Tuesday, October 30, 2007


For all that we see or seem,
is just a meme within a meme.


Fundamentalist atheist Richard Dawkins defines meme as a unit of cultural information. Simpler said: memes construct the consensus reality of groups of people. Any abstract concept can only be expressed as meme, my favorite linguistic tool of consciousness. A meme looks a bit like an idea, but while ideas are attributed to individuals, memes gain their importance by collective use.

A group of correlated memes builds a memeplex. For example, the bible and the organisations operating with reference to this book make up the christian memeplex. Memeplexes help organising knowledge about areas without personal exposure, as well as they help integrating individual experiences into the fabric of society.

Like genes, memes mutate and adapt to their environments. Their lifetime and rate of mutation exceeds that of individual human genes, and compares most likely best to viral characteristics. Memeplexes might morph significantly by exchanging large numbers of individual memes without compromising the pseudo integrity of the memeplex. Political parties and their connected ideological memeplexes demonstrate this memetic malleability on a regular basis.

Fruits of scientific research, spiritual experiences and group interactions shape memes and vice versa. Memes provide the mental glue for society, shared beliefs about the physical and metaphysical world. Memes sometimes try to describe truth and objective reality, but we have no proof that these memes (truth and objective reality) correlate to anything existing in nature.

Yet memes don't grow on trees, some of them have been carefully crafted to fulfill very specific purposes. Memes are transported by language and art. This makes media in its various occurrences to the primary maintainer and distributor of memes. Who ever controls the media, can influence the propagated memes.

In tribal societies, song, dance and paintings provided the medium for memetic survival. These societies have not met the memes of human superiority and ownership of nature, which made them in the eyes of British colonialists in need to be civilised. Parasitic strata of society like politicians and military require a wealthy society with a weakening dominating memeplex to establish the memetic and physical takeover of communities, counties, countries and finally the entire planet.

Control over humans derives from the design of social norms and their active promotion as dominating memeplex through the available media of any given time. Many people still believe that some sort of natural laws justify the hierarchical structures of societies. Shifting their perspective towards the understanding that hierarchical organisation is only one potential meme to structure society might ease the process of retransformation into a community based species.

Although every human is equipped to learn a language, most of us are rather consumers than creators of memes. The distribution of memes has for a long time been a privilege of the dominator class, which has adapted and morphed local memes into the dominator memeplex. However, even though the commoners had a little chance to act against the memetic domination throughout history, local memes could easily survive.

The time of memetic dominance has ended with the information age. The multitude of interpretations of individual group and events offer the freedom to chose your memetic make up, to customize your mental skin. Tear the matrix apart. Stop being deceived.

Knowledge and information appear overwhelming to some people, who have otherwise no problem recalling "facts" about the life of film, tv or sport celebrities. The concepts of memes offers a way to organise knowledge, the knowledge about ways to organise knowledge, and a way to remove mental debris systematically (plus maybe at least three other things I can't recall right now).

The memetic revolution follows along two pathways: deconstruction and construction. The language of the dominating classes perpetuates harmful memes, which need deconstruction. A comprehensible language for the functioning of the meme machine mind needs construction. Experience isn't the byproduct of life, it's the essence.



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Friday, October 26, 2007

Here is an important message from our Global Führer. He needs our support so that fish and human beings can finally coexist peacefully. May the Goddess convince everyone that hierarchies breed this kind of leadership.

Thursday, October 18, 2007

The terror attacks of September 11 2001 mark the beginning of a new era in global politics. The United States, sole global superpower after the collapse of the Soviet Union, did not act as global role model for the "End of History", like Francis Fukuyama suggested after the end of the Cold War, but was faced with a new enemy.

During the Cold War, the threat of Mutually Assured Destruction (MAD) by the use of nuclear weapons prevented the US and USSR from engaging in an open war, as such a war, even if done pre-emptively, was considered suicidal. Instead, both superpowers fought proxy wars in places like Vietnam, Korea and Afghanistan.

The Post-Cold-War era was far from being peaceful. The US engaged 1991 in wars in Iraq and 1999 in Kosovo, and suffered from terror attacks on the WTC in 1993 and on its embassies in Kenya and Tanzania in 1998. However, restrictions of civil liberties didn't take place after these attacks, at least not on a global scale.

That changed after the 911 attacks. 6 weeks later President Bush signed Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism Act of 2001, known as Patriot Act, and its western allies have enacted similar legislation since then. Canada and the UK introduced new anti-terrorism legislation at the end of 2001, the European Union passed similar legislation in 2003. Australia followed suit in 2004, just after the train bombings in Madrid.

However, the anti-terrorism laws failed to act as deterrent. Terror attacks happened in Bali in 2002 and 2005, in Madrid 2004, in London 2005 and in Mumbai 2006. The icon of 21st century terrorism, Osama Bin Laden, has not been captured, but numerous people ended up in dubious prisons like Guantanamo Bay as terror suspects, without the presumption of innocence or legal representation.

The anti-terror legislation does not only affect terror suspects, but all citizens. Security checks at airports have increased, several countries plan to introduce ID cards with biometrical information, people have been banned from boarding planes for expressing their opinion by wearing t-shirts with political messages.

Yet some consequences are less palpable. Surveillance has been made much easier and CCTV camera became ubiquitous in public spaces. The increased security measures require more funding, so that more taxpayer's money is spend on the war on terror. This essay evaluates the phenomenon of 21st century terrorism, the reaction of state actors to it and the consequences for civil liberties.


Terrorism is not a new strategy, yet the scale of the 911 attacks is certainly unprecedented. The images of destruction and the high number of casualties reminded of war, brought by global communication networks to living rooms all across the planet. Although wars in the traditional meaning involve state actors, the US administration considered the terror attacks as an act of war and reacted accordingly.

Five days after 911 President Bush said:
"As I said yesterday, people have declared war on America, and they have made a terrible mistake, because this is a fabulous country. … This is a new kind of -- a new kind of evil. …. This crusade, this war on terrorism is going to take a while."


The American president kept his promise, and being a neo-conservative (realist) he waged two traditional wars that still linger on. Afghanistan was invaded on October 5 2001, three weeks before the Patriot Act was signed, and the Iraq invasion began on March 20 2002.

Although these wars were announced as part of the Global War On Terror, they fit into the strategies of neo-conservatives in the US which were devised well before 911. The neo-conservative think tank Project for a New American Century (PNAC), founded in 1997, urged President Clinton 1998 in an open letter to complete the unfinished business in Iraq and to impose a regime change.

Ten out of 18 signatories of this open letter became part of the Bush administration, but their influence did not end there. PNAC released in 2000 the strategy paper Rebuilding America's Defenses, which stresses the importance of increasing the US' influence in Central Asia and the Middle East, maintaining America's unique position as a dominant military power, the need for further militarisation and pre-emptive action.

However, by the time the document was released, threats like terrorism and rogue states were not considered as grave danger for the US, which could justify a massive increase in military spending.
„[T]he process of transformation, even if it brings revolutionary change, is likely to be a long one, absent some catastrophic and catalyzing event – like a new Pearl Harbor".

The "new Pearl Harbor" happened on September 11 2001, and consequently key issues of Rebuilding America's Defenses like unilateralism, pre-emptive warfare and increase in military spending, became part of President Bush's National Security Strategy.

Especially the war in Iraq, a unilateral move of the US without legitimation from the United Nations Security Council, has raised a lot of criticism. More Americans have been killed in Iraq than on 911, and the torture affair of Abu Ghraib has tainted the US administration's claim to protect human rights.

With the Military Commisions Act of 2006 the US introduced the concept of illegal enemy combatant, a legal construct that denies suspects habeas corpus, allows for indefinite detention and denies the right of compensation for those who were held in error.

According to President Bush, the war on terror requires the need to arbitrarily detain people to CIA prisons outside the US, and withhold their basic human rights. However, two basic questions about global terrorism seem to be neglected whenever new anti-terror legislation is introduced: the efficiency of proposed changes in legislation, and the size of the problem of global terrorism.

Less than 4,000 people have been killed in the attacks in New York 2001, Bali 2002 and 2005, Madrid 2004, London 2005 and Mumbai 2006. Acts of terrorism, no matter how spectacular, are luckily rare events, and remain - statistically seen – a much less likely cause of death than suicide, traffic accidents, substance abuse or other lifestyle choices, not too mention an average of 25,000 people starving daily due to the imbalances of the global economic system.

The motivations of terrorism are difficult to study, as it is a rare phenomenon, and might find its origins in a diversity of local causes. The simplified rationale promoted the US government, that terrorisms primary goal is the destruction of western liberties, has not proven helpful in counteracting terrorism.

Yet without calling the 911 attacks an attempt to abolish the freedom of western countries, support for the unilateral war efforts of the US would have been unlikely. The 911 attacks can be understand as violent opposition against the US foreign policy in the Middle-East, and its support for Israel. The restrictions of civil rights by the introduction of anti-terror legislation eradicated a lot of liberties taken for granted in democratic societies.

The freedom to assemble, freedom of speech and the privacy of citizens have been severly restricted. If it was the aim of global terrorism to destroy western liberty, western governments have acted as an indispensable helper, and the war could end.

The increase in governmental power to spy on its citizens has not yet proven efficient, but more cases in which these powers were abused become known. The loss of civil liberties for those who disappear in secret CIA prisons is very apparent, yet even in Australia the rules of law have been suspended for terror suspects.

The first victim of the Australian anti-terror laws was Faheem Lodhi of Sydney, who was sent for 20 years into a high-security prison.
"Justice Anthony Whealy said while there was little case law to guide him, the courts must take a stand against terrorism."

This stand against terrorism meant that Lodhi was sentenced for a thought crime – he did not commit any acts of terrorism, nor were an concrete plans for a terror attack found. His crime consisted of knowing another terror suspect, having maps of Sydney's electricity grip and a copy of an internet pamphlet describing how to build bombs.

The presumption of innocence was not used in this case, he was sent to jail for a possible future intention. The latest victim of the terrorist hunt is Dr. Haneef, a Brisbane doctor who is a distant cousin of someone linked to the failed terror attacks in Glasgow in July 2007. Dr. Haneef was detained without charge for 20 days, lost his working visa and can't return to Australia, although no proof of any terrorist activity could be found.

Once someone gets in the spotlight of any suspicion of terrorism, basic rights will be revoked. Political activists were banned from participating in protests against the G8 conference in Germany and the APEC conference in Sydney, even with a clean legal record.

The idea of pre-emptive activity has spread from warfare to jurisdiction, with dire consequences not only for terror suspects, but for any citizen. Entire areas in Sydney were blocked from public access, demonstration in front of the security fence were not permitted. The $170 million spend for APEC's security did not prevent the team from ABC's show Chaser – War on everything to enter the security perimeter with a faked motorcade.

The ABC comedians did not expect to succeed with their prank, yet they demonstrated the illusion of absolute security. The Australian taxpayers had to pay the bill for the APEC conference, while not even being allowed to show their dissent.

Conclusion


Terrorism became an ubiquitous news item since 911, although terror acts remain rare events. The war on terror reaped the lives of hundred thousands people in Iraq and Afghanistan, but hasn't achieved any of its nominal goals.

Terrorism certainly poses a risk to society, but the size of this risk seems grossly exaggerated in comparison to other challenges the globalised world faces. The war on terror, however, cannot be won, and will last forever, or unless citizens demand from their governments to stop it. Terror is a concept, not an enemy, and using the phrase "war on terror" is not only semantic nonsense, but also distracts from the casualties this war has produced so far.

Yet as long as the "war on terror" continues, the removal of civil liberties is unlikely to be reversed. Especially the restrictions for demonstrations severely impaired the ability for citizens to influence the political process and the public opinion, both vital components of healthy democracies.

The restrictions of civil rights are less visible than the terrible images of destructions following terror acts, but they affect far more people than those acts, at least by the way their taxes are spend. Acts of terrorism, however, are basically criminal acts with an untypical motivation. The experience with the legal system shows that laws cannot prevent crime, yet this idea is suggested by the battery of new anti-terror legislation.

Terrorists can take life, but they cannot change the legal system of societies, only governments can do this. If they primary goal of "global terrorism" is the abolition of freedom in democratic societies, governments acted as their accomplices with the introduction of anti-terror legislations. Civil liberties have never been granted deliberately by governments, most of them have been fought for with democratic means, which are on the brink of becoming illegal.

'In some ways she was far more acute than Winston, and far less susceptible to Party propaganda. Once when he happened in some connection to mention the war against Eurasia, she startled him by saying casually that in her opinion the war was not happening. The rocket bombs that fell daily on London were probably fired by the Government of Oceania itself, "just to keep the people frightened".'
(Orwell, 1984)


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Friday, October 12, 2007

Cunningly surreal reconciliation. Cool shit rap. Thank you, John Howard, you're the man. The man without any moral, a sycophant toward big money, a mate towards his filthy rich friends and a leader.

Mr Howard seems to know that he would never pass the character requirements set up by Kevin "Heinrich" Andrews, so he preemptively takes sides of those billionaires that funded there wealth by screwing their customers.

However, it is understandable that Howard has sympathy for a high-level dole bludger like Pratt or Kerry Packer. He himself is busy disguising his utter uselessness, or rather maintaining the myth of the need for a "leader".

But now, after initiating the next land grab from the hands of their original custodians, rewriting Australian history to make it literally more white, Mr. John coconut Howard considers contemplating reconciliation with the Aboriginal people.

From a psychological point of view, Howard is either a pathological liar or has an extremly distorted perception of reality, traits certainly shared with his opponent. Pratt screwed his customers, abusing his position of power, lauded by Howard, occupying the position of highest political power.

So this "leader" openly shows his disrepect for his voters by sanctifying high level business crimes, as well as he continues the occupation of terra nullius by handing out mining right in the Northern Territory to Areva.

In the style of a fascist dictator he openly asks to rewrite history books and teach the whitewashed version of the Australian genocide success story. And if he continues to act out like a little Mussolini, John Australian Values Howard will be reelected.

Monday, October 08, 2007

Obsessions come and go, some rigid, some flow. Technology attracts many people. I cannot resists its temptation, still believing in the opportunity of an utopian society. Technology fostered ephemeralization, getting more out of less, which creates an average wealth unknown from our limited historical perspective.

Although governments use technology for surveillance and control, spreading mobile communication widely around offers new opportunities to organise. The Internet has become a vital tool to coordinate resistance, wireless access can help leaving less traces.

Melbourne Wireless want to provide free community broadband network access, like some nice people that provide open access to passersby. I'm pretty sure the DS will help me massively tapping into this ethereal resources. However, this will involve reviving old coding skills. I can see heaps of networks, I just can't connect as yet... which is annoying.

Now for something completely different: Moore's Law will finance the revolution.

Saturday, October 06, 2007

Two weeks after I acquired my latest gizmo, a Nintendo DS, the hacking kit arrived in the mail. I already had a 2GB Micro SD compatible with the SuperCard Lite, ready to go with Romloader and DSLinux.

I was a bit surprised when I opened the package as I finally realised what I ordered. The SuperCard Lite and the NinjaPass were fine, but I didn't get the X9 MicroSD reader, but a cheap looking flimsy one. The SuperCard works with MiniSD - something in my collection of portable memory I havent got yet.

With a preconfigured MicroSD card, two fresh 2GB Kingston MicroSDs, two Slot 2 booting devices, one Passkey (SuperKey) and a Slot 1 booting device (NinjaPass) I was ready to start testing and tasting delicious DS homebrew.

As yet, I have to figure out how to format the new MicroSDs. With an adapter I can use them in my cameras, and the cameras transfer the content okay, but there seems to be no proper filesystem on the card. Attached with the MicroSD reader I cannot see card nor format it via DiskUtil.

Finally I found the formatting option on my digital videocam, and again, the Finder offers to initialise an unreadable media, but DiskUtil gives only input/output with every formatting option.

Next try will be with the good old Ixus. Unfortunatly the Ixus doesn't mount its memory as disk but interacts with iPhoto, which limits the file upload opportunity. The Ixus software might be able to handle file transfers, but it only formats to 1gb. Let's see what will happen. Nuffing. Great.

No loader found is NinjaPass Response, let's see what happens once I put the loader via the videocam mount onto it... If this sounds a bit complicated, that's exactly how I think about it, and I course the inventors of the raw file format and such.

So I put the latest loader and a DSOrganise Version from their website on it, and now into the ninjapass.... Wicked. And stupid me. Or not? I can start into the Ninjapass, but DSOrganise just hangs about.

Let's see what the moonshell will do. Victory is mine!!!!!! The default speed setting is x4, I changed it to x3, and DSOrganise booted up fine. I will still try to format the card into something readable by the MicroSD reader and the Mac, it's less cumbersome than firing the camera up each time I want to tranfer files.

It's a bit strange that I can't set the default speed for the MicroSD card, I always have to manually set it to the right speed. However, even my first DSLinux kernel started up (woohoo!!!), although I can't log in right now (what's the default password again?).

So the happy homebrew session can begin, and customizing of the moonshell for example....

Absolutely awesome. The DS turns out to be a little wonder. I can even choose between running stuff from the NinjaPass or the supercard lite... means I can sell the superpass/supercard bundle to someone :) And the patched version of DSOrganise locates easily three APs in reach. I still have to figure out how to connect to the web, so far I had no luck.


The most important things to remember for me now:
  • L/R and down start the slot-2 supercard lite (woohoo!!!)
  • Homebrew needs to be patched with the NinjaPass
  • GameSave is after reboot