Friday, August 31, 2007

Read a Book 3: Pooky's list for BigK on NVS

A book list developed by "Pooky" for "Big K" on the Nigeria Village Square website.

Dreams of Africa in Alabama: The Slave Ship Clotilda and the Story of the Last Africans Brought to America by Slyvaine Diouf


amazon. Tells the fascinating story of the Clotilda, the last ship to bring African slaves to America, the shameful antecedents to the incident and the unusual and inspiring aftermath. Published to coincide with the 200th anniversary of the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade, the book brings to light a little-known yet vitally important element to this troubled aspect of US history.

Exchanging Our Country Marks: Transformation of African Identities in the Colonial and Antebellum South by Michael Gomez

amazon This study establishes tangible links between the African American community and its African origins, tracing the process by which African populations exchanged their distinct ethnic identities for one defined primarily by the conception of race.


Been in the Storm too Long – Leon Litwick

Before the Mayflower: History of Black America by Lerone Bennett


amazon reviews
"It is well known that the european historian has been biased in his presentation of historical facts when it comes to africans.This book is sure to cause anger to those who have accepted the distortions in history as truth.I am constantly amazed at the blacks as well as whites who never question ethnicity when it comes to the portrayal of europeans as ancient africans in the movie "The Ten Commandments". Egypt is Africa! And to accept that a european could go to africa and simply because of skin color have control over its animals as well as its peoples. (TARZAN) These types of distortions have injured those who would realize a humanity that is equal and has brainwashed those who would think that they are superior. I applaud Mr. Bennett in this effort to dispell some of the errors in history."

"For every misstep and offense committed against Africans, the author gloriously lists how there was an African culture/ruler who exceeded the wealth/power/etc of the "bad" European. In essense, the very thing it criticized in others, it heaped praise upon Africans who did the same. Criticizing greed of Americans/Europeans, it celebrates the unfathomable wealth of African rulers..."


Negrophobia – The 1906 Atlanta Riot by Mark Bauerlein
amazon: In 1906, in a bitter gubernatorial contest, Georgia politicians played the race card and white supremacists trumpeted a Negro crime scare. Drawing on new archival materials, Mark Bauerlein traces the origins, development and brutal climax of Atlanta's descent into hatred and violence in that fateful summer. "Negrophobia" is history at its best

Trabelin' on: The Slave Journey to an Afro-Baptist Faith by Mechael Sobel
amazon Africans brought their world views into North America where, eventually, under the tremendous pressures and hardships of chattel slavery, they created a coherent faith that preserved and revitalized crucial African understandings and usages regarding spirit and soul-travels, while melding them with Christian understandings of Jesus and individual salvation.


Reconstruction After the Civil War
by John Hope Franklin
amazon

[Recommended: After Appomattox: How the South Won the War by Stetson Kennedy

amazon This work about events of the post-Civil War era shows, by means of drawing upon long-buried testimonials from victors and perpetrators of Ku Klux Klan terror, that the verdict of Appomattox was largely reversed during Reconstruction.


From Slavery to Freedom: A History of African American by John Hope Franklin and Alfred Moss

amazon
"From Slavery to Freedom" remains the most revered, respected, honored text on the market.

Mis-education of the Negro by Carter G. Woodson

amazon review
"this book spoke of the misdirection in education and the consequences it can have on a society without deep a sense of purpose, a society that is failing to nurture its own values and build on genuine and progressive thoughts. The greatest strength of this book is that it shows us not only the strength of a proper education, but also the negative imparts of an improper education."

THE "educated Negroes" have the attitude of contempt toward their own people because in their own as well as in their mixed schools Negroes are taught to admire the Hebrew, the Greek, the Latin and the Teuton and to despise the African. The vast majority of the Negroes who have put on finishing touches in our best colleges are all but worthless in the development of their people.

[Igi-Iwe Award, for a seminal work on the subject]

Thank you "Pooky". BTW, the same mis-education applies to the African school system.

Thursday, August 30, 2007

Afrikans in Science

Ivan Van Settima, the author of They Came Before Columbus explores his book Blacks in Science - Ancient and Modern

I spent 4 years at the School of African and Oriental Studies (SOAS), London University doing my first degree, and never once, never once in all those years did I learn did I learn anything about any African civilisation.


Christopher Columbus NEVER ONCE set foot on the American continent.
We know little about Africa because of (historians' and anthropologists') fascination with the primitive, and their habit of extrapolating, from these limited observations, books about Africa that tell us little of the quintessential African.

Africa has far less jungle than any other continent comparable with its land space.
A great many Africans are Eurocentric in thought and deed. They do not know where they are coming from, what is going on, or where they are going.

The Europeans Avery(?) and Schmidt(?) in 1978 discovered that 1500 - 2000 years ago, Africans were smelting steel in Tanzania, in a machine using a semi-conductor unknown in Europe until the 20th century. At 1800 degree Centigrade. Producing iron crystallisation process to process a fine blue of carbon steel. In a single stage which was more efficient that Europe's later 2 stage process.

Imaging the holocaust of taking some one hundred million people out of a society over three hundred years. The massive destruction of civilisations so that people can mock Africa and say "why are you so inferior and fragmented now if you used to have such fine civilisations?"


Knowledge about "black" people has become highly politicised.

Then a discovery just a few months after the Tanzanian smelter, by American researchers Lynch(?) and Robbins(?), of an astronomical observatory, a kind of African Stonehedge, in Namaratung(?) in north-west Kenya. They were able to note that that Kenyans had developed an accurate pre- (European) historic calendar in at least 300 BCE. The calender we use today is derived from the Ancient Egyptian. It was invented in 4200 BCE. Babylonians did not have a proper calendar. The astronomical observations of Egyptians helped divided the year into 12 months of 30 days each. They put 5 festival days at the end of the year.

Cheikh Anta Diop discovered a civilisation, a monastic dynasty (Tar-Seti?) in the Nile valley dated at least 2000 years before the first dynasty of ancient Egyptian. At Tar-Seti, they founded not only architectural forms, but also the falcon god Horus, the crown art-form associated with Egypt, the palace facade later used by the Egyptians, and above all, they found heiroglyphs. So the first writing in the world is not even Egyptian, rather it is Ethiopian / Sudanic.

In west Africa, around 13th century AD, about 7 centuries ago, Africans (the Dogon tribe now in Mali) were recording the star system, Sirius B, which is invisible to the naked eye. Sirius A is a bright star that all can see. The Africans also projected its orbit and projectory up to 1990 AD at the end of the 20th century AND intuited its mass. Europe's reaction: a MIT professor is said to have commented "Africans have no business knowing this kind of thing".

The first scientific evidence of the use of numbers in the world is found in the Congo, Zaire. It is known as Ishango-bone(?) and is 8000 years old. It is a simple mathematics but it is the first evidence avalable. The Yoruba mathematical system is one of the most complex and abstract in the world.

Nobody goes to the semi-primitive communities of Eastern Europe and writes of its inhabitants as indicative of all Europeans, yet that is done with Africa.

The first medical journals, the first mathematical papyrus were WRITTEN in African languages.

A lot of the Greek, ancient and modern European, scholars went to Africa to pick up knowledge and returned to Europe to be proclaimed the father of this, the father of that...

Where is the English script? Cicero said "the English are so stupid, I am not sure we can make successful slaves of them!" There were many scripts in Africa even if only a few (the literate) used them.

By the 13th AD century, Africans were already performing eye cataract surgery, ceasarean?! section surgery, used drugs for hypertension and some phycho-somatic disorders, had perfectly ground spherical lenses, made telescopes...

In modern science, more than 100 patents by African-Americans up to 1913, despite that many inventions under slavery were attributed to plantation owners or to lawyers, as slaves were not considered citizens of the USA. A patent is a contract between the government and a citizen.

Racism and the Rise of the Right

So you know that racism white supremacy is behind the new world order impacting on your economy...

Racism and Rise of the Right
by Sharon Martinas
source: Challenging White Supremacy Workshop

Prussian Blue

Video:
Prussian Blue

How the young are indoctrinated into hate

Friday, August 24, 2007

Be The Media 2: Database-driven websites

Database-driven websites with Drupal CMS and Postgresql DBMS
CMS is content management system. DBMS is data-base management system

=== Install Postgresql 8.2 ===
$ sudo aptitude install postgresql-8.2
$ sudo su postgres

## Create user and database for Drupal on Postgresql
$ createuser -D -A -P drupaluser
$ createdb -O drupaluser drupaldb

## Remove user and database for Drupal on Postgresql
$ dropuser drupaluser
$ dropdb drupaldb

## Modify the pg_hba.conf file
$ sudo nano /etc/postgresql/8.2/main/pg_hba.conf
## comment out this line
# "local" is for Unix domain socket connections only
# local all all ident sameuser
## add the following lines
# TYPE DATABASE USER IP-ADDRESS IP-MASK $
host drupaldb drupaluser 127.0.0.1 255.255.255.25$
## save the file (Ctrl + x, y) and restart the postgresql database server engine
$ sudo /etc/init.d/postgresql* restart
## Check your database connection:
$ psql -h 127.0.0.1 -p 5432 -U drupaluser -W drupaldb
Password for user drupaluser:

INSTALL DRUPAL-5.2
## install drupal dependencies
# sudo aptitude install libapache2-mod-php5 php5-imagick imagemagick php5-ldap $

## download the drupal core files
$ sudo wget http://ftp.osuosl.org/pub/drupal/files/projects/drupal-5.2.tar.gz
tar xvzf drupal-5.2.tar.gz
## you can read the install file on creating postgresql database and user (alre$
# sudo nano drupal-5.2/INSTALL.pgsql.txt
## make a folder for your drupal installation.
sudo mkdir /var/www/drupal
## make the drupal directory writeable
sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/drupal
## move your drupal files into the drupal folder
sudo mv drupal-5.2/* drupal-5.2/.htaccess /var/www/drupal
## create a /storage folder for things like files, images, etc
$ sudo mkdir /var/www/drupal/storage
## make the data storage writeable
sudo chown -R www-data:www-data /var/www/drupal/storage
## Edit the settings.php file so that drupal can know what user, password and $
sudo nano /var/www/drupal/sites/default/settings.php
* Database URL format:
$db_url = 'pgsql://username:password@localhost/databasename';
where username = drupaluser password = drupaluserpass databasename = $
## save the file (Ctrl + x, y)
## Edit the amount of memory PHP can use to run scripts. The default 8mb is no$
sudo nano /etc/php5/apache2/php.ini file
; Resource Limits ;
memory_limit = 180M

; Example lines:
;extensions=pgsql.so
## save the file (Ctrl + x, y) and restart apache
sudo /etc/init.d/apache2 restart

### In a browser, enter: http://localhost/drupal/install.php

CONFIGURATION

## File System
## If you created a /storage folder, rather than a /files folder.
change the name of File System Path from 'files' to 'storage'
## Change the Download Method from public to private
## Select 'save configuration'

## Cron
## Click on 'You can run manually'

For further configuration, please refer to:
http://drupal.org/node/260

Thursday, August 23, 2007

Read A Book 2: Unschooling

The Ijebu Drums take the view that adults should help the young develop organised intellect, independent thought, and active productivity. The education system is proving to deliver the opposite of these virtues. The Home-Schooling movement recognises this deficiency in schooling. Whether it is funded or managed by private, public and faith authorities, schools appear to be training the young to be only obedient, mono-dimensional, hyper-consumers.

This responsible adult on The Power of Home Schooling and Power of HomeSchooling Book Review Part 2 has recommended some books and activities for adults.

Here is a partial listing of the books mentioned.
The Unschooling Handbook: How to Use The World As Your Child's Classroom by Mary Griffith
addresses the issues and diffi culties of unschooling in this practical guide. The book hel ps parents to raise self-reliant, self-motivated learners an d helps children to fulfil their true potential.

Raising Children Who Think For Themselves by Elisa Medhus
is a prescriptive parenting book with many qualities that give it a broad appeal. It reveals the one force tipping the scales of society towards the dead-end and perilous road of moral decay: We are taught to govern ourselves through external influences rather than through our inner voice of reason. In other words, we are externally directed instead of internally directed, and sadly we raise our children to be the same. Fortunately, it is never too late to address this problem: a child of any age will benefit when they learn how to follow their own inspiration and rely on their intuition.

The Teenage Liberation Handbook: How to Quit School and Get a Real Life and Education by Grace Llewellyn
argues that school is the antithesis of democracy, that children and teenagers are being deprived of their freedom and trained for life in totalitariasm and they are learning less than they would out of school. It makes the obvious point that schools destroy people's love of learning replacing it with a system based on fear of failure. It then offers advice on how to quit school including persauding your parents. The next section explains how to use different resources available in the community in order to learn and the final section explains the possibilities open to unschoolers to earn money . Every teenager should read this book, but so should every teacher, parent and politician.

Mathematical Games

Total Recall: How To Boost Your Memory Power by Joan Minninger

The Culture of Make Believe by Derrick Jensen

War Against The Weak: Eugenics and America's Campaign To Create A Master Race by Edwin Black

[BTW. It seems that the deliberate dumbing down of schooling, health, nutrition and other life choices across the world is part of an eugenic campaign. Today the program for condom use hardly questions the sterilisation effects of spermicidal chemicals used in condoms or of the trace elements and condom material left behind in the female organs. Already, the spate of forced abortions in some communities is likened to an eugenic genocide. Maybe this book casts some further light]

They Came Before Columbus by Ivan Settima
People from the African continent arrived in the Americas well before the person known as Christoper Columbus is recorded to have discovered it (hence, the New World) for Europeans. As in Australia, New Zealand, parts of Africa, and the Americas itself, European settlers killed off many of the natives.

Guess What Came to Dinner?: Parasites and Your Health by Ann Louise Gittleman

Toxics A to Z A Guide to Everyday Pollution Hazards by John Harte, Cheryl Holdren, Richard Schneider, and Christine Shirley

The Secret Life of Plants by Chr Tompkins Peter

The Secret Teachings of Plants: The Intelligence of the Heart in Direct Perception of Nature by Stephen Harrod Buhner

Homeschooling for Excellence by David Colfax
The Colfax teenagers run their own businesses, write articles for their local journals, help with building work and care for goats on their homestead all whilst reading prolifically, and gaining a science education which would be the envy of most univesity professors. The oldest three go to Harvard, but one could almost say that this is by the way.

The Anatomy Coloring Book by Wynn Kapit and Lawrence M. Elson

Alternative Answers To Pain: The Complete Conventional and Alternative Guide to Treating Chronic Pain (Reader's Digest Alternative Answers by Richard Thomas

Vaccines: Are They Really Safe and Effective? by Neil Z. Miller

The Sinus Sourcebook by Deborah F. Rosin

Milk: The Deadly Poison by Robert Cohen of notmilk.com
milk is a toxic substance, containing hundreds of different substances, each one having the potential to exert a powerful biological effect when taken independently of the others. Milk contains proteins and hormones, fat and cholesterol, pesticides, viruses and bacteria (including bovine leukaemia, bovine tuberculosis and cow immunodeficiency virus), all combining to produce an array of ailments in humans. It investigates possible conspiracies which may have influenced the FDA and Congress as well as the scientific and medical establishment to deliberately disguise the dangers of consuming milk and dairy products.

The Praetorian Guard: United States Role in the New World Order by John Stockwell

The Mythmaker: Paul and the Invention of Christianity (Hardcover) by Maccoby Hyam

Raw Power!: Building Strength and Muscle Naturally by Stephen Arlin

The Healing Miracles Of Coconut Oil by Bruce N.D. Fife

Drugs Masquerading As Foods: Deliciously Killing American-Afrikans and All Peoples by Suzar
I turned to this book after more than 2 years of constant pain and illness that none of my doctors could diagnose or cure. Desperate for help, I bought this book and tried most of the author's recommendations. I stopped eating white flour, grains, sugar, dairy, and certain types of fat.


Water: The Shocking Truth That Can Save Your Life by Patricia Bragg and Paul C. Bragg

Intoxication: The Universal Drive for Mind-altering Substances by K.Ronald Siegel

Plants of the Gods: Their Sacred Healing and Hallucinogenic Powers by Richard Evans Schultes and Albert Hofmann

Mass Control: Engineering Human Consciousness by Jim Keith

Guns Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies by Jared Diamond

Animal Wise: The Spirit Language and Signs of Nature by Ted Andrews



To add some personal choices
Civil Disobedience by Henry David Thoreau

The Nazi Connection: Eugenics, American Racism and German National Socialism by Stephan Kuhl
The Nazi movement rested on an occult mythology shared among many in the European elite. As such, its beliefs and rites, including royal hierarchy and racialist supremacy, are also widely shared and may be the basis of many European 'values', economic activities, and social policies - certainly in Germany, UK and USA. Many of the Nazi scientists were helped to leave Germany at the end of the European World War Two to settle in UK, USA and South Africa and to continue their work. This work continues in the Human Genome Project and in the man-ufactured diseases Ebola, Mad Cow Disease, and AIDS.

White Flight: Atlanta and the Making of Modern Conservatism (Politics and Society in Twentieth Century America by Kevin Kruse
a myth-shattering book. Focusing on the city that prided itself as 'too busy to hate,' Kevin Kruse reveals the everyday ways that middle-class whites in Atlanta resisted civil rights, withdrew from the public sphere, and in the process fashioned a new, grassroots, suburban-based conservatism [that powered the new Republican and Democratic parties]. This important book has national implications for our thinking about the links between race, suburbanization, and the rise of the New Right.

Race to the Frontier: "White Flight" and Western Expansion by John Dippel
Why did so many thousands of settlers pull up stakes and undertake the arduous journey to the frontier in 18th- and 19th-century America. While the desire for a more prosperous future figured prominently in their decisions, so did another, largely overlooked factor - the presence of slavery and the growing number of blacks, both free and slave, in the eastern half of the United States. Poor white farmers, particularly those in the Upper South, found themselves displaced by the spreading of the plantation system. In order to survive economically they were chronically forced to move further inland. As they did so... they sought to erect legal barriers to prevent slavery from taking hold as well as to deter the migration of free blacks who would otherwise compete for jobs and endanger white society.

Yakub & The Origins Of White Supremacy: Message To The White Man & Woman In America by Dorothy Blake

Blacked Out Through Whitewash: Exposing the Quantum Deception/Rediscovering and Recovering Suppressed Melanated by Suzar


Websites
The Mankind Quarterly

The Occidental Quarterly

Wednesday, August 22, 2007

Securing Yourself 1

Your activities can be monitored and recorded when you use electronic media.
When you use a computer machine to access the internet, it is possible to record your keystrokes. Keystrokes are the keys that you type, and the sequence of typing, onto the keyboard. Try to ensure no gadgets are attached to the cable connecting the keyboard to the computer machine. Be aware that keystroke recording software may be installed on the local machine.

Your data input is recorded in the computer cache (short term memory) until you switch off the machine. If you upload any data onto a remote machine, the data will be saved also into the cache and the hard (long term memory) drive of the remote machine.

When you use an electronic mail (email) or web hosting service, your data is saved into the hard drives of the service provider and is replicated (copied) onto several remote machines.

Be The Media 1: Newspaper Publishing

Be the media.

Newspaper publishing with the Campsite open source software

Step 1:Requirements:
Campware newspaper publishing software. Available, free, by download from http://www.campware.org
Operating System software. This installation uses Debian 4.0 (Etch) version of GNU-Linux
Web Server software. This installation uses the Apache 2.0 web server and PHP 5 scripting language
Database software. This installation uses Mysql 5.0 database management system (DBMS) software
Server Machine. A server machine is a high-powered computer system. This machine will need to be powered on and connected to the Internet 24/7/365, so get one with redundant power and network ports. The machine should also have minimum of 3GHz, 2GB HDD.
Root access. The root is a super-administrator of this machine. You need root access in order to correctly install and configure the Campware software.
Normal User access, Once the software is configured, create normal user accounts to edit the newspaper. You need to create accounts for editor, contributor, etc


Step 2: Dependencies:
In the terminal window, run the following command [omit the \, it only indicates the command is all on the same line]
apt-get install \
libdbd-mysql-perl apache2 libapache2-mod-php5 openssl \
libmysqlclient15-dev libmysqlclient15off zlib1g-dev \
libxml2-dev libidn11-dev libcurl3 libcurl3-dev libssl-dev \
php5-mysql mysql-client-5.0 mysql-server-5.0 mysql-common \
g++ php5-gd imagemagick libwww-curl-perl libcurl4-openssl-dev

Step 3: Additional dependencies
you should enter and remember a password for Mysql root user
Test the connection to ensure it does not allow anonymous login! Enter 'mysql'
ERROR 1045 (28000): Access denied for user 'root'@'localhost' (using password: NO)
Test the connection to ensure it allows authorised login with password. Enter 'mysql -u user -p' for local machines or 'mysql -h host -u user -p' for database hosted on remote machines. host is name of the host machine. user is the name of database user. Enter user's password at prompt.

If like me you have problems installing libcurl-devel, you may need to compile it from source.
1. Download from here
2. Unachive it using the command: run 'tar xvzf
3. Enter the curl directory and configure: run './configure' Note that the default location is "/usr/local". to change this location to your home directory, run './configure --prefix=$HOME'
4.run 'make'
5.run 'make install'
*/

Step 4: Installation:
1. Download the latest in a directory on the server.
2. Unarchive it using the command: run 'tar xzvf '
3. Enter Campsite directory: run 'cd campsite'
4. Run './install.sh', answer the install questions.


When you run the install script, you have the option of customizing certain aspects:
Select 1 to change options.
* The default apache user/group: the administration interface scripts and template will belong to the apache user/group; when creating a new instance the script will use the default values unless instructed otherwise by the user. There may be a WARNING! on apache user and group not being "apache" but should be "www-data". Change to suit yourself.
The final configuration we use are:
APACHE_USER=www-data [apache]
APACHE_GROUP=www-data [apache]
CAMPSITE_DIR=/usr/local/campsite
BIN_DIR=/usr/local/campsite/bin
SBIN_DIR=/usr/local/campsite/sbin
ETC_DIR=/usr/local/campsite/etc
WWW_DIR=/usr/local/campsite/www
WWW_COMMON_DIR=/usr/local/campsite/www-common
DEFAULT_SMTP_SERVER_ADDRESS=localhost
DEFAULT_SMTP_SERVER_PORT=25
DEFAULT_DATABASE_SERVER_ADDRESS=localhost
DEFAULT_DATABASE_SERVER_ADDRESS=localhost

PARSER configuration:
PARSER_START_PORT=2000


Resolving Common Errors
The following errors may come up:
1. Checking ADMIN_INTERFACE module dependencies...executable convert not found in /bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin:/opt/bin
ImageMagic package was not installed. Please install it.
Solution: install the imagemagick package. run '# apt-get install imagemagick'

2. Installing Campsite...The base package was installed. In order for Campsite to work you must install at least one instance.
Campsite create instance utility
There were ERRORS!!!
Unable to connect to database server.
Solution:
2a. Make sure that you have installed the mysql server [we used mysql-server-5.0].
2b. Make sure to change instance base parameters in order to insert the database password.
Do you want to change the instance base parameters? (Y/N) [N]: y
- database_password: The password is needed to connect to the database server
Enter database_password value: [enter your mysql user password]

Step 5: Congratulations on successfully installing Campsite. Now to configure Apache web server.

IMPORTANT!!!
Please configure apache server BEFORE using Campsite application; make sure
the crond daemon is running; for details read the INSTALL file and follow the instructions.

edit the "campsite-vhost.conf" file and change $SERVER_NAME to name of host server machine
# nano /usr/local/campsite/etc/campsite/campsite-vhost.conf
Change to where 100.100.10.1 is your_server_address
DocumentRoot /usr/local/campsite/www/campsite/html
ScriptAlias /cgi-bin/ /usr/local/campsite/www/campsite/cgi-bin/
Change ServerName $SERVER_NAME to ServerName your_server_name


Include the file "campsite-vhost.conf" in the main apache configuration file.
Apache v2.X (examples given as if you've used default values for installation):

1) Copy "[instance_name]-vhost.conf" to /etc/apache2/sites-available:

# cp /usr/local/campsite/etc/campsite/campsite-vhost.conf /etc/apache2/sites-available/

2) Create a symlink from sites-available to sites-enabled:

# ln -s /etc/apache2/sites-available/campsite-vhost.conf /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/

3) The campsite configuration file requires the "Actions" apache module. If the file "actions.load" is not in /etc/apache2/mods-enabled, then it's not enabled.
To check, use the following command:
# ls /etc/apache2/mods-enabled
To enable it, use the following command:
# ln -s /etc/apache2/mods-available/actions.load /etc/apache2/mods-enabled/

4) Restart the web server:

# apache2ctl restart
Or:
# /etc/init.d/apache2 restart

BTW, the main Apache2 config file is at:
# nano /etc/apache2/apache2.conf

Step 6: After configuring the apache server for Campsite enter the Campsite
administration site by starting a browser and typing in the following
URL: http://[$SERVER_NAME]/admin/ or the
URL: http//[$SERVER_ADDRESS]/admin
Fill in "admin" and "admn00" user and password respectively to log in.
You should change the password as soon as possible.

Monday, August 20, 2007

apartheid returns to USA-Europe schools

The owners of factories need cheap labour, so African-American and Latino school children are taught Sewing, Advanced Sewing, Hairdressing to fill the jobs. Meanwhile, priviledged Euro-Americans enjoy USD22.000 funding per child in public schools to prepare them for fruitful lives.
Jonathan Kozol: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America.

None of this is by accident. It is how priviledge hopes to retain its competitive advantage in the age of democracy, globalisation and free markets: by starving potential competitors of the most essential tools - the intelligent use of knowledge. Afrikans will recognise this disparity as 'discrimination'. It is the difference between the education possible in elite (mostly private schools but also government/public schools with privatised access) and the intellectual decapitation that takes place in "normal" schools. Go to a school and you may never do well in life. Go to an elite school and you have a much more probable chance of success in life.

globalising inequality

"we have divorced how economies are doing, from how the people are doing.
The worse the suffering of the poor, the stronger the stock exchange performs, the higher the GDP reported, the better the economy is said to perform"
Globalising Inequality
The award-winning development reporter and photojournalist, Palagummi Sainath, is India's foremost chronicler of the impact of Globalization on the country's rural populations.

Wednesday, August 15, 2007

Read a Book 1

The video diary Read a book by D'Mite implores the 'nigger' to "read a book, raise your children (kids), drink water, buy some land, brush your teeth, wear deodorant...". Truly the state of unconsciousness of some Afrikan-folk in Europe-USA is quite contemptible.

But what books to read? Let us try to put some together.

The Leopard's Spots: A Romance of the White Man's Burden-1865-1900 by Dixon, Thomas, Jr., 1864-1946
In every one of these soldier's hearts, and over all the earth hung the shadow of the freed Negro, transformed by the exigency of war from a Chattel to be bought and sold into a possible Beast to be feared and guarded. Around this dusky figure every white man's soul was keeping its grim vigil.


Africans in Colonial Louisiana by Gwendolyn Midlo-Hall
- charts the ethnic background of enslaved Africans including the Bambara and others.
Exchanging our Country Marks: The Transformation of African Identities in the Colonial and Antebellum South by Michael Gomez
- has much information, including charts and tables on the ethnic origin of New World Africans.
Black Legacy: America's Hidden Heritage by William Pierson

Awake Afrikans: You have been warned.

Africa is the cornerstone of the new world order. To understand this imperialistic order, one must become familiar with the concepts of dialectic reasoning and doublespeak rhetorics. The dialectic mindset was espoused by the faustian philosopher Georg Hegel. Africans are now familiar with the doublespeak rhetoric of "we are giving Africa 'foreign aid' while actually planting seeds of perpetual weakness and fanning the flames of self-destruction.
Both concepts come together in Albert Pike's tome: Morals & Dogma. Freemasonry's organisations in USA are implicated as instrumental to success of the KKK (project of the Scottish Rite),the secessionist Confederate Army, and the Democratic (Dixiecrats) party.
Freemasonry IS the intellectual, if not the true religious, basis of culture among elites in modern Europe (including the USA) where it is the dialectic opposite of christianity, and in modern Arabia where it is the dialectic opposite of islam-mohammedanism, and in the United Nations where it is cloaks the Lucis Trust with the cloth of Humanism.

The Antipasministries reveals the Dominionism agenda of the Euro-USA empire in Africa as it is implemented through religious brain-washing, disease infestation, poverty and debt bondage, slave-plantation labour, puppet governments, dumb education, mis-information, and resurgent chaos. Unchecked by Afrikans' awakening and vigilance, this agenda may lead to a new eugenics war logic of Africa without the Afrikans.

Note the role in Africa, Caribbeans and South America of 'aid workers' and 'non-governmental organisations (NGO)' in weakening governments, destabilising countries, and acting as scouts.

The Centre for Research on Globalisation highlights A Warning to Africa: The New U.S. Imperial Grand Strategy. This military positioning across the continent is largely unreported in the news media. It is the central theatre for the Project for New American Century, the think tank based in Washington DC, USA, although their report (download) in true dialectical style does not appear to concern itself with Africa. The Antipasminitries paper shows how Euro-USA's wealth is built on the back of Africa's poverty.

See also:
wake up America
Secret Societies

Tuesday, August 07, 2007

Orisha is omitted from geography of religion

In response to the geography of religion video [cite original]
This historical geography of religion is incomplete. Tt omits the spread of Orisha. This Afrikan spiritual religion originated in Yorubaland, western Africa, and spread to Americas, Pacific and Caribbean island-nations on the back of the slave trade. It is, arguably, the Orisha belief system that helped the enslaved maintain their human sanity through the worst horrors of that trade. Orisha values were and are syncretized with Christainity and Mohammedalism/Islam in many places, so to avoid or lessen persecution. The spirituality is reviving as heritage consciousness returns to Afrikans worldwide. It is de-facto religion in Cuba, Haiti, Dominican republic, Dahomey/Benin republic, Yoruba-Nigeria, and Bahia-Brazil.

Saturday, August 04, 2007

Blacks are faster?

This in response to an article So black runners are naturally faster, wrong in the Times of London of Abameta, 04 Ogun 2007.

The historical myth of Afrikan genetic inferiority is used to justify racism / white supremacy, apartheid / segregation, colonialism and, now "helping" Afrika. Hitler's Europe thought so until Jesse Owens proved otherwise in Berlin 1936. The scientific reality is that melanin (which makes brunettes darker than blonds) is a dominant gene marker i.e. brunettes are genetically dominant over blonds, as evident in the children of mixed hair (sub-race?) couples. Afrikans have the most melanin... The IQ test and number of scientists red herring may (not) prove that said IQ testers or scientists are genetically superior to their own parents. What passes for crime is often success in business that is not sanctioned and taxed by the state. Discrimination forces some social groups into such businesses more than other groups. History shows that no social group commits violent state-sanctioned crime, to perpetuate discrimination, as thoroughly as Europeans.

The Kneed

The Kneed
------------
True it is, the soul prevails beyond life on earth.
Pity it is, then to waste it in pursuit of foreign lore and treasure.
You, made first beyond all others, in the image of the Creator.
Is it you kneed, with eyes and hands raised, to image of another?
Another, who has separated spirit from mind from matter
Another who, ignores the spirit, pays you no mind, and says "all matter is mine!"
Kneel then, heathen, so to make heaven on earth for the other.
Why ever rise, wretch, for what heaven can you now enter?
Your ancestors, still the essence of the Creator,
Know not you who calls another man's pottery, Father!

Friday, August 03, 2007

...like me

If you are like me, welcome to being divine.

As the Yoruba say, Afrkians are "irunmole" who are destined to be "orisha".
Irunmole - the people whose hair (irun) enlightens(mo) the surrounding area (ile).
Orisha - the people whose spiritual self (ori) are chosen (sha) to be one with the Creator.


video a girl like me
colour is more than skin-deep for Afrikan-Amerikan women struggling to define themselves.
comment: Ironically, even as the Afrkikan-diaspora awakens to embrace consciousness, the continental Afrikans are hypnotised by foreign religions and cultural products. The doll test indicates the effect of centuries of intensive brainwashing through education, religion, and the media (colo-mentality). This is what you get from giving your children "Barbie".

video response to a girl like me a beautiful 40 year old, thinks back and forth.

video HairStory: the videography

Hair is a link to one's ancestry. In ceremonies, it is possible to discern one's ancestral lineage from the manner of dress, tribal marks, hair style, language and speech. Why do you hate your ancestry so much as to attach fake or dead hair to your head? The more you imitate, the more you are hated and scorned, and treated like an "adolescent race incapable of becoming adults"
Why chemically alter your hair? As millions of men prove everyday, the easiest hair care regime is wash-oil-comb-and sometimes, trim. That's it.
Why wash your body with bleach? Even as others, not naturally completed with sufficient productivity of melanin, spend fortunes on tanning creams and suntan lotions and sex-enhancing potions!

video a boy like me
presented by Bill Cosby, who unfortunately went on to create the Fat Albert cartoon series.

video Simple Justice The Social Evidence of Racism. Heart-breaking.
A dramatization called "Simple Justice" portrays psychologist, Dr. Kenneth B. Clark, as he conducts his famous "doll test," designed to gather social science evidence of the effects of white supremacy (racism).

video Interview with the real Dr. Kenneth Clark, who says PARENTS are the key. Children can be taught to respect and love themselves

video black zombies
the extreme self-hatred that arises from culture conflict and mentacide.

video Psychological Dispositions in Black & White Adults take the test. Which is good. Which is bad. Black or White? The "west" is soaked with racialist ideology. Unlike in many part of Afrika, Asia and Arabia where various cultures contest and co-habit with near-strength, the ethnic lines are sharper drawn in European-dominant geographies. This test is about preference own's self-identity, it is just as much about prejudice towards the other.

video For the people with Listerfelt Middleton.
The two main falsehoods on basis of which the myth of European supremacy (racism) began and is sustained.
1) To create the myth of European (white) superiority, it was necessary to create the myth of Afrikan (black) inferiority. ONLY by acclaiming for Europe, that which had been created by Afrikans, could Europeans spread the myth of Afrikan inferiority around the globe.
2) Intensive indoctrination of Afrikans into rejecting the self and assimilating into the other - via christainity (white Jesus idolatry), education (Europe discovered all things Afrkian) and the media (constant images of head-scratching, semi-naked, bad-doing Afrikans). Just like training the mighty elephant with ever smaller chains until it is enslaved in a circus on a string, Meanwhile the European is constantly assured that the world is your oyster, to rule and to own.

Language, Religion and Kulture
Help your self and your children to learn an Afrikan language, Yoruba is a complete heritage system of language, religion and culture. Its orisha spirituality is the pre-dominant religious order in the Afrikan diaspora.

the afrikan flag




Ashia ti Afrika

odu 16 and opon ifa - for spiritual communion and affirmation of continuity of aye and orun
aake of shango - double-headed for vigilance and for eternal retribution
igbale - the broom of strength in unity
red, green and black - colours of the Afrikan nation

how universities can become useful, again

direct action.academia reaches out to the grassroots
How, now, to tie this effort to economic sustenance beyond the university walls?

Wednesday, August 01, 2007

Borrow now, or else...

In 2005, I attended yet another investment forum in Nigeria. On this occasion, state governments were promoting investments in an industrial park scheme to be developed as a tax-efficient free trade zone. Apparently, it was to be funded by foreign direct investment (FDI). There was some perfunctionary mention of industrial production in form of oil refining for export, and allied manufacturing. There was a lot of talk about the need to ensure and protect returns on investment, and to assure investors that Nigeria is good for business. For some reason, forum attendees raised questions about economic sovereignty. The officials were hazy about why exactly any Afrikan business would need FDI or how the scheme would create employment and wealth.


Stealing a Nation video
Chagos Islands is the Afrikan island nation now known as "Diego Garcia". It is located in south eastern Afrika, in the Indian Ocean. A land illegally colonised and occupied, it was "given" by the British to USA so that the "international community" could have a base from which to easily do "peace-keeping" in Afrika, Asia and Arabia. None of the "commonwealth" countries protested vigorously when the Chagossians were ethnically cleansed off by " 'civilisation, christainity and commerce' is the white man's burden" Britain, so that "freedom-loving" USA could build the largest offshore military base on earth, off the coast of Afrika.

War By Other Means video
Debt is a weapon of mass destruction. It is being used to de-humanise, and gradually to de-populate, people across the world.


book research: The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals, and the Truth about Global Corruption. by John Perkins.

John Perkins, From 1971 to 1981 he worked for the international consulting firm of Chas T. Main where he was a self-described "economic hit man." He is the author of the new book "The Secret History of the American Empire."

a team of assassins were sent in from South Africa — forty-five, forty-six, I can’t remember the exact number — were sent in as a rugby team to bring in Christmas gifts to children of the Seychelles, but their real job was to overthrow the government and assassinate Rene.


Read the democracynow.org interviews: here and here

TRANSCRIPT

AMY GOODMAN: Hundreds of thousands of protesters are gathering in Germany ahead of tomorrow’s G8 meeting of the world’s richest nations. The three-day summit is being held in the coastal resort of Heiligendamm. German police have spent $18 million to erect an eight-mile-long, two-meter-high fence around the meeting site.

Global warming will be high on the agenda. Going into the meeting, President Bush has proposed to sideline the UN-backed Kyoto Accords and set voluntary targets on reducing emissions of greenhouse gas. Other top issues will include foreign aid and new trade deals.

Today, we spend the hour with a man who claims to have worked deep inside the forces driving corporate globalization. In his first book, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, John Perkins told the story of his work as a highly paid consultant hired to strong-arm leaders into creating policy favorable to the US government and corporations, what he calls the “corporatocracy.” John Perkins says he helped the US cheat poor countries around the globe out of trillions of dollars by lending them more money than they could possibly repay and then taking over their economies. John Perkins has just come out with his second book on this issue. It’s called The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals and the Truth about Global Corruption. John Perkins joins us now in the firehouse studio. Welcome to Democracy Now!

JOHN PERKINS: Thank you, Amy. It’s great to be here.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, before we go further, “economic hit men” — for those who haven’t heard you describe this, let alone describe yourself as this, what do you mean?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, really, I think it’s fair to say that since World War II, we economic hit men have managed to create the world's first truly global empire, and we've done it primarily without the military, unlike other empires in history. We've done it through economics very subtly.

We work many different ways, but perhaps the most common one is that we will identify a third world country that has resources our corporations covet, such as oil, and then we arrange a huge loan to that country from the World Bank or one of its sister organizations. The money never actually goes to the country. It goes instead to US corporations, who build big infrastructure projects — power grids, industrial parks, harbors, highways — things that benefit a few very rich people but do not reach the poor at all. The poor aren’t connected to the power grids. They don’t have the skills to get jobs in industrial parks. But they and the whole country are left holding this huge debt, and it’s such a big bet that the country can't possibly repay it. So at some point in time, we economic hit men go back to the country and say, “Look, you know, you owe us a lot of money. You can't pay your debt, so you’ve got to give us a pound of flesh.”

AMY GOODMAN: And explain your history. What made you an economic hit man?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, when I graduated from business school at Boston University, I was recruited by the National Security Agency, the nation’s largest and perhaps most secretive spy organization.

AMY GOODMAN: People sometimes think the CIA is that, but the NSA, many times larger.

JOHN PERKINS: Yeah, it is larger. It’s much larger. At least it was in those days. And it’s very, very secretive. We all — there’s a lot of rumors. We know quite a lot about the CIA, I think, but we know very, very little about the NSA. It claims to only work in a cryptography, you know, encoding and decoding messages, but in fact we all know that they’re the people who have been listening in on our telephone conversations. That’s come out recently. And they’re a very, very secretive organization.

They put me through a series of tests, very extensive tests, lie detector tests, psychological tests, during my last year in college. And I think it’s fair to say that they identified me as a good potential economic hit man. They also identified a number of weaknesses in my character that would make it relatively easy for them to hook me, to bring me in. And I think those weaknesses, I inaudible might call, the three big drugs of our culture: money, power and sex. Who amongst us doesn’t have one of them? I had all three at the time.

And then I joined the Peace Corps. I was encouraged to do that by the National Security Agency. I spent three years in Ecuador living with indigenous people in the Amazon and the Andes, people who today and at that time were beginning to fight the oil companies. In fact, the largest environmental lawsuit in the history of the world has just been brought by these people against Texaco, Chevron. And that was incredibly good training for what I was to do.

And then, while I was still in the Peace Corps, I was brought in and recruited into a US private corporation called Charles T. Main, a consulting firm out of Boston of about 2,000 employees, very low-profile firm that did a tremendous amount of work of what I came to understand was the work of economic hit men, as I described it earlier, and that’s the role I began to fulfill and eventually kind of rose to the top of that organization as its chief economist.

AMY GOODMAN: And how did that tie to the NSA? Was there a connection?

JOHN PERKINS: You know, that’s what’s very interesting about this whole system, Amy, is that there’s no direct connection. The NSA had interviewed me, identified me and then essentially turned me over to this private corporation. It’s a very subtle and very smart system, whereby it’s the private industry that goes out and does this work. So if we’re caught doing something, if we’re caught bribing or corrupting local officials in some country, it’s blamed on private industry, not on the US government.

And it’s interesting that in the few instances when economic hit men fail, what we call “the jackals,” who are people who come in to overthrow governments or assassinate their leaders, also come out of private industry. These are not CIA employees. We all have this image of the 007, the government agent hired to kill, you know, with license to kill, but these days the government agents, in my experience, don't do that. It’s done by private consultants that are brought in to do this work. And I’ve known a number of these individuals personally and still do.

AMY GOODMAN: In your book, The Secret History of the American Empire, you talk about taking on global power at every level. Right now, we’re seeing these mass protests taking place in Germany ahead of the G8 meeting. Talk about the significance of these.

JOHN PERKINS: Well, I think it’s extremely significant. Something is happening in the world today, which is very, very important. Yeah, as we watched the headlines this morning, you know, what we can absolutely say is we live in a very dangerous world. It’s also a very small world, where we’re able to immediately know what’s going on in Germany or in the middle of the Amazon or anywhere else. And we’re beginning to finally understand around the world, I think, that the only way my children or grandchildren or any child or grandchild anywhere on this planet is going to be able to have a peaceful, stable and sustainable world is if every child has that. The G8 hasn’t got that yet.

AMY GOODMAN: Explain what the Group of Eight are.

JOHN PERKINS: Well, the Group of Eight are the wealthiest countries in the world, and basically they run the world. And the leader is the United States, and it’s actually the corporations within these companies — countries, excuse me — that run it. It’s not the governments, because, after all, the governments serve at the pleasure of the corporations. In our own country, we know that the next two final presidential candidates, Republican and Democrat alike, are going to each have to raise something like half a billion dollars. And that’s not going to come from me and you. Primarily that’s going to come from the people who own and run our big corporations. They’re totally beholden to the government. So the G8 really is this group of countries that represent the biggest multinational corporations in the world and really serve at their behest.

And what we’re seeing now in Europe — and we’re seeing it very strongly in Latin America, we’re seeing it in the Middle East — we’re seeing this huge undercurrent of resistance, of protest, against this empire that’s been built out of this. And it’s been such a subtle empire that people haven’t been aware of it, because it wasn’t built by the military. It was built by economic hit men. Most of us aren’t aware of it. Most Americans have no idea that these incredible lifestyles that we all lead are because we’re part of a very vicious empire that literally enslaves people around the world, misuses people. But we’re beginning to understand this. And the Europeans and the Latin Americans are at the forefront of this understanding.

AMY GOODMAN: Well, we’re going to talk to you about Congo, about Lebanon, about the Middle East, about Latin America, much of what you cover in The Secret History of the American Empire, when we come back.

break

AMY GOODMAN: Our guest is John Perkins. From 1971 to ’81, he worked for the international consulting firm of Charles T. Main, where he was a self-described “economic hit man.” His new book is called The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals and the Truth about Global Corruption. Let's talk back, going to Latin America, about this ChevronTexaco lawsuit.

JOHN PERKINS: Well, that’s extremely significant. When I was sent to Ecuador as a Peace Corps volunteer in 1968, Texaco had just gone into Ecuador, and the promise to the Ecuadorian people at that time from Texaco and their own politicians and the World Bank was oil is going to pull this country out of poverty. And people believed it. I believed it at the time. The exact opposite has happened. Oil has made the country much more impoverished, while Texaco has made fortunes off this. It’s also destroyed vast areas of the Amazon rainforest.

So the lawsuit today that’s being brought by a New York lawyer and some Ecuadorian lawyers — Steve Donziger here in New York — is for $6 billion, the largest environmental lawsuit in the history of the world, in the name of 30,000 Ecuadorian people against Texaco, which is now owned by Chevron, for dumping over eighteen billion gallons of toxic waste into the Ecuadorian rainforest. That’s thirty times more than the Exxon Valdez. And dozens and dozens of people have died and are continuing to die of cancer and other pollution-related diseases in this area of the Amazon. So all this oil has come out of this area, and it’s the poorest area of one of the poorest countries in the hemisphere. And the irony of that is just so amazing.

But what I think — one of the really significant things about this, Amy, is that this law firm has taken this on, not pro bono, but they expect if they win the case, which they expect to do, to make a lot of money off of it, which is a philosophical decision. It isn’t because they wanted to get rich off this. It’s because they want to encourage other law firms to do similar things in Nigeria and in Indonesia and in Bolivia, in Venezuela and many other places. So they want to see a business grow out of this, of law firms going in and defending poor people, knowing that they can get a payoff from the big companies who have acted so terribly, terribly, terribly irresponsibly in the past.

And Steve Donziger, the attorney — I was in Ecuador with him just two weeks ago — and one of the very touching things he said is — he’s an American attorney with, you know, very good credentials, and he says, “You know, I’ve seen a lot of companies make mistakes and then try to defend themselves in law courts.” And he said, “That’s one thing. But in this case, Texaco didn’t make mistakes. This was done with intent. They knew what they were doing. To save a few bucks, they killed a lot of people.” And now they’re going to be forced to pay for that, to take responsibility for that, and hopefully open the door to make many companies take responsibility for the wanton destruction that’s occurred.

AMY GOODMAN: Let's talk about Latin America and its leaders, like Jaime Roldos. Talk about him and his significance. You wrote about him in your first book, Confessions of an Economic Hit Man.

JOHN PERKINS: Yeah, Jaime Roldos was an amazing man. After many years of military dictators in Ecuador, US puppet dictators, there was a democratic election, and one man, Jaime Roldos, ran on a platform that said Ecuadorian resources ought to be used to help the Ecuadorian people, and specifically oil, which at that time was just coming in. This was in the late ’70s. And I was sent to Ecuador, and I was also sent at the same time to Panama to work with Omar Torrijos, to bring these men around, to corrupt them, basically, to change their minds.

You know, in the case of Jaime Roldos, he won the election by a landslide, and now he started to put into action his policy, his promises, and was going to tax the oil companies. If they weren’t willing to give much more of their profits back to the Ecuadorian people, then he threatened to nationalize them. So I was sent down, along with other economic hit men — I played a fairly minor role in that case and a major one in Panama with Torrijos — but we were sent into these countries to get these men to change their policies, to go against their own campaign promises. And basically what you do is you tell them, “Look, you know, if you play our game, I can make you and your family very healthy. I can make sure that you get very rich. If you don’t play our game, if you follow your campaign promises, you may go the way of Allende in Chile or Arbenz in Guatemala or Lumumba in the Congo.” On and on, we can list all these presidents that we’ve either overthrown or assassinated because they didn’t play our game. But Jaime would not come around, Jaime Roldos. He stayed uncorruptible, as did Omar Torrijos.

And both of these — and from an economic hit man perspective, this was very disturbing, because not only did I know I was likely to fail at my job, but I knew that if I failed, something dire was going to happen: the jackals would come in, and they would either overthrow these men or assassinate them. And in both cases, these men were assassinated, I have no doubt. They died in airplane crashes two months apart from each other in 1981 — single plane; their own private planes crashed.

AMY GOODMAN: Explain more what happened with Omar Torrijos.

JOHN PERKINS: Well, Omar, again, was very stalwartly standing up to the United States, demanding that the Panama Canal should be owned by Panamanians. And I spent a lot of time with Torrijos, and I liked him very, very much as an individual. He was extremely charismatic, extremely courageous and very nationalistic about wanting to get the best for his people. And I couldn’t corrupt him. I tried everything I could possibly do to bring him around. And as I was failing, I was also very concerned that something would happen to him. And sure enough — it was interesting that Jaime Roldos's plane crashed in May, and Torrijos said — got his family together and said, “I’m probably next, but I’m ready to go. We’ve now got the Canal turned over.” He had signed a treaty with Jimmy Carter to get the Canal in Panamanian hands. He said, “I’ve accomplished my job, and I’m ready to go now.” And he had a dream about being in a plane that hit a mountain. And within two months after it happened to Roldos, it happened to Torrijos also.

AMY GOODMAN: And you met with both these men?

JOHN PERKINS: Yes, I’d met with both of them.

AMY GOODMAN: What were your conversations like?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, especially with Torrijos, I spent a lot of time with him in some formal meetings and also at cocktail parties and barbecues — he was big on things like that — and was constantly trying to get him to come around to our side and letting him know that if he did, he and his family would get some very lucrative contracts, would become very wealthy, and, you know, warning him. And he didn’t really need much warning, because he knew what would be likely to happen if he didn’t. And his attitude was, “I want to get done what I can in my lifetime, and then so be it.”

And it’s been interesting, Amy, that since I wrote the book Confessions, Marta Roldos, who’s Jaime’s daughter, has come to the United States to meet with me, and I just spent time with her in Ecuador. She is now a member of parliament in Ecuador, just elected, and she married Omar Torrijos's nephew. And it’s really interesting to hear their stories about what was going on — she was seventeen at the time her parents — her mother was also in the plane that her father died in; the two of them died in that plane — and then to hear her talk about how her husband, Omar's nephew, was in that meeting when the family was called together and Omar said, “I’m probably next, but I’m ready to go. I’ve done my job. I’ve done what I could do for my people. So I’m ready to go, if that’s what has to happen.”

AMY GOODMAN: So what were your conversations at the time with other so-called economic hit men? I mean, you became the chief consultant at Charles Main.

JOHN PERKINS: Chief economist.

AMY GOODMAN: Chief economist.

JOHN PERKINS: Right. Well, you know, when I was with other people that — we could be sitting at a table, say, in the Hotel Panama, knowing that we’re both here to win these guys over, but we also had our official jobs, which were to do studies on the economy, to show how if the country accepted the loan, it was going to improve its gross national product. We would talk about those kinds of things. It’s, I suspect, a little bit like if two CIA agents, spies, get together or have a beer together, they don’t really talk about what they’re really doing beneath the surface, but they’ve got an official job, too, and that’s what you focus on. And, in fact, the two, in my case, are very closely linked.

So we were producing these economic reports that would prove to the World Bank and would prove to Omar Torrijos that if he accepted these huge loans, then his country's gross national product would just mushroom and pull his people out of poverty. And we produced these reports, which made sense from a mathematical econometric standpoint. And, in fact, it often happened that with these loans, the GNP, the gross national product, did increase.

But what also was true, and what Omar knew and Jaime Roldos knew and I was coming to know very strongly, was that even if the general economy increased, the poor people with these loans would get poorer. The rich would make all the money, because most of the poor people weren’t even tied into the gross national product. A lot of them didn’t even make income. They were living off subsistence farming. They benefited nothing, but they were left holding the debt, and because of these huge debts, their country in the long term would not be able to provide them with healthcare, education and other social services.

AMY GOODMAN: Talk about Congo.

JOHN PERKINS: Oh, boy. The whole story of Africa and the Congo is such a devastating and sad one. And it’s the hidden story, really. We in the United States don’t even talk about Africa. We don’t think about Africa. You know, Congo has something called coltan, which probably most of your listeners may not have even heard of, but every cell phone and laptop computer has coltan in it. And several million people in the last few years in the Congo have been killed over coltan, because you and I and all of us in the G8 countries demand low — or at least we want to see our computers inexpensive and our cell phones inexpensive. And, of course, the companies that make these sell them on that basis, that “Oh, here, mine’s $200 less than the other company.” But in order to do that, these people in the Congo are being enslaved. The miners, the people mining coltan, they’re being killed. There’s these vast wars going on to provide us with cheap coltan.

And I have to say, you know, if we want to live in a safe world, we need to be — we must be willing, and, in fact, we must demand that we pay higher prices for things like laptop computers and cell phones and that a good share of that money go back to the people who are mining the coltan. And that’s true of oil. It’s true of so many resources that we are not paying the true cost, and there’s millions of people around the world suffering from that. Roughly 50,000 people die every single day from hunger or hunger-related diseases and curable diseases that they don’t get the medicines for, simply because they’re part of a system that demands that they put in long hours, and they get very, very low pay, so we can have things cheaper in this country. And the Congo is an incredibly potent example of that.

AMY GOODMAN: You talk about the so-called defeats in Vietnam and Iraq and what they mean for corporations.

JOHN PERKINS: Yeah, well, that’s — yeah, we, you and I, look at them as defeats, perhaps, and certainly anybody who lost a child or a sibling or a spouse in these countries look at them as disasters, as defeats, but the corporations made a huge amount of money off Vietnam, the military industry, huge corporations, the construction companies. And, of course, they’re doing it in a very, very big way in Iraq. So the corporatocracy, the people that are in fact insisting that our young men and women continue to go to Iraq and fight, they’re making a tremendous amount of money. These are not failures for them; they’re successes from a very strong economic standpoint. And I know that sounds cynical. I am cynical about these things. I’ve been there. I’ve seen it. And, you know, we must learn not to put up with that anymore. All of us.

AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to John Perkins. His book is The Secret History of the American Empire. It’s the fortieth anniversary of the 1967 Israeli-Arab war. You talk about Israel being a Fortress America in the Middle East.

JOHN PERKINS: I think it’s very sad and very telling, once again, that the Israeli people, for the most part, are led to believe that they’ve been given this land as a payoff, basically, for the Holocaust, because they deserve to be recompensed. And, of course, the Holocaust was terrible, and they do deserve to be taken care of and recompensed and have stability.

But why would we locate that place in the middle of the Arab world, their traditional enemies? Why would we locate that place in such an unstable area? It’s because it is serving as a huge fortress for us in the biggest oil fields known in the world today, and we knew this when Israel was located there. And I think the Israeli people have been terribly exploited in this process.

So, in fact, we built this vast military base, armed camp, in the middle of the Middle Eastern oil fields that are surrounded by the Arab communities, and in the process, we’ve obviously created a tremendous amount of resentment and anger and a situation that it’s very difficult to see any positive outcome there. But the fact of the matter is, our having this military base in Israel has been a huge defense for us. It’s been a place where we could really launch attacks, rely on. It’s been our equivalent of the Crusaders’ castles in the Middle East. And it’s very, very sad. I think it’s extremely sad for the Israeli people that they’re caught up in all of this. I think it’s extremely sad for the American people. It’s extremely sad for the world that this is going on.

AMY GOODMAN: As we crisscross the globe, John Perkins, which is exaclty what you did in your years as an international consultant, having been groomed by the National Security Agency, but then becoming a top economist in an international consulting firm, you have also written books about Shamanism. You also write about Tibet. Where does Tibet fit into this picture?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, you know, I was just in Tibet a couple of years ago, and it was an interesting thing, because I took a group of about thirty people into Tibet with me as part of a non-profit organization. I was leading the trip. And some of these people had been in the Amazon with me, been to other places. And, of course, Tibet right now is — it’s very depressing, because the Chinese presence is extremely strong, and you see how the Tibetan culture has been put down. And you’re always aware that there’s Chinese soldiers and spies all around you. And many of the people on the trip came to the realization, yeah, this terrible here. “Free Tibet,” we all know about that, but the ones who had been with me on a trip to the Amazon, where the oil companies and our own military are doing the same things, said, “But doesn't this remind us of what we’re doing in so much of the world?” And it’s something we tend to forget.

We can all wave banners about “Free Tibet,” which we should, but how about freeing the countries that are under our thumb, too? And certainly Tibet is not nearly — well, I hate to say it this way, because some people might disagree with me, but I think Iraq is in worse shape than Tibet is these days, although both of them are in pretty bad shape. But so, what we saw in Tibet is that same kind of model that we’re implementing around the world. And yet, most Americans are not aware that we’re doing it. They’re aware that the Chinese are doing it, but not aware that we’re doing it on actually a much bigger level than the Chinese are.

AMY GOODMAN: John Perkins, talk about your transformation. You were making a lot of money. You were traveling the world. You were in a position where you were meeting presidents and prime ministers of countries, bringing them to their knees. What made you change, and then, ultimately, the decision to write about it?

JOHN PERKINS: You know, Amy, when I first got started — I grew up — three, four hundred years of Yankee Calvinism — in New Hampshire and Vermont, with very strong moral principles, came from a pretty conservative Republican family. And all during the ten years that I was an economic hit man, from ’71 to ’81, I was pretty young, but it bothered my conscience. And yet, everybody was telling me I was doing the right thing. Like you said, presidents of countries, the president of the World Bank, Robert McNamara, patted me on the back. And I was asked to lecture at Harvard and many other places about what I was doing. And what I was doing was not illegal — should be, but it isn’t. And yet, in my heart, it always tore at my conscience. I’d been a Peace Corps volunteer. I saw. And as time went by and I began to understand more and more, it got to be more and more difficult for me to continue doing this. I had a staff of about four dozen people working for me. Things were building up.

And then, one day I was on vacation, sailing in the Virgin Islands, and I anchored my little boat off the St. John Island, and I took the dinghy in, and I climbed this mountain on St. John Island in the Virgin Islands up to this old sugar cane plantation in ruins. And it was beautiful. Bougainville. The sun was setting. I sat there and felt very peaceful. And then suddenly, I realized that this plantation had been built on the bones of thousands of slaves. And then I realized that the whole hemisphere had been built on the bones of millions of the slaves. And I got very angry and sad. And then, it suddenly struck me that I was continuing that same process and that I was a slaver, that I was making the same thing happen in a slightly — in a different way, more subtle way, but just as bad in terms of its outcome. And at that point, I made the decision I would never do it again. And I went back to Boston a couple of days later and quit.

AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to John Perkins, worked for Chas Main International Consulting Firm, self-described “economic hit man,” now has written a new book called The Secret History of the American Empire. When we come back from break, we’ll talk about — well, from quitting the American empire to taking it on. Stay with us.

break

AMY GOODMAN: We’re talking to John Perkins. His second book on the issue of economic hit men is called The Secret History of the American Empire. John Perkins is a New York Times bestselling author. His book Confessions of an Economic Hit Man took this country by storm.

So, you quit, but that was one step. Writing about it was another. Talk about your attempts over time.

JOHN PERKINS: Oh, yes. After I quit, I tried several times to write the book that became Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, and each time I reached out to other economic hit men I had worked with or jackals to try to get their stories, word got out and I was threatened. I had a young daughter at the time. She’s now twenty-five. And I also was offered some bribe. In fact, I accepted a bribe of about a half a million dollars. It’s what’s called a legal bribe, but it’s a bribe, and it was given to me with the condition that I not write the book. There was no question about that. I describe it in detail.

And I assuaged my guilt by putting a lot of that money into nonprofits I had formed — Dream Change and Pachamama Alliance — that are helping Amazonian people fight oil companies, so to assuage my guilt some. But I didn't write the story. And this happened a number of times, and I would find one excuse or another, and I wrote other books about indigenous people. I worked with these people. I wrote the books you mentioned earlier about Shamanism and so forth, and so I kind of, you know, distracted myself and assuaged my guilt and went on with this.

And then, on 9/11, I was in the Amazon with the Shuar people, had taken a group of nonprofit people in to learn from indigenous people in the Amazon. But shortly after that, I came up to New York to Ground Zero, and as I stood there looking down into that terrible pit, that smoldering — and it still smelled of burning flesh — I realized that I had to write the book, I could no longer defer, that the American people had no understanding of why so many people around the world are angry and frustrated and terrified, and that I had to take responsibility for what happened at 9/11. In fact, we all have to take a certain responsibility, which is not in any way to condone mass murder by anybody ever — I’m not condoning that in any way — but I did realize that the American people needed to understand why there’s so much anger around the world. I had to write the book.

So this time I didn’t tell anyone I was writing it, and even my wife and daughter, they knew I was writing something, but they didn’t know what. I didn’t reach out to other people. It made it a little more difficult to write it. But finally I got it in the hands of a very good New York agent, and he sent it out to publishers. At that point, this manuscript becomes my best insurance policy, as at that point if something strange happens to me, including now, suddenly the book will sell. Even though it’s been a bestseller for a long time, it will sell a lot more copies, if something — people sometimes laugh and say, “Do you worry that your publisher may be trying to assassinate you, because it would certainly help book sales?” I don’t worry about it. But, you know, so at that point, once I got the manuscript there, it became my insurance policy.

AMY GOODMAN: You write “A jackal is born,” about Jack Corbin. Who is he?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, Jack Corbin — and that’s not his real name, but he’s a real person — he’s alive and well today, working for us in Iraq. But he is a jackal, he is an assassin. And one of the most fascinating stories, I think, involves Seychelles, which is a small county, an island country, off the coast of Africa. And it happens to be located where Diego Garcia, one of the United States’s most strategic air bases, is located.

There’s a long history behind Diego Garcia. But in the late '70s, Seychelles had a president that was very friendly to us, James Mancham, and he was overthrown in a bloodless coup by France-Albert Rene, a socialist. And France-Albert Rene threatened to get us out of Diego Garcia, to expose the real facts behind the terrible things that went on to put us in Diego Garcia. There’s a lot of details that I won’t get into now.

In any case, I was called down to Washington to meet with a bunch of retired generals and admirals, who were trying — who were all working as economic hit men for consulting firms, and they were prepping me to go in and corrupt France-Albert Rene and bring him around to our side. But before doing that, they wanted to find out whether he was really corruptible or not. And it was sort of interesting that they — one of these generals had a young protégé, a young man, and the general had noticed that a high diplomat from Seychelles in Washington had a young wife who was not very happy. So this young man was sent in to seduce the wife and compromise her and get information from her, which is a fairly common tactic. Sex is a big thing in this game of diplomacy and economic hit people. And sort of an interesting bi-story here is that one time at lunch this general came back, and he said, “You know, I think you economic hit men have a much tougher job than you women counterpart, because,” he said, “now this woman, the diplomat’s wife, is buying into this with the young man, but she wants to be convinced that he loves her. So, you know, my god, you know, I’d give the keys to the Pentagon to a young lady just for some good sex. I don’t need to be convinced that she loves me. But I guess that’s the difference between men and women.” That’s what he said. Kind of interesting. Anyway, in the end, the young man did get the information from the wife, and the information was that France-Albert René was not corruptible. There was no point in even trying.

AMY GOODMAN: Also, Diego Garcia is very significant as a military base.

JOHN PERKINS: Extremely significant. And it was used — it’s being used in Afghanistan and Iraq and sorties that we fly in to Africa or any part of that world. In any case, I was called off the job, and a little while later a team of assassins were sent in from South Africa — forty-five, forty-six, I can’t remember the exact number — were sent in as a rugby team to bring in Christmas gifts to children of the Seychelles, but their real job was to overthrow the government and assassinate Rene. At the time, I didn’t know these individuals. Now, I know Jack Corbin. I know him very well, personally. I’ve met him since. Our paths crossed back then, but we didn’t know each other.

AMY GOODMAN: What exactly did he do?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, the team went in, and they were apprehended at the airport. A security guard discovered a hidden weapon on one of them. A huge gun battle broke out at the Mahi airport, and these mercenaries were surrounded by perhaps a thousand soldiers on the outside. Jack told me it was one of the few times in his life where he figured he was going to die and had time to think about it. Many times he could have died, but he just reacted quickly. And they didn’t know what to do, but eventually an Air India 707 came into view and asked permission to land, and they gave it permission to land. As soon as it landed, they hijacked it, and they flew it back to Durban, South Africa.

And I’m now watching this on the national news. This was now on US national news, and I’m knowing that this is — I didn’t know what was going to happen when I was called off the case, but now I’m seeing it unfold. And to the world, what we saw is this plane, Air India 707, flies into Durban, South Africa, surrounded by South African security guards. The men on the plane give themselves up. They march off. They’re sent to court and then sentenced to prison, and some, I think, to execution, and that’s the end of the story, as far as we know.

Now that I know Jack, what actually happened was when the plane was surrounded, the security forces got on the telephone with the plane and discovered there was their good friends, their teachers in fact, on the plane. They worked out a deal. The men gave themselves up. They did spend three months in prison. They had their own wing with television, etc., and then were quietly released after three months. A lot of those same men, that team, a lot of them today are in Iraq working for us there, doing things that, you know, our soldiers are forbidden from doing. And they’re making very good money doing it.

AMY GOODMAN: Who is this man, so-called Jack Corbin, working for today in Iraq?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, he works for a private company in Iraq that has a contract, you know, that comes through the Pentagon, CIA, one of those organizations. So, like so much of this work, there’s a tremendous, as you’ve reported on this program, a tremendous number of these mercenaries there. Jack Corbin and his people are at the very top of that level. They’re the extremely skilled ones who do the really delicate work. We’ve also got a lot of people working for Blackwater and others that, you know, are not quite as skilled and are just out there doing kind of the grunt work. But there’s all kinds at that level.

AMY GOODMAN: Bechtel, Bolivia, the water wars. You’re based in the Bay Area, where Bechtel is based, and the continent you know best, South America.

JOHN PERKINS: Yeah, well, you know, Bechtel was given the franchise to own and operate the water system of Cochabamba, Bolivia, third largest city in that country. And the World Bank forced this to happen. It’s so sad. When it happened, suddenly the price of water quadrupled for some people, went up by tremendous amounts. People could no longer afford water. Cochabamba is a pretty poor city. There’s sections of it that are extremely poor.

And so, the people took to the streets. They rebelled against this. There were riots. And Bechtel dug in its heels, but eventually they threw Bechtel out of Bolivia. Bechtel then sued Bolivia for $50 million in a European court, because they couldn’t sue in a US court, because of the laws between Bolivia and the US. And then Evo Morales was elected president of Bolivia, and very shortly after that, Bechtel dropped its lawsuit. But it was interesting that the lawsuit was for lost profits that they hadn’t been able to realize because they had been thrown out for doing things that were so onerous to the people there.

AMY GOODMAN: John Perkins, what do you see as the solutions right now?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, you know, Amy, this empire that we’ve created really has an emperor, and it’s not the president of this country. The President serves, you know, for a short period of time. But it doesn't really matter whether we have a Democrat or a Republican in the White House or running Congress; the empire goes on, because it’s really run by what I call the corporatocracy, which is a group of men who run our biggest corporations. This isn’t a conspiracy theory. They don’t need to conspire. They all know what serves their best interest. But they really are the equivalent of the emperor, because they do not serve at the wish of the people, they’re not democratically elected, they don’t serve any limited term. They essentially answer to no one, except their own boards, and most corporate CEOs actually run their boards, rather than the other way around. And they are the power behind this.

And so, if we want to turn this around, we have to impact them very strongly, which means that we have to change the corporations, which is their power base. And what I feel very strongly is that today corporations exists for the primary purpose of making large profits, making a few very rich people a lot richer on a quarterly basis, on a daily basis, on a very short-term basis. That shouldn't be. There is no reason for that to be.

Corporations have been defined as individuals. Individuals have to be good citizens. Corporations need to be good citizens. They need to take — their primary goal must be to take care of their employees, their customers and all the people around the world who provide the resources that go into making this world run, and to take care of the environments and the communities where those people live.

We must get the corporations to redefine themselves, and I think it’s very realistic that we can do so. Every corporate executive out there is smart enough to realize that he’s running a very failed system. As an economist, as a rational person, nobody can conclude anything otherwise. If you look at the fact that less than 5% of the world's population live in the United States and we consume more than 25% of the world's resources and create over 30% of its major pollution, you can only conclude that we’ve created a very flawed and failed system. This is not a model that can be sold to the Chinese or the Indians or the Africans or the Middle Easterners or the Latin Americans. We can’t even continue with it ourselves. It has to change. And corporate executives know that. They’re smart individuals. I believe that they want to see change.

And when we have really pushed them to change, we’ve been extremely successful. For example, we’ve got them to clean up rivers that were terribly polluted in the 1970s in this country. We got them to get rid of the aerosol cans that were destroying the ozone layer. We got them to change their policies toward hiring and promoting minorities and women. We’ve gotten them to put seatbelts in cars and airbags, against their initial resistance. We’ve got them to change tremendously in any specific area where we’ve set out to do that.

Now, it behooves us, we must convince them that their corporations need to be institutions to make this a better world, rather than institutions that serve a few very rich people and their goal is to make those people even richer. We need to turn this around. We must.

AMY GOODMAN: I want to ask one last quick question on Ecuador, and that is the death of Ecuador’s Defense Minister Guadalupe Larriva, who died in a helicopter crash last year near the Manta US Air Base installation. Do you know anything about that?

JOHN PERKINS: Well, yeah. I just came from Ecuador, and everybody is talking about it, because the same thing happened to Jaime Roldos’s minister of defense before he was assassinated. And the fact that it happened next to the US air base in Manta and it was a freak crash, two helicopters collidng, the similarities between what happened to Jaime Roldos, people all through Ecuador are saying this was a warning to Rafael Correa, the new president of Ecuador.

AMY GOODMAN: We’re going to have to leave it there. John Perkins, thanks for joining us. John Perkins’s new book is called The Secret History of the American Empire: Economic Hit Men, Jackals and the Truth about Global Corruption.