforcement system to monitor, identify and enforce red light violations for certain intersections located within the City of Knoxville, (Requested by Police Department), was presented to Council for consideration.

Councilmember Pelot made a motion to approve the resolution. Councilmember Becker seconded the motion.

Councilmember Becker made the following comments and amendment:

“I move to amend Resolution 11E to add an additional “Whereas” clause which will be inserted as the third “Whereas” clause and which will read:

WHEREAS, before the completion of the first year and the second year of operation of the contract, the Council wishes to receive a report from the administration as to the operation of the system; and

I would also like the operative section of the Resolution to be amended so as to renumber the current Section 2 to Section 3 and to add a new Section 2 which will read as follows:

SECTION 2: Prior to the end of the first anniversary and the second anniversary of the contract, the Mayor, through his duly appointed representatives, shall Furnish to the member of the City Council a report on the operation of the Automated red light enforcement system.

Vice-Mayor Brown and Councilmember Frost seconded the motion to amend. Discussion on the motion ensued with the following persons addressing the matter: Councilmember Becker; Councilmember Frost; Vice-Mayor Brown; Councilmember Woodhull; Charles Swanson, City Council Attorney; Police Chief Owen; Councilmember Hultquist; Morris Kizer, Law Director.

By unanimous voice vote the motion to approve the amendment carried. The amendment was adopted.

Council suspended the rules to allow up to five persons per side to speak for five minutes each.

Discussion ensued with the following persons addressing the resolution: Bill Stack, 916 Wesley Road, representing Wesley Neighborhood Association, in favor of resolution; Carole Allen, 2129 Spence Place, in favor of resolution; Melinda Klar, 1918 Penwood, in favor of resolution; Deb Moppin, 415 Bellmeade Drive, in favor of resolution; Chief Don Greene, KPD, in favor of resolution; David Buckwalter, 813 Maplehurst Cr., in opposition to resolution; Joe Bryson, in opposition; Greg Lambert, 7001 Clinton Highway, in opposition; Oscar “Poor Boy” Brown, 3707 Skyline Drive, in opposition; Bryan Moneyhun, 5512 Dogwood Road, in opposition; Gordon Catlett gave rebuttal in favor of resolution. Councilmembers Hultquist, Bailey, Hall, Becker, Woodhull, Frost, Brown and Pelot addressed the resolution.

Upon roll call on the original motion to approve the resolution, as amended, City Council voted as follows: Councilmembers Becker, Brown, Frost, Pelot Roddy and Woodhull voted “Aye.” Councilmembers Bailey, Hall and Hultquist voted “Nay.” The motion carried. The printed resolution can be found attached to these minutes as Resolution No. R-397-05.
Knoxville City Council Minutes, November 8, 2005

"It is extremely easy to beat this type of ticket in court. Your easiest defense is to simply throw the ticket away. If it does not come with a return receipt that requires a signature, there is no proof that you actually got the ticket and they cannot prosecute you on that. What the legal system wants you to do is just send in the fine and not ask any questions. This can be a big money maker for some communities. One other form of defense to utilize on your behalf is the fact that when you are accused in court you must be faced by your accuser. Obviously the computer cannot appear in court as a defense method for the prosecution. Also, you do not have to identify yourself as the driver of the vehicle because it would violate your sixth amendment rights against self incrimination."
-Norman G. Fernandez, attorney at law, and Jes Beard, attorney at law in Chattanooga, Tennessee, JesBeard.com, "How to Beat a Speeding Ticket - Photo RADAR"

AUS(OZ)TRALIA - "Chinese scientists are the unlikely heroes of a New South Wales speeding case which saw a Sydney magistrate dismiss the charge against an alleged speed merchant because the Roads and Traffic Authority (RTA) could not prove that its vital photographic evidence was 'secure', news.com.au reports. At the centre of the brouhaha lies the MD5 algorithm, used to "store the time, date, place, numberplate and speed of cars caught on camera", as smh.com.au explains MD5 is intended to safeguard against tampering with this information by turning it into a 128-bit sequence of digits. However, the chaps from the China's Shandong University proved it was possible to alter the data and retain the same code, ie, the RTA could theoretically change, for example, the car's speed without any evidence of tampering. The whole thing came to a head when lawyer Denis Miralis used this possible abuse against the RTA in the case of a man allegedly caught speeding in a school zone last November. In June, Magistrate Lawrence Lawson gave the RTA eight weeks to produce an expert willing to testify that the photos had not been doctored. When the RTA failed, Lawson threw out the case and awarded the defendant AU$3,300 costs. Miralis immediately demanded an enquiry into all NSW's 110 speed cameras, declaring: 'The integrity of all speed camera offences has been thrown into serious doubt and it appears that the RTA is unable to prove any contested speed camera matter because of a lack of admissible evidence.' Unsurprisingly, the NSW Law Society admitted the judgment might 'open the doors for other drivers caught by speed cameras to mount the same defence'."
-Lester Haines, , "Chinese boffins provoke Oz speed camera kerfuffle - Case binned after image algorithm cracked," 11 August 2005

Robert's Rules of Order - online rules for cussing out city council

Survival Tips on Robert's Rules of Order

If you wish to defeat, delay, or weaken a motion that you are against, you need to know when you can interrupt the speaker with the precise modification or motion ...

  1. To prevent the assembly from adopting the motion;
  2. To assist the maker of the motion with the phrasing of the motion, so that it is even more confusing, less defendable, or less appealing;
  3. To amend the motion to an extent that not even the maker of the motion will vote for its approval;
  4. To prolong the debate and to confuse the issue until someone moves to Postpone Indefinitely or Calls for the Orders of the Day;
  5. To disrupt the proceedings by introducing motions which can interrupt a speaker, without requiring a second, and without allowing debate, nor requiring a vote.

The result is that you can defeat a motion, even when the majority is in favor of the motion.

"Using highly accurate in-ground or radar speed measurement technologies, REDFLEXred™ and REDFLEXspeed™ fixed site systems provide enforcement of both red light and speed violations during the red signal phase. During the amber and green signal phases, the systems act as 24 hour unmanned speed cameras, capturing speed violations, with evidentially supportive video clips. REDFLEXspeed™ camera systems provide 24hr fixed site speed enforcement or can be installed as mobile systems in law enforcement vehicles or on a tripod at the roadside. REDFLEXtoll™ photo enforcement systems for toll violation enforcement applications are designed to integrate with Redflex processing systems or the customer's own systems. SMARTCAm™'s leading edge technology, combined with sophisticated image caching and OCR technologies, ensures that REDFLEXtoll™ meets all the requirements of free-flow toll operations."
-RoadTraffic-Technology.com, REDflex Traffic Systems

King of Spain seizes all Texas streets and highways for GPS toll road taxation-by-the-mile

TexasTollParty.com
2005

AUSTIN, TEXAS - Austin residents face $4,000/year wheel tax for driving across town! The first freeway tolling authority in Texas now estimates 44 to 64 cents per mile after they promised 12 cents per mile in early 2004! "Double Tax Tolls" are public freeways funded with our tax dollars to create a revenue-generating machine that will shift ALL our freeways to tollways. Privatizing and tolling our freeways will cause more traffic congestion on frontage roads with stop lights for those that can't or won't pay the $5 to $15 toll tax to go anywhere. Perry says it's a local decision, while local officials say the Gov. made them do it. The blame game is over. All the looters must go. Not one freeway has never been tolled in the history of our country. The toll authorities throughout Texas, otherwise known as Regional Mobility Authorities (RMA), are a new bureaucracy created to administer a whole NEW TAX on Texas families as they drive to work, school and shop. Unelected, unaccountable RMA's will set the toll rates for freeways we've already paid for. This is a clear case of taxation without representation.

Video clip - Austin Toll Party's Tunes not Tolls Benefit Concert, including the legendary Jimmy Vaughn. Alex Jones of Infowars.com, PrisonPlanet.com and WBCR 1470am in Alcoa Tennessee introduces Jimmy who then performs a special 'No Tolls' blues tune for an appreciative and enthusiastic crowd of supporters.

"It opens the door to open-ended new taxation that will amount to the largest tax increase in Texas History."
- Lyle Larson, Bexar County Commissioner

"CATV and internet are Weapons of Mass Instruction."
-John Lee, executive producer, Pirate News TV

New York City plans to charge $7 for midtown driving

NY Newday
Associated Press
November 11, 2005

"New York City is studying a plan to charge $7 to motorists who drive into Midtown during peak hours. The New York Times reports that the Partnership for New York City is engaged in a nine-month study of so-called 'congestion pricing'. Such a pricing model would theoretically lead more people to carpool or use mass transit, as well as help air quality and allow for speedier bus routes. Mayor Michael Bloomberg's spokesman told the paper it is 'not' on his second-term agenda. According to outlines of the plan, the 840,000 cars that enter Manhattan south of 60th Street on a weekday could get a $7 charge during peak hours. Cars that start and finish in that zone might pay a $4 charge. The outside Manhattan highways, such as the FDR Drive and Westside Highway would remain free. No toll barriers would be set up, but drivers could have to prepay the fees using vending machines or through the Internet. Video cameras would be used to match license plates with accounts. London has had 'success' with a similar pricing plan."

Gatso 2: rollout of UK's '24x7 vehicle movement database' begins

By John Lettice
The Register
15 November 2005

"A '24x7 national vehicle movement database' that logs everything on the UK's roads and retains the data for at least two years is now being built, according to an Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO) strategy document leaked to the Sunday Times. The system, which will use Automatic Number Plate Recognition (ANPR), and will be overseen from a control centre in Hendon, London, is a sort of 'Gatso 2' network, extending. enhancing and linking existing CCTV, ANPR and speedcam systems and databases. Which possibly explains why the sorcerer's apprentices in ACPO's tech section don't seem to have needed any kind of Parliamentary approval to begin the deployment of what promises to be one the most pervasive surveillance systems on earth. The control centre is intended to go live in April of next year, and is intended to be processing 50 million number plates a day by year end. ACPO national ANPR co-ordinator John Dean told the Sunday Times that fixed ANPR cameras already exist 'at strategic points' on every motorway in the UK, and that the intention was to have 'good nationwide coverage within the next 12 months.' According to ACPO roads policing head Meredydd Hughes, ANPR systems are planned every 400 yards along motorways, and a trial on the M42 near Birmingham will first be used to enforce variable speed limits, then to 'tackle more serious crime.' Hughes intends ANPR to go in whenever CCTV systems are installed, and cites the 'complete system' around Meadowhall shopping centre in Sheffield, where every vehicle is checked on the ANPR database, as the model. The primary aims claimed for the system are tackling untaxed and uninsured vehicles, stolen cars and the considerably broader one of 'denying criminals the use of the roads.' But unless the Times has got the spacing wrong, having one every quarter of a mile on motorways quite clearly means they'll be used to enforce speed limits as well, which would effectively make the current generation of Gatsos obsolete. Otherwise, checking a vehicle's tax and insurance status every 15 seconds or thereabouts would seem overkill. Civil liberties trainspotters will share The Register's pleasure at discovering that the Disclosure of Vehicle Insurance Regulations 2005 'were made under powers provided for in the Serious Organised Crime and Police Act 2005.' The seriousness of untaxed and uninsured vehicles is at the very least a matter of opinion, but 'organised'?"

Swiss driver attacks Gatso Robocop Spy Cam with pick-axe, then throws it off cliff

By Lester Haines
The Register
16th November 2005

"We know this will find favour with a large number of Reg readers: an enraged Swiss driver has smashed a speed camera off its mountings with a pick-axe after the Gatso snapped him doing 50mph in a 30mph zone in the Swiss alpine village of La Punt Chamues-ch. Not satified with that, he then ran the offending camera over with his car, drove it up a mountain and chucked it off a cliff, in the process successfully destroying both Gatso and film, Ananova reports."

Fatalities rise in speed camera hotspots - More Gatsos, more splatsos

By Lester Haines
The Register
19 July 2005

"The UK government recently suspended the deployment of more speeds cameras pending the outcome of of a University College London probe into whether they actually save lives. We have no doubt, then, that the investigators will be taking a close interest in the Motorcycle News revelation that road deaths have risen dramatically in those areas favoured with the most Gatsos. According to the MCN figures - joyfully reported in today's Sun - Hertfordshire saw a 24 per cent rise in speed camera numbers between 2003 and 2004. In the same period, road fatalities rose by 34 per cent. Likewise in Wiltshire, camera numbers went up 14 per cent, and those killed 22 per cent. In County Durham, meanwhile, a lone Gatso oversaw a 22 per cent drop in fatalities. The Sun is also delighted to report that in North Wales, where 'Gatso fan Chief Constable Richard Brunstrom has a league table for traffic cops', 56,247 speeding tickets were issued although this had little effect on safety, with an 18 per cent increase in road deaths. The reason? Simple, says safety expert Paul Smith: 'Crashes are avoided by making a safe plan based on what you see. Cameras move attention away from hazards to speedometers.”

Robocop speed camera clocks 81mph school bus terror run - Bus tachygraph proves bus top speed was actually 29mph

By Lester Haines
The Register
23 February 2005

"Two drivers who found themselves facing a stern slap on the wrist for allegedly attempting to break the land speed record on the Queen's Highway will not after all face the full weight of the law. In both cases, the offenders were able to prove that the speed camera evidence was flawed. Ipswich school bus driver Trevor Martin received a letter stating he would be prosecuted for driving his vehicle through a village at 81mph. The 43-year-old told UK tabloid the Mirror: 'I was completely shocked when I received the notice as driving is my livelihood. I knew a conviction for going 81mph in a 30mph limit would lead to me losing my licence and being suspended from work. It created a lot of stress and worry. My wife doesn't work and I bring the money in.' Luckily for Mr Martin, the bus's tachograph showed that he had in fact been doing 29mph. Speed camera operator Suffolk SafeCam said of the outrage: 'A combination of technical and human error was to blame. The camera wrongly recorded the speed - but a secondary check should have been made, measuring the speed of the vehicle against the white lines on the road. Unfortunately the operator did not complete the process fully and the matter was then automatically passed through the system'. All well and good, but as Martin pointed out: 'It would have been harder to prove my innocence in a car'. The Home Office, meanwhile, has launched an investigation into the use of long-range ProLaser III radar guns after Inverness Sheriff Court threw out a speeding prosecution against 34-year-old John MacGregor. The alleged speed junkie was clocked at 132mph - something which surprised both MacGregor and the court since his car has a flat-out top speed of 107mph. The ProLaser III is 'a handheld device to catch vehicles more than a mile away' which was 'designed to prevent drivers evading penalties by slowing down for roadside cameras then speeding up afterwards', the Daily Telegraph explains. Following the court's decision, MacGregor's lawyer called for all convictions based on ProLaser III readings to be reviewed. He further advised "motorists charged with speeding on evidence of the device to contest their case".

Robocop speed camera clocks motorist at 406 mph - Pretty good going in a Peugot

By Lester Haines
The Register
21 January 2004

"Since we Brits already hold the land speed record as a result of jet-powered Thrust SSC going supersonic in 1997, it seems only natural that we should attempt to be the first nation to break the sound barrier with a petrol-driven reciprocating-engined vehicle. That at least appears to be what sales manager Peter O’Flynn was attempting when clocked at an impressive 406mph (653kmph) by a speed camera in Cheshire. The achievement becomes even more admirable when we learn that Peter was at the time at the controls of a humble Peugot 406, until now thought to have a top speed of 129mph. Heroic Peter is modest about his tremendous effort, insisting: 'I rarely speed and it’s safe to say I’ll contest this.' Officials, however, say Mr O’Flynn still faces prosecution despite the obvious attack of insanity which afflicted it speed (sorry, safety) camera.n This superb piece of bureaucratic madness is just the latest chapter in the ongoing saga of the government's war against speeding motorists. We look forward with eager anticipation to police slapping the cuffs on the first OAP to reach hypersonic velocities in a battery-powered disabled buggy."

"When the Austrian government passed a law this year allowing police to install closed-circuit surveillance cameras in public spaces without a court order, the Austrian civil liberties group Quintessenz vowed to watch the watchers. Members of the organization worked out a way to intercept the camera images with an inexpensive, 1-GHz satellite receiver. The signal could then be descrambled using hardware designed to enhance copy-protected video as it's transferred from DVD to VHS tape. The Quintessenz activists then began figuring out how to blind the cameras with balloons, lasers and infrared devices. And, just for fun, the group created an anonymous surveillance system that uses face-recognition software to place a black stripe over the eyes of people whose images are recorded. Quintessenz members Adrian Dabrowski and Martin Slunksy presented their video-surveillance research at the 22nd annual Chaos Communication Congress here this week. Five hundred hackers jammed into a meeting room for a presentation that fit nicely into CCC's 2005 theme of "private investigations." Slunksy pointed out that searching for special strings in Google, such as axis-cgi, will return links that access internet-connected cameras around the world. Quintessenz developers entered these Google results into a database, analyzed the IP addresses and set up a website that gives users the ability to search by country or topic -- and then rate the cameras. "You can use this to see if you are being watched in your daily life," said Dabrowski. The conference, hosted by Germany's Chaos Computer Club, featured many discussions on data interception and pushing back the unprecedented onslaught of surveillance technologies. Even the Dutch, once known as hacker-friendly, politically progressive Europeans, are now fearful and demanding more cameras on their streets, said Rop Gonggrijp, founder of Dutch ISP Xs4All. Gonggrijp says the Dutch chief of police has announced the intention to store large amounts of surveillance data and mine it to determine who to pressure and question. "People are screaming for more control," said Gonggrijp. Dutch journalist Brenno de Winter warned that the European Parliament's support for data retention doesn't ensure security, and makes citizens vulnerable to automated traffic analysis of who communicates with whom through phone calls and internet connections. "What we have seen is a system that fails because we miss out on too much information, and even if we have all that information, it doesn't give us the right information and it is easy to circumvent," said de Winter. CCC member and security researcher Frank Rieger said hackers should provide secure communications for political and social movements and encourage the widespread use of anonymity technologies. He said people on the other side of the camera need to be laughed at and shamed. It must not be cool anymore to have access to this data," said Rieger, who argued that Western societies are becoming democratically legitimized police states ruled by an unaccountable elite. "We have enough technical knowledge to turn this around; let's expose them in public, publish everything we know about them and let them know how it feels to be under surveillance." The four-day Chaos Computer Congress is meeting near Alexanderplatz in the former East Berlin, where more than a half-million people rallied for political reform five days before the fall of the Berlin Wall. In his keynote address, Joichi Ito, general manager of international operations for Technorati, warned that the internet could itself become a walled-in network controlled by the International Telecommunication Union, Microsoft and telecommunications companies. Ito said these restrictions would stifle free speech and the ability to question authority without retribution. "An open network is more important for democracy than the right to bear arms and the right to vote," said Ito. "Voice is more important than votes."
-Ann Harrison, Wired News, "Hackers Rebel Against Spy Cams," December 30, 2005

"I don't trust government. And neither should our citizens."
-US Senator Larry Craig, United States Senate, Committee on the Judiciary, "DOJ Oversight: Terrorism and Other Topics", testimony by US Attorney General John Ashcroft re President George Bush Jr.'s Executive Orders to "legalize torture" of US citizens for ALL "crimes" including "victimless 'crimes'", and refusal to release that memo (felony Contempt of Congress), C-SPAN2, June 8, 2004

"Make yourselves sheep and the wolves will eat you."
-Benjamin Franklin


Kicking the Gangster Out of Gangster Government


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SEPTEMBER 911 SURPRISE
VIDEO ARCHIVE



Top Secret Community Access TeeVee in NOxVile Tennessee
Pirate News' September 911 Surprise as seen on Japanese TV on September 11, 2004, and
US Dept of Homeland Security's Popular Mechanics magazine, March 2005
Required reading for North Carolina Wesleyan College, Political Science 495 - 9/11 The Road to Tyranny, Spring 2005
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