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			by Ulson Gunnar 
			14 April 2015 
			
			from
			
			Journal-NEO Website 
			
			
			Spanish version 
			 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			The information war can be quickly lost if one cannot get their 
			assets onto the "battlefield."  
			
			  
			
			For the US, UK or Europe, the constant 
			din of their propaganda spread across the planet via their 
			impressive and immense media networks has recently run into a few 
			snags. 
			 
			In nations like Russia, China or Iran, ruling governments and local 
			industry have begun creating their own Internets, their own 
			alternatives to US-controlled social media platforms and search 
			engines, and in some cases, even their own hardware to run it all 
			on.  
			
			  
			
			They have also taken a cue from the US 
			and decided to put in "kill switches" and censorship measures to 
			prevent information from abroad being piped into their nation and 
			disseminated among their populations. 
			 
			Or more accurate than saying "to prevent information from abroad," 
			one could say, "propaganda from abroad." 
			 
			For instance, the US State Department's 
			
			Voice of America network 
			openly attempts to insert narratives favorable to US interests in 
			targeted countries. So important does the US State Department see 
			this mission, it has even attempted to construct independent 
			communication networks by building their own towers and relay 
			stations. 
			 
			The US State Department has also spent millions of dollars on 
			developing an "Internet in a suitcase," or a means to create an 
			Internet among activists even when the government of a nation 
			targeted by the US for regime change shuts down the real Internet.
			 
			
			  
			
			Far from science fiction, the New 
			York Times would even cover it in their article, "U.S. 
			Underwrites Internet Detour Around Censors." 
			 
			But the problem the US State Department and the special interests 
			that underwrite it, is that such solutions are easily overcome by 
			other governments, and even non-state actors operating in the 
			defense of their nation against US-backed sedition. 
			 
			In order to crowdsource such a project, and have it spread 
			prolifically across the planet, it must be made to appear 
			altruistic, unattached to the political subversion it is 
			actually created for, and put into the hands of unwitting, 
			well-intentioned hackers for the purpose of building it, refining it 
			and perpetually updating it to adapt and overcome whatever 
			challenges it faces. 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			Enter the "Outernet"
			 
			 
			At first glance, 
			the Outernet looks like an amazing 
			social project by genuine people interested in empowering people 
			with the vast amounts of free information available on the Internet.
			 
			
			  
			
			It is a satellite based broadcast, 
			meaning it can reach anyone on Earth with a receiver. And while it 
			talks about a "library in your pocket" and how having that 
			information could change society, it also talks about the inability 
			for sovereign governments to censor it.  
			
			  
			
			But who would want to censor a library? 
			 
			At second glance, one will notice Syed Karim, the "founder" 
			of Outernet. Karim was previously "director of innovation" at the 
			Media Development Investment Fund (MDIF) 
			which, surprise, funds the Outernet.  
			
			  
			
			And in turn, MDIF is run by former 
			employees of 
			
			Open Society (grantmaking 
			network founded by 
			George Soros), with Open Society funding MDIF. 
			 
			In other words, at second glance, we see Open Society behind the 
			Outernet through a series of carefully concealed fronts and an 
			incestuous, tangled web of conflicts of interest.  
			
			  
			
			The initial nobility of the concept only 
			further spirals into the abyss of government and corporate sponsored 
			mass public persuasion and manipulation when one reads the archives 
			of what has actually been broadcast already using Outernet. 
			 
			Some of my favorites include "war surgery," perfect for America's 
			terrorist mercenary army now operating in, 
			
				
					- 
					
					Yemen  
					- 
					
					Syria  
					- 
					
					Iraq  
					- 
					
					Lebanon   
					- 
					
					Libya  
				 
			 
			
			There is also, 
			
				
			 
			
			The Albert Einstein Institution, 
			it should be remembered, played a central role in building up the US 
			State Department's various networks behind so-called "color 
			revolutions" that have since hit Ukraine, the Middle East and even 
			as far as Southeast and East Asia. 
			 
			Content is broadcast based on "votes." But as everyone should know, 
			voting itself is subject to mass manipulation either of the 
			voters' own perception, or of the very mechanics of the vote itself.
			 
			
			  
			
			It is also very clear that content that 
			is either well sponsored, or is put out by well organized groups, 
			gets placed toward the top of the list including links to the 
			Jehovah Witnesses. 
			 
			Thus the "great equalizer" Karim claimed Outernet is in fact yet 
			another channel of Western government and corporate propaganda, 
			giving those who already monopolize vast territory amid the 
			information war, yet another weapon to use against unsuspecting 
			minds.  
			
			  
			
			The only real feature that makes 
			Outernet different from cable television or the Internet, is the 
			fact that it is broadcast from a satellite, and thus difficult to 
			block in a targeted country, and receivable by whomever the US State 
			Department takes pilfered tax dollars and buys receiver sets for. 
			 
			Currently, however, there is also a lot of very useful information 
			that is being broadcast, voted up by legitimate users of the system, 
			using the system as it should in theory be used. The problem is, 
			whenever special interests want, they can override "the vote," and 
			spread propaganda and sedition anywhere on Earth. 
			 
			It should be noted that projects
			
			by Google,
			
			and Facebook, both
			
			partners of the NSA and its information war against 
			humanity, have similar plans to Outernet.  
			
			  
			
			They propose roving drones or airships 
			that transmit the Internet all over the world like Outernet's 
			satellite arrangement. Again, it would be assets controlled by 
			the US government and corporations, and potentially beyond 
			the reach of sovereign nations targeted by broadcasts and the 
			sedition they are there to support. 
			 
			It is clear that at least one foot has been placed in space, 
			regarding the ongoing and ever-evolving information war.  
			
			  
			
			Other nations are likely to follow suit, 
			placing their own broadcasters above the West and beaming down 
			information the West would otherwise like controlled or silenced 
			altogether.  
			
			  
			
			For the hackers and enthusiasts 
			clamoring over the idea of Outernet, they can't be blamed.  
			
			  
			
			But they would be wise to look deeper 
			into who is behind it, and think about alternatives they 
			could create to truly realize this concept as it should be, and deny 
			these interests yet another noble cause to hide behind, and 
			ultimately ruin with their deceit. 
			 
  
			
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