
	by Mike Adams
	
	the Health Ranger
	
	December 07, 2010
	from 
	NaturalNews Website
	
	
	Regardless of what you think about the Wikileaks release of state secrets, 
	there's no debating the astonishing fact that the internet made these leaks 
	possible. 
	
	 
	
	Without the internet, no single organization 
	such as Wikileaks would have been able to so widely propagate secret 
	government information and make it public. In the old model of information 
	distribution - centralized mainstream media newspapers and news broadcasts - 
	such information would have been tightly controlled thanks to government 
	pressure.
	
	But the internet allows individual information publishers to bypass the 
	censorship of government. In the case of Wikileaks, it allowed an Australian 
	citizen to embarrass the U.S. government while sitting at a laptop computer 
	in the United Kingdom.
	
	Governments don't like to be embarrassed. They don't like their secrets 
	aired on the internet. 
	
	 
	
	Sure, it's okay for governments to tap all of 
	your secrets by monitoring your phone calls, emails and web browsing habits, 
	but every government seeks to protect its own secrets at practically any 
	cost. That's why the upshot of this Wikileaks release may be that 
	governments will now start to look for new ways to censor and control the 
	internet in order to prevent such information leaks from happening in the 
	future.
	
	What governments around the world are suddenly beginning to realize is that 
	a free internet is ultimately incompatible with government secrets, and 
	secrets are essential to any government that wants to remain in power.
	
	
	 
	
	That's because, as even Noam Chomsky 
	stated in this DemocracyNow video interview (WikiLeaks 
	Cables Reveal "Profound Hatred for Democracy on The Part of Our Political 
	Leadership"), 
	most government secrets are based on information governments wouldn't want 
	their people to discover - secrets that might threaten the legitimacy of 
	government if the people found out the truth.
 
	
	 
	
	
	How the FCC plans to 
	seize authority over the internet
	
	
	As part of a long-term plan to control content on the internet, the FCC is 
	now attempting to assert authority over the internet in the same way it has 
	long exercised content censorship authority over broadcast television and 
	radio.
	
	The reason you can't say those seven dirty words on broadcast television, in 
	other words, is because the FCC controls broadcast television content and 
	can simply revoke the broadcast licenses of any television station that 
	refuses to comply. This is the same tactic, in the internet world, of 
	yanking a web site's domain name, which the Department of Homeland Security 
	has already begun doing over
	
	the last several weeks.
	
	The FCC also controls content on the radio and can yank the broadcast 
	licenses of any radio stations that refuse to comply with its content 
	censorship. This is why operators of "pirate radio stations" are dealt with 
	so harshly: For the government to allow any radio station to operate outside 
	its censorship and control is to invite dissent.
	
	The internet, of course, has been operating freely and without any real 
	government censorship for roughly two decades. In that time, it has grown to 
	be what is arguably the most influential medium in the world for information 
	distribution. Most importantly, the internet is the medium of information 
	freedom that is not controlled by any government.
	
	The U.S. government wants to change all that, and they've dispatched the FCC 
	to reign in the "freedoms" of the internet.
 
	
	 
	
	
	How to crush internet 
	Free Speech
	
	
	The first step to the FCC's crushing of internet freedom is to assert 
	authority over the internet by claiming to run the show. 
	
	 
	
	The FCC, of course, 
	has no legal authority over the internet. It was only granted authority in 
	1934 over broadcast communications in the electromagnetic spectrum - you 
	know, radio waves and antennas, that kind of thing.
	
	There is nothing in the Communications Act of 1934 that grants the FCC any 
	authority over the internet because obviously the internet didn't exist 
	then, and it would have been impossible for lawmakers in the 1930's to 
	imagine the internet as it operates today.
	
	So instead of following the law, the FCC is trying to "fake" its way into 
	false authority over the internet by claiming authority in the current "net 
	neutrality" debate. By asserting its authority with net neutrality, the FCC 
	will establish a beachhead of implied authority from which it can begin to 
	control and censor the internet.
	
	This is why "net neutrality" is a threat to internet freedom. It's not 
	because of anything to do with net neutrality itself, but rather with the 
	FCC's big power grab in its assertion that it has authority over websites 
	just like it has authority over broadcast radio.
 
	
	 
	
	
	The FCC may soon tell 
	you what you can post on the internet
	
	
	Where is this all heading? Once 
	
	the FCC establishes a foothold on the 'net, 
	it can then assert that it has the power to tell you what to post on the 
	internet.
	
	
	 
	
	Here's how it might unfold:
	
		
		First, the FCC will simply ban what it calls "information traitors," which 
	will include people like Julian Assange (Wikileaks) who publish state 
	secrets. (Technically Julian Assange can't be a traitor since he's not even 
	American in the first place, but don't expect the FCC to care about this 
	distinction.)
Once the public is comfortable with that, the FCC will advance its agenda to 
	include "information terrorists" which will include anything posted about 
		Ron Paul, the 
		Federal Reserve and the counterfeit money supply, 
		G. Edward 
	Griffin, or anything from true U.S. patriots who defend the Constitution.
		
		 
		
		The anti-state website
		
		LewRockwell
		(where some of my own 
	articles have appeared from time to time) would also be immediately banned 
	because its information is so dangerous to government control.
After that censorship is in place, the FCC will likely begin to push the 
	corporate agenda by banning websites that harm the profits of large 
	corporations. This will include, of course, websites like NaturalNews which 
	teach people about health freedom, nutritional cures, natural remedies and 
	alternatives to 
		
		Big Pharma's high-profit pharmaceuticals.
		
The way this will come about is that the FCC may require a license to 
	publish health information on the web, in much the same way that states 
	currently license doctors to practice medicine. 
		 
		
		This is how conventional 
	medicine has operated its monopoly for so long, by the way: By controlling 
	the licensing of doctors at the state level. Any doctor who dares prescribe 
	nutritional supplements or suggest that medication might be harmful to a 
	patient immediately gets stripped of his license to practice medicine (and 
	thereby put out of business). 
		 
		
		The FCC will likely do the same thing across the 
	internet. Sites that publish health information without a license will be 
	deemed "a threat to public health" and be seized by the government.
	
	
	The first target? Anti-vaccine websites. 
	
	 
	
	
	Vaccines are so crucial to the 
	continuation of disease and medical enslavement in America that any site 
	questioning the current vaccine mythology will be deemed a threat to public 
	health - or perhaps even a "terrorism" organization.
	
	Essentially, once the FCC has gained power and authority over the internet, 
	it will use that power to push a Big Government/Big Business agenda that 
	censors the truth, keeps people trapped in a system of disinformation, and 
	silences anyone who challenges the status quo.
	
	The FCC is poised to become the FDA of internet information, banning 
	alternative speech and enforcing an information monopoly engineered by 
	powerful corporations.
	
	Think of the FCC as the new the Ministry of Truth from George 
	Orwell's novel
			
          1984.
 
	
	 
	
	
	This is not about net 
	neutrality, it's about the FCC power grab
	
	
	Remember, I am not arguing here for or against the principle of net 
	neutrality itself, but rather warning about the FCC's imposition of false 
	authority over the internet in the first place. 
	
	 
	
	The idea of net neutrality has merits, but 
	granting the FCC the power to control the internet is a disastrously bad 
	idea that will only end in censorship and "information tyranny" - especially 
	now that governments around the world are witnessing the "dangers" of 
	information freedom via the Wikileaks fiasco.
	
	If there's one thing governments hate, it's real freedom. 
	
	 
	
	Sure, they all 
	talk about freedom and publicly claim their allegiance to it, but behind the 
	scenes what they really want is total information control. That's because 
	freedom gives people the ability to say what they want, to whomever they 
	want, and even to oppose the doctrine of the government.
	
	Just look at China and how it has censored the internet to the point where 
	you can't even log in to Facebook from that country.
	
	Governments hate freedom because freedom threatens centralized power and 
	control over the People. And because governments hate freedom, they also 
	hate the internet as long as it's free. 
	
	 
	
	This is why bloggers and internet journalists 
	are right now imprisoned all over the world for merely 
	
	posting the truth. 
	
	
	
	As 
	Noam Chomsky said in his 
	DemocracyNow interview, 
	what the recent Wikileaks releases really show is that the U.S. government 
	has,
	
		
		"a profound hatred for democracy."
	
	
	It also happens to have a profound hatred for 
	actual freedom, because people who are free to think for themselves and 
	write whatever they want are always going to be a threat to a government 
	that wants people to conform, obey and acquiesce.
 
	
	 
	
	
	All government 
	agencies seek to expand their power
	
	
	What do the FCC, FDA, TSA, DEA, FTC and USDA all have in common?
	They all want more power. 
	
	
	 
	
	They want more authority, bigger budgets and more 
	control over the world around them. They are like cancer tumors, growing in 
	size and toxicity while they consume more and more by stealing resources 
	from a healthy host. The bigger these cancer tumors become, the more 
	dangerous they become to the health of the host body, and the more urgently 
	they need to be held in check or excised from the body entirely.
	
	There is no such thing as a government agency that wants to be smaller, with 
	shrinking budgets and fewer employees on the taxpayer payroll. 
	
	
	 
	
	Government 
	departments - just like people - incessantly seek more power even at the 
	expense of freedom among those they claim to serve. And this move by the FCC 
	to assume control over the internet is one of the most dangerous power grabs 
	yet witnessed in the short history of the information age.
	
	By the way, one of the reasons we created and launched NaturalNews.TV was 
	because we wanted a video site that could not be turned off by YouTube.
	
	
	 
	
	You've probably heard the horror stories of 
	famous content producers like Alex Jones having their YouTube accounts 
	suddenly terminated. NaturalNews.TV is a safe haven for alternative health 
	content that cannot be turned off by a large corporation that doesn't 
	recognize the value of health freedom.
	
	Feel free to participate by uploading videos or viewing the many thousands 
	of free videos available right now at www.NaturalNews.TV
	
	By the way, I recommend reading another outstanding article on this topic 
	written by John Naughton at
	The 
	Guardian. 
	
	
	 
	
	Here's a taste of what he writes:
	
		
		Consider, for instance, how the views of the US administration have changed 
	in just a year. 
		 
		
		On 21 January, secretary of state 
		
		Hillary Clinton made a landmark speech 
	about internet freedom, in Washington DC, which many people welcomed and 
	most interpreted as a rebuke to China for its alleged cyberattack on Google.
		
		
			
			"Information has never been so free," 
		declared Clinton. "Even in authoritarian countries, information networks 
		are helping people discover new facts and making governments more 
		accountable."
		
		
		She went on to relate how, during his visit to 
	China in November 2009, 
		Barack Obama had,
		
			
			"defended the right of people to freely 
		access information, and said that the more freely information flows the 
		stronger societies become. He spoke about how access to information 
		helps citizens to hold their governments accountable, generates new 
		ideas, and encourages creativity." 
		
		
		Given what we now know, that Clinton speech 
	reads like a satirical masterpiece.