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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE |
CONTACT: The Yes Men
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Massive Leak Reveals Criminality, Paranoia, Among Corporate Titans
Dow pays "strategic intelligence" firm to spy on Yes Men and grassroots activists. Takeaway: movement is on the right track!
LONDON - February 26 - WikiLeaks begins to publish today over five million e-mails obtained by Anonymous from "global intelligence" company Stratfor. The emails, which reveal everything from sinister spy tactics to an insider trading scheme with Goldman Sachs (see below), also include several discussions of the Yes Men and Bhopal activists. (Bhopal activists seek redress for the 1984 Dow Chemical/Union Carbide gas disaster in Bhopal, India, that led to thousands of deaths, injuries in more than half a million people, and lasting environmental damage.)
Many of the Bhopal-related emails, addressed from Stratfor to Dow and Union Carbide public relations directors, reveal concern that, in the lead-up to the 25th anniversary of the Bhopal disaster, the Bhopal issue might be expanded into an effective systemic critique of corporate rule, and speculate at length about why this hasn't yet happened—providing a fascinating window onto what at least some corporate types fear most from activists.
"[Bhopal activists] have made a slight nod toward expanded activity, but never followed through on it—the idea of 'other Bhopals' that were the fault of Dow or others," mused Joseph de Feo, who is listed in one online source as a "Briefer" for Stratfor.
"Maybe the Yes Men were the pinnacle. They made an argument in their way on their terms—that this is a corporate problem and a part of the a [sic] larger whole," wrote Kathleen Morson, Stratfor's Director of Policy Analysis.
"With less than a month to go [until the 25th anniversary], you'd think that the major players—especially Amnesty—would have branched out from Bhopal to make a broader set of issues. I don't see any evidence of it," wrote Bart Mongoven, Stratfor's Vice President, in November 2004. "If they can't manage to use the 25th anniversary to broaden the issue, they probably won't be able to."
Mongoven even speculates on coordination between various activist campaigns that had nothing to do with each other. "The Chevron campaign [in Ecuador] is remarkably similar [to the Dow campaign] in its unrealistic demand. Is it a follow up or an admission that the first thrust failed? Am I missing a node of activity or a major campaign that is to come? Has the Dow campaign been more successful than I think?" It's almost as if Mongoven assumes the two campaigns were directed from the same central activist headquarters.
Just as Wall Street has at times let slip their fear of the Occupy Wall Street movement, these leaks seem to show that corporate power is most afraid of whatever reveals "the larger whole" and "broader issues," i.e. whatever brings systemic criminal behavior to light. "Systemic critique could lead to policy changes that would challenge corporate power and profits in a really major way," noted Joseph Huff-Hannon, recently-promoted Director of Policy Analysis for the Yes Lab.
Among the millions of other leaked Stratfor emails are some that reveal dubious financial practices, including an apparent insider trading scheme with Goldman Sachs Managing Director Shea Morenz, who joined Stratfor's board of directors and invested "substantially" more than $4 million in the scheme, called StratCap. "What StratCap will do is use our Stratfor's intelligence and analysis to trade in a range of geopolitical instruments," wrote Stratfor CEO George Friedman in September 2011. StratCap was designed through a complex offshore share structure to appear legally independent, but Friedman assured Stratfor staff otherwise: "Do not think of StratCap as an outside organization. It will be integral... It will be useful to you... We are already working on mock portfolios and trades." (StratCap has been due to launch in 2012, though that could now change.)
Other emails show Stratfor techniques of a truly creepy Spy vs. Spy sort: "[Y]ou have to take control of him. Control means financial, sexual or psychological control," wrote CEO Friedman recently to an employee, Reva Bhalla, on how to exploit an Israeli intelligence informant providing information on Chavez's cancer. (Stratfor's "confidential intelligence services" clients include, besides Dow and Union Carbide, the US Department of Homeland Security, the US Marines, the US Defense Intelligence Agency, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, and Raytheon.)
Perhaps most entertainingly of all, the email trove reveals that Stratfor's "Confederation Partners"—an unethical alliance between Stratfor and a number of mainstream journalists—are referred to informally within Stratfor as its "Confed Fuck House." (Another discovery: Coca Cola was spying on PETA. More such gems are sure to surface as operatives sift through the 5.5 million emails.)
A number of the remaining Yes Men-related emails take the form of reports on public appearances by the Yes Men, such as one that describes one audience comprised of "art students on class assignments and free entertainment." Another notes that "The Yes Men tweeted about the US Chamber of Commerce 'plotting forged emails, documents to trick (AND smear) opponents,'" a reference to an apparent plot to discredit Chamber opponents using forged documents, as revealed when thousands of emails were recently leaked by Anonymous from cyber-security firm HB Gary. Yet another discusses Alessio Rastani, the Wall Street trader widely mistaken for Yes Man Andy Bichlbaum, who proclaimed, live on the BBC, that "governments don't rule the world, Goldman Sachs rules the world."
"Rastani was right," said the real Andy Bichlbaum five months later. "But it's now very clear that it doesn't have to be that way anymore."
The Yes Men and representatives from the Bhopal Medical Appeal will join Julian Assange of Wikileaks at a press conference at noon today, Feb. 27, at the Frontline Club in London.

43 Comments so far
Show AllIt has always been my opinion that this the weak point of the Corporate State. They can handle and survive attacks and protests against Individuals be they a single Corporation or person. To them this gives the public the perception that checks and balances in place are working.
What they fear are attacks against the entire SYSTEM. It is the entire system that is corrupt and even were a Glass Steagall reimposed it not really a threat to the system. The OWS movement was one of the first that saw the public start questioning the entire system.
Again the problem is not just Mosanto or JP Morgan or The Moodys rating agency or Fox news. It is a systemic problem which can only be addressed with massive change in how wealth and power distributed.
Got off track there...you are right about the ugly fascist death of capitalism, Jaded. The serious class struggle is coming. What the, probably, 99% of the 1% don't realize, is that they too will become victims of their corruption and extortion. They will be the mink coat in the back alley, sleeping in the Benz, eating out of 5star restaurant trash cans. The rest of us will have long survived and be happy and toasty in our log cabins in the woods, making delicious stew with squashes and venison, playing the banjo and smokin da g, dancing the night away...:-)))
i needed that! showed this news to my son on his way out the door and he said, "we need to bring criminal charges." but, heck, "they" want us to put faith in this rigged system.
Many decades ago Henry Ford said this: “ if the American people ever found the way the banking system really worked, there would be revolution overnight”.
Well like I said, the cat is out of the bag, now it is up to the people.
oh, what a pleasure to read so many posters pointing to the bigger picture. i read just the other day that wal-mart, like exx-mo a subsidiary of gs gets almost every retail penny spent. also, a lot of banks across the nation, er uhm, globe work under the goldman sachs’ wing meant to assure us rubes of diversity. the corporate hydra-monster when caught in a scam will quickly throw a human to the crowd if that serves to protect the image. why?
“don’t you know, people, you are expendible!”
”make it so, scotty!” too many believe that money equals happiness and security for retirement, therefore fear attacking the all-corrupting SYSTEM. it’s not easy to toss away the security blanket but as times get tough, just repeat over and over,
“it’s only money!” till you believe it.
Please name the mainstream journalists in cahoots with these criminals. I would like to see them disgraced in public.
Please be patient with this analogy - although it may seem a stretch.
When the home computer was invented and computers were controlled by typing MS DOS commands in ascii text next to a dot or other prompt - - - nearly 80 percent of blind persons along the Bell Curve were enfranchised to USE them. The cognitive human factors were not insurmountable, nor were the costs of interface peripherals astronomical. A good time was being had by ALL.
But technology advanced to the Graphic User Interface - requiring a mouse to be moved across a screen to a target buttons to be clicked. Suddenly, ALL blind persons were disenfranchised. When Bill Gates comprehended this, he sincerely felt bad. Human factors engineers began to work on the matter. But as fast as they could work, computer technology lurched ahead. Each lurch involved a next generation of adaptive technology for blind access. To-day, blind persons who are average computer users need to be 2 SD above the Mean, and power blind users better be able to make Straight "A"s at Harvard. We're now talking the upper 10 percent of blinks [an affectionate term].
==It has always been my opinion that the Corporate State can handle and survive attacks and protests against Individuals, be they a single Corporation or person. - What they fear are attacks against the entire SYSTEM. It is the entire system that is corrupt and even were a Glass Steagall reimposed it's not really a threat to the system. The OWS movement was one of the first that saw the public start questioning the Entire System.==
Watching the OWS on the street, did you see The Bell Curve? Some unhappy people were holding bricks to throw through a glass window, ANY glass window. Aggressive opponents demanded of many protesters: "Okay - what is it that you would replace Capitalism WITH?" How many, captured by press microphones, answered that question with adequate knowledge, articulate speech, and ethical confidence? Four?
If average Americans were to be given a 20 question test upon the important revelations of Wikileaks across the last 18 months, how would the scores distribute? I regard Julian Assange as a genius of whom Strines should be proud as hell.
But we're getting a hot fudge sundae ten feet across and eight feet high. Five million CIA emails? This is like cracking the human genome. The upper one percent of the Bell Curve will take pains to digest and explain it to the other 99 percent who, in order not to feel relatively stupid, will say: "Hell, we KNEW that!"
Trylon
Very, very interesting article. It demonstrates that "the 1 %" is and themselves feel much weaker than the 99 % perceive.
This should fuel the necesseary revolution - and might even make it a fairly peaceful one, by people simply connecting around the 1 % - probably what them 1 % fear most of all, being disqualified by equal infrastructural knowledge - to swamp and then ignore the rulings, directions and demands by "Gold Sacks & co", i.e. the 1 %.
The ongoing confrontation is of Power against Necessity. Necessity will win - and those who want to survive better align with it - i.e. our premises in the Biosphere. (Or 'Gaia' if you will - 'Gaia' being the Biosphere seen from the consciousness side, by a living being "looking"/sensing within, rather than at that mirror of consciousness being the material world, most immedediately the Biosphere).
These Corporate Titans, arms of Goldman Sachs, got cought at the scene of the crime with the facts. They got their spies assets of CIA who email their partners and this is what they say...
"confidential intelligence services"
StratCap will trade Stratfor's intelligence, sold in a range of geopolitical instruments
But we got wikileaks and anonymous discovered they got the big money but still blew their cover.
We find their journalists every day on TV, in on the con of conspiracy. Will they keep their jobs, down on their knees, if they dare confirm what we now plainly see.
The system is corrupt rotting at the top, but we will go on and cannot be stopped. Singin bout Weeeee the people.... singin bout Weeeee the people.
So they spy on our thoughts spy on how we talk and we caught them doin that by just walkin the walk.... Weeee the people
Our intel caught them quiet as a mouse, planning forged emails at the "Confed Fuck House".
So who pays them now for democracies loses? The US Government and it’s corporate Bosses...
"confidential intelligence services" clients include, Dow and Union Carbide, Lockheed Martin, Homeland Security and Northrop Grumman... the US Marines, and added to the stew, DIA and Raytheon just to name a few.
singin bout Weeeeeee the people, wont be stopped, Weeeeee the People.....