Brett Kavanaugh heeft lak aan internationaal recht en mensenrechten, dus ook aan seksueel geweld tegen vrouwen…….

Kavanaugh,
Trump’s kandidaat voor het hooggerechtshof in de VS, wordt nu terecht
zwart gemaakt voor zijn seksueel wangedrag in het verleden. Echter
veel belangrijker zijn de prestaties en uitspraken die deze hufter
als rechter heeft neergezet en gedaan.

 

Kavanaugh
heeft lak aan het internationaal recht, als daardoor VS belangen
kunnen worden geschaad. Zo stelt Kavanaugh dat
mensenrechtenschendingen begaan door VS
huurlingenlegers die voor het Pentagon werken (‘military
contractors’ als Blackwater) niet vervolgd hoeven te worden en dat al helemaal niet
door andere landen….. Je hoeft je niet af te vragen wat Kavanaugh
vindt van oorlogsmisdaden begaan door het leger van de VS of van de
onderaannemers van het Pentagon, die deze misdaden begaan >>
niet vervolgen!!

Onder
oorlogsmisdaden vallen ook verkrachtingen en martelingen en daar kom
je terug bij waar men zich nu druk over maakt in de VS als het om
Kavanaugh gaat. Het is wel duidelijk dat Kavanaugh niet zwaar tilt
aan zware misdaden begaan tegen vrouwen, of zelfs seksueel geweld
tegen mannen, je weet wel misdaden waarvoor de CIA zelfs geheime diensten van andere lande
n traint…….

Lees
het volgende artikel van Carey Wedler en verbaas je net als ik over
het feit dat men opperschoft Kavanaugh nog durfde te kandideren voor een
taak die belangrijk is voor de vraag of de VS eigenlijk nog wel een
rechtsstaat is……… (dat is de VS al lang niet meer en toch
levert Nederland zelfs landgenoten uit aan dit land, waar het recht
met voeten wordt getreden, zoals met het meer dan achterlijke ‘plea
bargain’ >> je kan beter bekennen, ook al heb je iets niets gedaan, daar
je anders een extreem lange gevangenisstraf kan worden
opgelegd…..)…..

What
the Media Isn’t Telling You About Brett Kavanaugh

Afbeeldingsresultaat voor What the Media Isn’t Telling You About Brett Kavanaugh

September
25, 2018 at 4:23 pm

Written
by 
Carey
Wedler

(ANTIMEDIA Op-ed) —
As expected, the corporate media’s coverage of Brett Kavanaugh’s
appointment process is disappointingly superficial. While there’s
no doubt sexual harassment is a pressing issue in modern-day America,
left-leaning establishment outlets and individuals alike are mired in
these accusations, as well as partisan political divides as they fail
to recognize Kavanaugh’s very troublesome record of court
rulings—rulings that show his verifiable proclivity toward using
the government to very literally harass the American people and the
rest of the world.

While
Congress and the people bicker over their disagreements with
Kavanaugh as he testifies, few are discussing what he has in common
with both factions of the American ruling class.

The
ACLU compiled a 
report in
August detailing his many troublesome perspectives, highlighting his
past decisions on surveillance, free speech, presidential and
congressional war powers, and as a result, the overarching iron fist
of government power that few care to challenge, choosing instead to
fight for control of the institution at large.

As
the ACLU summarized in its “Report of the American Civil Liberties
Union on the Nomination of Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh To Be
Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court”:

[Kavanaugh’s]
record shows his extreme deference to presidential war power and
national security claims, an unwillingness to enforce international
law absent express incorporation by the political branches, and
a tendency to find obstacles to holding government
officials accountable for constitutional and human rights
abuses in national security cases
.”

One
of the greatest constitutional violations since 9/11 has been the
U.S. government’s denial of fair trials and redress over government
violations of rights within the justice system. Kavanaugh has
encouraged these encroachments. In the 2015 case Meshal v.
Higgenbotham
, Kavanaugh moved to deny “a remedy to an
American citizen detained and abused by FBI agents overseas
,”
siding with security over freedom, claiming that giving the American
citizen in question his constitutional rights might undermine efforts
to fight terrorism.

In
a 2009 case, Saleh v. Titan, he asserted military
contractors cannot be held liable to human rights abuses as long as
they are acting under the authority of the U.S. military.

There
is ample evidence of these abuses, but Kavanaugh does not believe in
holding government affiliates accountable. Similarly, in the same
ruling, he asserted that “government contractors [are] immune
from torture claims brought under the [Alien Tort Statute] when the
contractors operate under the control of the U.S. military
.”
The military’s violent authority trumps all.

In
2008, he sided with the executive branch on war powers. Kavanaugh
wrote in the ruling for Harbury v. Hayden that
courts cannot review allegations of executive branch wrongdoing
if the claims challenge national security or foreign affairs
decisions.

In
still another case, El-Shifa Pharmaceutical Industries Co. v.
United States
 (2010), he showed his “inclination
to dismiss cases alleging government misconduct where national
security or foreign affairs are at issue.

He
has also opined that the U.S. government’s war powers are free from
the constraints of international law and that international treaties
can be ignored if U.S. courts “construe statutes, at least when
related to war powers.” Further, he has asserted that while the
U.S. should technically respect international law, the courts have no
power to make the government comply with it. That decision should be
left to the president and Congress (most of us know how they’ve
handled their war powers).

Regarding
“continued detention” pursuant to the 2001 Authorization for Use
of Military Force, Kavanaugh went so far as to acknowledge in
2013’s Ali v. Obama that “this is a long war
with no end in sight
,” but still decided “it is not the
Judiciary’s proper role to devise a novel detention standard that
varies with the length of detention.

Kavanaugh’s
prompted another judge to claim the current Supreme Court nominee had
stretched the meaning of the AUMF so far that some habeas corpus
rulings were “functionally useless.” Similarly, as the ACLU
observed, Kavanaugh has “joined or written numerous D.C. Circuit
opinions that have turned judicial habeas review of Guantánamo
detention into a virtual rubber stamp
.”

His
record on free speech is less atrocious than his reverence for
authoritarian war powers, protecting government corruption and
violence, and denying justice to citizens and noncitizens alike.
Nonetheless, he has been known to side with suppressing speech on
some occasions. As the ACLU report explains:

His
jurisprudence suggests that, where the precedent is clear, he
faithfully applies the law. Where the case law offers ambiguity,
however, he has shown a willingness to restrict speech rights.

With
regard to government spying, in 
Klayman
v. Obama
 in
2015, he disturbingly said the “
suspicionless
mass collection of Americans’ call records is ‘entirely
consistent with the Fourth Amendment
.’”
Further, he 
said: “The
Government’s collection of telephony metadata from a third party
such as a telecommunications service provider is not considered a
search under the Fourth Amendment
”—and
that even if bulk collection 
did constitute
a search, such searches are totally reasonable.

He
is also supportive of America’s growing police state. In the 2007
ruling 
United
States v. Askew
,
he sided in favor of police stop-and-frisk tactics, another violation
of the 4th amendment. In another broad show of support of police
powers, he endorses qualified immunity, which is used to
exempt “
government
officials from liability for constitutional rights violations where
their actions are not clearly unconstitutional.”
 This
concept has been used by the Supreme Court to let a police officer
who shot a woman in her own yard off the hook, 
setting further
precedents to prevent police accountability. Though he opposes
“absolute immunity,” his support for a concept that already
limits government responsibility is troublesome on its own – and is
consistent with rulings regarding the government’s war powers.

The
national conversation about Kavanaugh is obsessively focused on
sexual harassment allegations and his views on traditional partisan
divides like women’s rights and healthcare. While these are not
unimportant issues, it is painfully telling that few are concerned
about the exact same issues both the left and right agree upon that
amount to verifiable harassment — by the government against the
American people and victims of his war machine.

Will
Congress be questioning Kavanaugh on mass surveillance? Doubtful,
considering they continue to 
pass legislation
to enable it. Will they question him about his endorsement of
unrestrained executive and legislative war powers? Again, doubtful
given their 
unrelenting warmongering
and commitment to 
spending taxpayer
dollars on their crumbling empire. As Congress continues to violate
the people’s rights while feigning concern for their well-being—and
as the media routinely 
fails to
inform the public of these incremental erosions of their freedoms and
liberties, it’s no surprise the country at large remains
unconcerned about Kavanaugh’s authoritarian record on war powers
and surveillance or his dubious commitment to free speech and holding
domestic law enforcement accountable.

Creative
Commons
 / Anti-Media / Report
a typo

=================================

Het label ‘Academi’ onder dit bericht staat voor het bedrijf Blackwater, men heeft deze naam geïntroduceerd nadat Blackwater psychopaten een groot aantal oorlogsmisdaden hadden begaan, waardoor er ophef ontstond over dit duivelse geteisem…..

Zie ook:

Rechters die het opnemen voor verkrachters dienen te worden afgezet

Kavanaugh: dus een vrouwvijandige smeerlap word aangewezen als opperrechter door een andere vrouwvijandige schoft………‘ (het woord opperrechter in deze kop klopt niet, Kavanaugh is lid van het hooggerechtshof, waar een ander de functie van opperrechter bekleedt, e.e.a. doet verder niets af aan de strekking)

Bovenklasse ontloopt elke verantwoording, waar de onderlaag zoveel mogelijk verantwoordelijk wordt gehouden voor elke misstap‘ (in het artikel van Caitlin Johnstone dat is opgenomen in dat bericht, wordt over Kavanaugh gesproken)

Eric Prince (oprichter Blackwater en oorlogsmisdadiger) wil oorlog in Afghanistan privatiseren…..

De
smerige en uiterst gewelddadige superpsychopaat Eric Prince, oprichter van
privé terreurleger Blackwater, kreeg bij tv zendgemachtigde MSNBC de
kans, zonder enige kritiek, zijn vuige oorlogspraatjes te
spuien……. Prince wil de oorlog in Afghanistan overnemen van het
Pentagon en belooft daarbij succes, een gedachte die goed viel bij
het beest Trump, zeker gezien ‘de resultaten’ van de oorlog die daar de laatste 17 jaar zijn geboekt*

Volkomen
terecht merkte Stephen Miles van ‘Win Without War’ op, dat Prince in
Den Haag terecht zou moeten staan voor het Internationaal Strafhof
(ICC), al geldt dit ook voor een fiks aantal politici en
hooggeplaatste militairen, de CIA, NSA en ga nog maar even
door……. 

Prince is als directeur van Blackwater, na fiks wat smerige oorlogsmisdaden omgedoopt tot Academi (ha! ha! ha! hoe verzint hij het??) en
is als zodanig één op één verantwoordelijk voor de moord en/of
verminking op/van een groot aantal burgers in o.a. Irak en Afghanistan…….. (waar men in de westerse reguliere media liever niet over spreekt….) 

Lees
het volgende artikel van Jake Johnson, eerder gepubliceerd op Common
Dreams en door mij overgenomen van Anti-War en zie hoe  de
geesten in de VS langzaam maar zeker worden klaargemaakt voor oorlogsvoering door
bedrijven als Academi…… Als dit gebeurt en er worden daarna
bovendien warbots ingezet
**,
is het hek helemaal van de VS ‘oorlogsdam…..’ (een dam van ongeveer
5 centimeter hoog…)

Durden wijst op het steeds harder slaan op de ‘oorlogstrommel’ in mediaorganen als MSNBC, waar deze media oorlogshitsers als Prince en anderen hun gif laten spuien, oorlogshitsers die bijvoorbeeld aandringen bij Trump een volledige oorlog tegen Syrië te beginnen…. Terwijl i.p.v. de oorlog tegen de Taliban in Afghanistan te intensiveren met een psychopathisch huurlingenleger, deze oorlog eindelijk te beëindigen, totaal wordt genegeerd door die mediaorganen….. Een pleidooi onder andere gedaan door Stephen Miles van ‘Win Without War’, die kortweg stelde dat i.p.v. de oorlog te privatiseren, het beter is deze te beëindigen’, een waarheid als een koe zoals je begrijpt.

He
Belongs in the Hague’: MSNBC Slammed for Handing Erik Prince
Megaphone to Sell War

August
17, 2018 at 10:07 pm

Written
by 
Jake
Johnson

(CD— Amid reports that
President Donald Trump is “
showing
renewed interest

in Blackwater founder Erik Prince’s plan to hand the war in
Afghanistan over to a private army led by an “
American
viceroy,
” MSNBC on
Friday happily gave the notorious war profiteer a cushy platform to
make his 
nonsensical
and dangerous
 pitch
to the president almost entirely unchallenged.

Shame
on 
MSNBC for
giving Erik Prince a megaphone,” Stephen Miles, director of Win
Without War, 
wrote on
Twitter following Prince’s interview with 
MSNBC‘s
Andrea Mitchell. “He belongs in The Hague, not spewing his
warmongering for profit filth on television.”

Highlighting
the failure of both the deadly “conventional” approach the U.S.
has taken in Afghanistan over the past 16 years and Prince’s plan
to continue the war for profit, Miles went on to suggest an option
that—for obvious reasons—Mitchell and Prince both ignored, one
that is 
virtually
never aired on corporate media networks like 
MSNBC
.

What
if—hear me out—instead of privatizing the war in #Afghanistan, we
ended it,” Miles 
wrote.
“Crazy, I know.”

Stephen Miles

@SPMiles42

What if – hear me out – instead of privatizing the war in , we ended it. Crazy, I know. But, maybe…

MSNBC @MSNBC

NEW: President Trump is showing renewed interest in a proposal by Blackwater founder Erik Prince to privatize the war, officials tell @NBCInvestigates. http://on.msnbc.com/2PfBbiq 

Erik Prince joins @mitchellreports now live on @MSNBC to discuss the details.

View image on Twitter

Watch
Prince’s full appearance on 
MSNBC,
during which the infamous mercenary was asked for his thoughts
on 
Omarosa but
wasn’t once seriously challenged on his “
prescription
for endless war
“:

Prince’s
appearance on 
MSNBC came
shortly after 
NBC
News
 reported
that Trump is growing increasingly impatient with 
his
own administration’s strategy
 and
looking toward Prince—the brother of billionaire Education
Secretary Betsy DeVos—for possible alternatives.

When
Prince’s plan had Trump’s attention in 2017, it had the backing
of his former strategist Steve Bannon and the president’s
son-in-law and senior adviser, Jared Kushner,” 
NBC reported.

In
recent meetings, Trump “has pressed his advisers about Afghanistan
progress” and expressed interest in Prince’s plan to privatize
the war, 
NBC noted,
citing anonymous administration officials.

As
usually happens when Prince makes his periodic appearances on
corporate news shows to tout his opportunistic, for-profit war plan,
critics were quick to highlight his 
horrendous
track-record
 and
argue that his plan to privatize the war in Afghanistan would lead to
even less oversight and more bloodshed.

Rep. Ro Khanna


@RepRoKhanna

As head of Blackwater, Erik Prince’s mercenaries committed multiple war crimes in Iraq and were convicted for their involvement in the Nissour Square massacre that killed 17 civilians. He deserves an investigation, not contracts to wage a private war in Afghanistan.

MSNBC

@MSNBC

NEW: Exclusive: President Trump is increasingly venting frustration about US strategy in Afghanistan, and showing renewed interest in a proposal by Blackwater founder Erik Prince to privatize the war, current and former sr. admin. officials tell @NBCNews. https://on.msnbc.com/2PfBbiq 

Twitter Ads info and privacy

Ron Wyden


@RonWyden

Cronyism on the battlefield. This is a prescription for endless war.https://www.nbcnews.com/news/military/officials-worry-trump-may-back-erik-prince-plan-privatize-war-n901401 


Trump eyes Erik Prince plan to privatize U.S. war in Afghanistan

“I know he’s frustrated,” Blackwater founder Prince said of the president. “He gave the Pentagon what they wanted. And they haven’t delivered.”

nbcnews.com

Twitter Ads info and privacy

David Rothkopf


@djrothkopf

Trumponomics: What’s better than an unwinnable war? An unwinnable war your political cronies can profit from on the taxpayer’s dime.

Ken Dilanian

@KenDilanianNBC

NBC News exclusive: Trump eyes Erik Prince plan to privatize U.S. war in Afghanistan https://www.nbcnews.com/news/military/officials-worry-trump-may-back-erik-prince-plan-privatize-war-n901401 … via @carolelee @ckubenbc @joshNBCNews

Jeffrey St. Clair

@JSCCounterPunch

The fact that Reality Winner is going to be sent to prison for 5 years and Erik Prince is still walking free & poised to send his murderous mercenaries into Afghanistan pretty much sums up where we come to as a country…https://www.nbcnews.com/news/military/officials-worry-trump-may-back-erik-prince-plan-privatize-war-n901401 


Trump eyes Erik Prince plan to privatize U.S. war in Afghanistan

“I know he’s frustrated,” Blackwater founder Prince said of the president. “He gave the Pentagon what they wanted. And they haven’t delivered.”

nbcnews.com

By Jake
Johnson
 / Creative
Commons
 / Common
Dreams
 / Report
a typo

=======================================

*
17 jaar lang is de oorlog in Afghanistan gaande (…) en als de VS en de rest van de NAVO niet vertrekken uit Afghanistan, kan het nog jaren, of zelfs decennia duren voordat de oorlog is
afgelopen…. Moet je nagaan: Afghanistan is door de Nederlandse
regering (al onder Rutte2, dus onder mede hoofdverantwoordelijkheid
van de PvdA) veilig verklaard voor de terugkeer van
vluchtelingen….. Wat een enorme rotschoft moet je zijn, om alleen
al iets dergelijks te suggereren……….

**
Die warbots worden al ontworpen en klaargemaakt voor productie,
waarbij een drone in feite al een warbot is, de menselijke vinger aan
de knop van drones die worden uitgerust met kunstmatige intelligentie
(AI) zal spoedig verdwijnen, daar te veel dronepiloten geestelijk
doordraaien, nadat ze weer vrouwen en kinderen hebben vermoord, die
niet eens verdacht waren….. Het is dan ook zo dat meer dan 90% van
alle slachtoffers bij VS drone aanvallen niet eens verdacht zijn,
inderdaad meestal vrouwen en kinderen (alleen al het vermoorden
van verdachten is tegen internationale wetten en deze standrechtelijke executies, ofwel moorden, zouden moeten worden
behandeld als ernstige oorlogsmisdaden!) 

Special Forces: een week in de hel…… Commercieel ronselen voor oorlogvoerend orgaan ‘Defensie…..’

Zag gisteren de aankondiging voor een programma op RTL 7 genaamd ‘Special Forces: een week in de hel’  (die combinatie Engels – Nederlands…. ha! ha! ha!)

Eén grote reclame voor speciale commando’s die o.a. geheime moordoperaties moeten uitvoeren (standrechtelijke executies), m.a.w. reclame voor staatsterreur…….. Dit op een tijdstip waarop jongeren tv kijken, jongeren ‘die rijp zijn voor het leger….’ Een programma voor de psychopaten in de dop, die na hun opleiding klaar zijn om wie dan ook te vermoorden, zolang het bevel maar van boven komt…… (en u weet het: ‘Befehl ist Befehl’),

Eenmaal uit het leger kunnen ze of zich aansluiten als huurling bij organisaties die onder contract in oorlogen vechten, zoals bij ‘dienstverleners’ als Blackwater (dat nu ‘Academi’ wordt genoemd), of onder eigen naam nog wat gewone burgers opruimen, daar ze in feite levende wapens zijn………..

Eén van de leuzen in het menu onder het programma: ‘over alle denkbare en ondenkbare lichamelijke en geestelijke beproevingen……..’

Deze toekomstige moordenaars worden opgeleid door professionele ex-moordenaars van de Britse SAS, de VS Navy Seals en de Russische Spetsnatz……….. Sensationeel hè……..???

Schandalig dat men zo openlijk ronselt onder kinderen, iets dat het ministerie van Defensie keer op keer flikt……..

Zie ook: ‘‘Special Forces: een week in de hel’, ofwel het ordinair ronselen van kinderen voor het leger…..

Erik Prince (Blackwater, nu: ‘Academi’) wil een koloniale VS onderkoning voor Afghanistan…….. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

De psychopathische rotschoft Prince, die het oorlogsmisdaden plegende terreurbedrijf Blackwater, nu ‘Academi’* leidt, riep afgelopen week in The Wal Street Journal, dat de VS de aanpak van de Britse East India Company zou moeten volgen in Afghanistan……..

De massamoordenaar is nu duidelijk helemaal knettergek geworden, hij wil dat er in navolging van de onderkoning onder de Britse koloniale overheersing van India, een VS onderkoning wordt aangesteld voor Afghanistan……. ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha! ha!

E.e.a. zou goedkoper zijn, dan de huidige manier van werken, waarbij een onderkoning ook nog eens over de militaire strategie zou moeten beslissen, iets dat dan weer bijzonder gunstig zou zijn voor zijn terreurorganisatie……..

Oorlogsmisdadiger Prince noemt zich sinds kort ook ‘onofficieel gezant van Trump’, het is dan ook niet moeilijk te raden, wie hij als onderkoning van Afghanistan ziet……..

Op 2 juni ontving ik een artikel via Anti-Media, waarin e.e.a. uiteen werd gezet:

Literal
Colonialism’: Blackwater Founder Calls for ‘American Viceroy’
to Rule Afghanistan

June
2, 2017 at 4:42 pm

Written
by 
Anti-Media
News Desk

(COMMONDREAMSDisplaying
what one commentator 
called “sheer
19th century bloodlust and thirst for empire,” Erik Prince, founder
of the private mercenary firm Blackwater, 
argued in The
Wall Street Journal
 this
week that the United States should deploy an “East India Company
approach” in Afghanistan.

The
country, he wrote, should be run by “an American viceroy who would
lead all U.S. government and coalition efforts—including command,
budget, policy, promotion, and contracting—and report directly to
the president.”

Prince
continued:

In
Afghanistan, the viceroy approach would reduce rampant fraud by
focusing spending on initiatives that further the central strategy,
rather than handing cash to every outstretched hand from a U.S.
system bereft of institutional memory.
In
Afghanistan, the viceroy approach would reduce rampant fraud by
focusing spending on initiatives that further the central strategy,
rather than handing cash to every outstretched hand from a U.S.
system bereft of institutional memory.

Prince
insists that these are “cheaper private solutions,” but such
privatization would also be a boon for military contractors.

As
one critic 
noted,
it is hardly surprising that a “war profiteer sees profit
opportunity in war.” Blackwater, the private military company
Prince founded in 1997—which now operates under the
name 
Academi—made
a fortune off the invasion of Iraq. In 2007, a 
New
York Times 
editorial noted that
Blackwater had “received more than $1 billion” in no-bid
contracts from the Bush administration; that same year, Blackwater
contractors shot and killed more than a dozen civilians in what came
to be known as the 
Nisour
Square massacre
.

But
“war profiteering” doesn’t quite capture the scope of Prince’s
vision for Afghanistan. Despite the fact that private contractors
have a 
long
record
 of
abuse and deadly criminality, Prince believes that they should have a
stronger presence in a war that has spanned nearly 16 years and cost
trillions of dollars.

Such
a recommendation, combined with Prince’s invocation of the East
India Company (EIC)—a vestige of the British empire that “conquered,
subjugated, and plundered vast tracts of south Asia for a century,”
in the 
words of
historian William Dalrymple—amounts to a call for “literal
colonialism,” 
says Anil
Kalhan, chair of the New York City Bar Association’s International
Human Rights Committee.

Prince’s
past connections to President Donald Trump indicate that his advice
could potentially have some measure of influence on the White House.

As The
Intercept
‘s
Jeremy Scahill, the author of a bestselling book on
Blackwater, 
reported in
January, Prince spoke with the Trump “team on matters related to
intelligence and defense” and offered suggestions “on candidates
for the Defense and State departments.”

In
April, 
The
Washington Post
 reported that
Prince, presenting himself as “an unofficial envoy for Trump,”
met in January with “a Russian close to President Vladi­mir
Putin as part of an apparent effort to establish a back-channel line
of communication between Moscow” and then-President-elect Trump.

Prince
also donated $250,000 to the Trump campaign following the 2016
Republican National Convention, according to the 
Post.

Prince’s
op-ed comes as the Trump administration is 
reportedly
considering
 sending
more troops to Afghanistan as civilian deaths from the war have
reached
record levels
.”

by Jake
Johnson
 / Creative
Commons
 / Common
Dreams
 / Report
a typo

=============================

* Zie: ‘Blackwater bedreigde onderzoeker Amerikaanse regering

Klik voor meer berichten n.a.v. het bovenstaande, op één van de labels die u hieronder terug kan vinden, dit geldt niet voor de labels EIC, Nisourplein, .

Monsanto vergiftigt niet alleen de wereld, maar heeft zelfs de moordenaars bv Blackwater opgekocht……..

Het volgende bericht kwam ik tegen op het blog van Stan van Houcke. In dit bericht (uit 2013), dat van Counter Current News (slecht werkende site) komt, wordt uitgelegd dat Monsanto, de grote gifmengers en gentech schoften, het agressief paramilitaire bedrijf Blackwater (later ‘Ex Services’ en nu ‘Academi’ genoemd) opkocht. Blackwater werkte o.a. voor multinationals als Monsanto, Chevron en banken als Barclays en Deutsche Bank. Blackwater heeft zich in het verleden o.a. schuldig gemaakt aan diverse oorlogsmisdaden en terrorisme in het algemeen. Daar Blackwater een privé onderneming is, die weliswaar veel voor het ministerie van defensie (lees: ministerie van oorlog) in de VS werkt, kan de regering van de VS daarmee alle claims over oorlogsmisdaden en terrorisme afwijzen en daarmee Blackwater zoveel mogelijk smerige zaken laten uitvoeren………

Het laat zich raden waarom Monsanto een bedrijf als Blackwater opkocht, immers het bedrijf heeft er belang bij, dat haar zaden overal worden verkocht en dat regeringen de boeren houden aan hun contracten met Monsanto. Zo heeft een groot aantal boeren in India zich het leven benomen, daar ze volkomen failliet gingen door hun contract met Monsanto. Dat zit zo: Monsanto verkoopt zaden aan boeren, waarbij die boeren ervoor tekenen, dat zij niet zelf de zaden vermeerderen (zoals ze al duizenden jaren hebben gedaan en doen). Monsanto belooft die boeren gouden bergen, als zij hun zaden afnemen, echter als het tegenzit, bijvoorbeeld door grote droogte, of slecht weer, houden de boeren geen geld over om zaden te kopen voor het volgende seizoen….. Uiteraard geeft Monsanto grote kortingen op de eerste levering, zoals een heroïne dealer dat doet met zijn klanten……

Het laat zich raden, dat er ontwikkelingslanden zijn, die hun boeren niet gaan lastigvallen met de claims van Monsanto, dan is het uiteraard erg handig, als je een goedgetrainde ploeg psychopaten achter de hand hebben, om hun claims ‘wat meer kracht’ bij te zetten………..

Naast dit alles heeft Monsanto nog te maken met milieugroepen, die (volkomen terecht) tegen gentech zijn en bovendien tegen het op grote schaal verspreiden van zwaar gif over de aarde, door dit klote bedrijf……… Altijd handig om een stel psychopaten achter de hand te hebben, om je belangen veilig te stellen, ja toch….???

Monsanto
and Blackwater

Yes,
Monsanto Actually DID Buy the BLACKWATER Mercenary Group!

February
2, 2013 2:39 pm·

monsanto

Reports
that the huge multinational corporation
Monsanto bought the largest mercenary army in the world might have
seemed ridiculous on the surface. But it turns out
that’s exactly what
happened.

A
report authored by Jeremy Scahill for 
The
Nation
 revealed
that Blackwater, later called Xe Services and more recently
“Academi”, had been sold to Monsanto.

The
clandestine intelligence service was renamed in 2009 after it
became notorious and synonymous with numerous reports of
abuses in Iraq, including massacres of civilians.

The
group, originally founded in 1997 by former Navy SEAL officer
Erik Prince, remains the largest private contractor of the
U.S. Department of State “security
services.” It exists in its functional capacity, so that the
state may engage in
terrorism while giving the government the opportunity to deny
it, because those carrying out the war crimes are not directly
reporting to members of the U.S. military hierarchy.

A
number of military and former CIA officers are said to work
for the mercenary group formerly known as Blackwater. The
purpose
 has always been to increase profit
selling their nefarious services-ranging from information and
intelligence to infiltration, political lobbying and paramilitary
training – for other governments, banks
and multinational corporations.

Scahill
indicates that the group does business with multinationals,
like Monsanto, Chevron, and financial giants such as Barclays and
Deutsche Bank, but that this is done through two companies owned by
Erik Prince, owner of Blackwater: Total Intelligence Solutions and
Terrorism Research Center. These officers and directors share the
group.

One
of those partners is Cofer Black, who was known for his brutality
as one of the directors of the CIA.

He
is alleged to have been the one who made contact with Monsanto back
in 2008 as director of Total Intelligence. Black entered into
the contract with the company in order to spy on and
infiltrate organizations of animal
rights
 activists, anti-GM and other dirty
activities of the biotech giant, according to sources close to
Academi.

Monsanto
executive Kevin Wilson declined to comment, when asked directly by
Scahill about this. But he later confirmed to 
The
Nation
 that
the company had in fact hired Total Intelligence in 2008 and
2009.

According
to Monsanto, this was only to keep track of “public
disclosure” of its opponents. He asserted, however, that Total
Intelligence was a “totally separate entity from Blackwater,”
even though it is just one of the myriad of names and forms the
massive mercenary group has adopted over the years.

Scahill
himself, however, says that he has copies of emails from Cofer
Black. They explain that after the meeting with Wilson for
Monsanto, where he explains to other former CIA agents, using their
Blackwater e-mails, that the discussion with Wilson was that Total
Intelligence had become “Monsanto’s intelligence arm,” spying
on activists and other actions, including “our people to legally
integrate these groups.”

In
all, Monsanto paid Total Intelligence $ 127,000 in 2008 and $
105,000 in 2009. After these details began to leak out, they seem
to have buried the paper trail, and perhaps utilized yet another
front for Blackwater to provide the same services.

Activists
have claimed to have confronted agents of Monsanto who roughly fit
the description of mercenaries with the group. Whatever name they
are utilizing at this point, it seems reasonable that if they have
been used in the past – and if they have repeatedly changed their
names and added sub-groups to their organization –
that they have only done the same thing once again.

Monsanto
has been criticized by an array of environmental, peace and even
health activists for their production of toxic poisons spilling
from Agent Orange to PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls), as well as
their more common business in selling pesticides, hormones and
genetically modified seeds.

Almost
simultaneously with the publication of
this article in The Nation, the Via Campesina reported the purchase
of 500,000 shares of Monsanto, for more than $23 million by the
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, which with this action completed
the outing of the mask of “philanthropy.” Another association
that is not surprising.

It
is a marriage between the two most brutal monopolies in the history
of industrialism: Bill Gates controls more than 90 percent of the
market share of proprietary computing and Monsanto about 90 percent
of the global transgenic seed market and most global commercial
seed. There does not exist in any other industrial sector
monopolies so vast, whose very existence is a negation of the
vaunted principle of “market competition” of capitalism. Both
Gates and Monsanto are very aggressive in defending their
ill-gotten monopolies.

Although
Bill Gates might try to say that the Foundation is not linked to
his business, all it proves is the opposite: most of their
donations end up favoring the commercial investments of the tycoon,
not really “donating” anything, but instead of paying taxes to
the state coffers, he invests his profits in where it is favorable
to him economically, including propaganda from their
supposed good intentions.
On the contrary, their “donations” finance projects as
destructive as geoengineering or replacement of natural community
medicines for high-tech patented medicines in the poorest areas of
the world. What a coincidence, former Secretary of Health Julio
Frenk and Ernesto Zedillo are advisers of the Foundation.

Like
Monsanto, Gates is also engaged in trying to destroy rural farming
worldwide, mainly through the “Alliance for a Green Revolution in
Africa” (AGRA). It works as a Trojan horse to deprive poor
African farmers of their traditional seeds, replacing them with the
seeds of their companies first, finally by genetically modified
(GM). To this end, the Foundation hired Robert Horsch in 2006, the
director of Monsanto. Now Gates, airing major profits, went
straight to the source.

Blackwater,
Monsanto and Gates are three sides of the same figure: the
war machine on the
planet and most people who inhabit it, are peasants, indigenous
communities, people who want to share information and
knowledge or any other who does not want to be in the aegis of
profit and the destructiveness of capitalism.

So
why were so many media outlets, editorialists and bloggers
clamoring to say that the purchase was a “hoax”?

That’s
a good question. The more cynical among us might suspect
a financial incentive from Monsanto itself to such “journalists.”
Monsanto indeed has hired a public relations team to seek out
critical blogs and
websites reporting on their crimes against both Nature and
humankind. We have seen this first hand in comments on
PoliticalBlindSpot.com articles on Monsanto. It is not beyond the
realm of possibilities that they have created blogs where
seemingly legitimate authors write organic thoughts, observations
and rebuttals. The public presumes these are real-world people,
when in fact they are working PR for the company.

But
the core argument of those who claim that the Monsanto purchase of
Blackwater is not true lies in the fact that we can only officially
document Blackwater being hired by Monsanto for years. Immediately
following this extensive work that Blackwater did for Monsanto,
they sold the company. Because of the nature of how the sale
transpired, it is impossible to document who the sale was to. The
obvious and logical conclusion to insiders (particularly in the
private security industry), however, is that the sale was in fact
to Monsanto who had been employing the group.

Xe
(now 
Academi)
has, indeed, been purchased
,
and while there’s no way of DOCUMENTING who the new owners really
are, the logical conclusion would be that Monsanto, who had been
employing them prior to the sale are the new owners. This, of
course, would also make sense of the secrecy surrounding the deal
and the identity of the new owners. The
 company
was bought out
 by
private investors via private equity companies that don’t have to
divulge any of their dealings, with Bank of America providing much
of the 
$200
million in financing
 for
the deal.

New
York-based USTC Holdings said it will acquire Xe and its core
operating subsidiaries, but did not disclose the price or terms of
the agreement in a statement.

USTC
Holdings is an investor consortium led by private equity firms
Forte Capital Advisors and Manhattan Partners.

Various
researchers have been trying to document the buy via a paper trail,
but so far without much luck. That, of course, is the point.

One
thing 
that
is known
:
Forte Capital Advisors is the baby of long-time Blackwater ally
Jason De Yonker:

DeYonker
has unique experience with the Company that dates back to
its founding in the late 1990s. He advised the Company through
development of its early business plan and expansion of the
Moyock training facility as well as supporting negotiations of
its first training contracts with U.S. government agencies.
Between 1998 and 2002, Mr. DeYonker co-managed Xe founder,
Erik Prince’s family office which included management of
Mr. Prince’s portfolio companies.

What
does that mean? The guy is a 
glorified
accountant
.

Prior
to joining Forté, Jason co-managed a +$100 million family office.
In addition to actively managing various platform companies, Jason
was a part of the executive team responsible for family wealth
management.

Jason
has spent the last 18 years advising on various mergers,
acquistions and divestitures with an aggregate transaction value
greater than $1 billion. Jason’s experience include: transaction
advisory, portfolio management, real estate development, venture
capital and cross border dealings. Jason began his career with
Arthur Andersen Corporate Finance Group, and was a Director in
Deloitte & Touche’s Corporate Finance Group. He also was the
Finance Director for the West Family Trust, a venture capital group
focused on cross-border transactons.

Jason
recieved a Bachelor of Business Administration, with a
concentration in finance and accounting, from the Univeristy of
Michigan.

The
other investor? It looks like the very junior partner will
be 
Manhattan
Partners
,
a private equity company – a shop that gathers money
from anonymous rich investors and uses the pool of cash
to  leverage buyouts of big companies they wouldn’t have
been able to take over on their own.

Manhattan
Partners invests in “compelling growth and 
special
situation transactions
,”
but this will be their first known foray into defense industries
– 
WarIsBusiness.com
reports
 (via
Spencer Ackerman
):

Manhattan
Growth Partners is led by Dean Bosacki and Patrick McBride. Bosacki
serves on the board of “the world’s largest 
commencement
photography
 business,”
among other companies. Manhattan Growth Partners, which describes
itself as “a progressive thinking private equity firm,” also
holds a majority interest in Hugo Naturals, a line of organic,
vegan-friendly soaps, lotions, scents and soy candles sold at Whole
Foods and other greenwashed retailers.

So
what does this all mean? Did Monsanto actually buy Blackwater? The
answer is yes, but indirectly. The purchase was made through shell
company and a pair of private equity firms. At the end of the
day, it would seem the logical conclusion is that in spite of
arguments to the contrary, Monsanto in fact did by the Blackwater
mercenary group… or at least the renamed Blackwater Xe, and
now Academi Services group. The big question, now
is 
why?

(Article
by M. David, Jackson Marciana and I.A. Jamal; image via #Op309
Media
)

http://countercurrentnews.com/2013/02/monsanto-actually-did-buy-the-blackwater-group/#

Voor meer berichten n.a.v. het voorgaande, klik op één van de labels, die u onder dit bericht terugvindt. Dit geldt niet voor het label ‘Blackwater’,