HIGHLY POTENT NEWS THAT MIGHT CHANGE YOUR VIEWS

war

VIDEO — BREAKING: Isreali Rocket Attacks Hitting Damascus, Huge Explosions

YouTube — sofilianews
May 4, 2013

YouTube — D.C PULSTATION
May 4, 2013

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[hat tip: What Really Happened]


VIDEO — Blatant Blitz: Israel bombs Syria, targets chem weapons depot?

Russia Today
 May 4, 2013

Israel has openly intervened in Syria for the second time this year, according to US officials. They say Tel Aviv has carried out another bombing run on a target inside Syria following a previous strike in January. RT gets reaction from Conn Hallinan, contributing editor for the U.S. think tank Foreign Policy in Focus and the latest from RT’s Middle East correspondent Paula Slier.

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Anti-drone protest in UK over domestic opening of Reaper control center

Russia Today
April 27, 2013

Edited time: April 28, 2013 16:29

[VIDEO]

Anti-war groups have held a protest at a UK airbase from which the country has begun controlling its fleet of assassination drones in Afghanistan. Previously, the remote pilots were deployed only in the US.

Four anti-war groups – including CND, the Drone Campaign Network, Stop the War and War on Want – are staging a nonviolent protest on Saturday over drone use by the Waddington base in Lincolnshire.

About four hundred peace campaigners marched from the city of Lincoln to RAF Waddington.

The British Royal Air Force (RAF) has opened drone control stations at the base located south of Lincoln this week to work in tandem with those already in place at Creech Air Force Base in Nevada. In 2010, the Ministry of Defence decided it needs the capability to remotely operate its armed drones from its own soil following a strategic security review.

Waddington is home to the new 13 squadron created for this purpose in October last year. The unit consists of about 100 personnel, including pilots, systems operators and engineers.

Together with the Nevada unit, the squadron will be remotely controlling UK’s drones, including the armed Reaper drones, which can drop laser-guided bombs and launch Hellfire missiles.

Image from twitter.com @ domlinley

“We aren’t flying any more operations than we were before, but with the time differences between the US, Afghanistan and the UK, it is now possible for pilots at Waddington to work in relay with the those in the US,” a source told the Guardian while explaining the rationale behind the new unit.

The UK deploys a relatively small, but still sizable, drone fleet in Afghanistan, mostly consisting of surveillance aircraft. There are five British Reapers deployed in the region, and the MoD plans to double that number this year.

Protesters expressed fears over the UK’s development of the drone program, which is marred by its association with its US counterpart. Washington uses CIA-operated drones in the targeted killings of suspected militants, which critics say results in an unacceptable number of civilian deaths and has shaky legal and moral grounds.

“Drones, controlled far away from conflict zones, ease politicians’ decisions to launch military strikes and order extra-judicial assassinations, without democratic oversight or accountability to the public,” Rafeef Ziadah, War on Want senior campaign manager said. “Now is the time to ban killer drones – before it is too late.”

The British military insist that their use of drones saves soldiers’ and civilians’ lives, and is no different from that of piloted aircraft.

“UK Reaper aircraft are piloted by highly trained professional military pilots who adhere strictly to the same laws of armed conflict and are bound by the same clearly defined rules of engagement which apply to traditionally manned RAF aircraft,” an MoD spokesman said.

Image from twitter.com @ CNDuk

 


UN report wants to terminate killer robots, opposes life-or-death powers over humans

Wikimedia Image (click robot for source)

GlobalPost.com
May 2, 2013

The Canadian Press

Killer robots that can attack targets without any human input “should not have the power of life and death over human beings,” a new draft U.N. report says.

The report for the U.N. Human Rights Commission posted online this week deals with legal and philosophical issues involved in giving robots lethal powers over humans, echoing countless science-fiction novels and films. The debate dates to author Isaac Asimov’s first rule for robots in the 1942 story “Runaround:” ”A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.”

Report author Christof Heyns, a South African professor of human rights law, calls for a worldwide moratorium on the “testing, production, assembly, transfer, acquisition, deployment and use” of killer robots until an international conference can develop rules for their use.

His findings are due to be debated at the Human Rights Council in Geneva on May 29.

According to the report, the United States, Britain, Israel, South Korea and Japan have developed various types of fully or semi-autonomous weapons.

In the report, Heyns focuses on a new generation of weapons that choose their targets and execute them. He calls them “lethal autonomous robotics,” or LARs for short, and says: “Decisions over life and death in armed conflict may require compassion and intuition. Humans — while they are fallible — at least might possess these qualities, whereas robots definitely do not.”

[READ MORE…]

[hat tip: Luke Rudowski]


VIDEO — School Surveillance Susanne Posel 26Feb2013

TheVinnyEastwoodShow.com
February 26, 2013

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US Schools are to have a new security protocol to protect teachers from students whereby police and private security with automatic weapons will now be involved in surveilling and punishing students.

James Wright http://www.facebook.com/occupyfreemasonry
The highest ranking Freemasonic Whistleblower in history was taken into a mental institution reminiscent of a 1940’s Gulag and strapped to a chair being made to watch sesame street, Disney movies and Christina Aguilera music videos.
A Hungarian prince who was working closely with James in reforming Freemasonry was recently assassinated in a most horrible ritualistic manner, his death has not been reported in the media and the police cover story is that he died of a heart attack.

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Journalism schools start teaching students to fly drones

End the Lie – Independent News
March 22, 2013

A small drone is seen during a hearing of the US Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill, March 20, 2013 in Washington, DC. (AFP Photo / Brendan Smialowski)

A small drone is seen during a hearing of the US Senate Judiciary Committee on Capitol Hill, March 20, 2013 in Washington, DC. (AFP Photo / Brendan Smialowski)

Next generation’s Walter Cronkites won’t be learning the traditional tricks and tips used by the journalists of today. Drones could be the next big tool for newsgathering, and some journalism students are getting hands-on experience already.

Editor’s note: be sure to check out our latest article on this trend as well as an article on drone use for news-gathering from 2012.

Drones aren’t likely to be approved for commercial use for a few more years, but in the meantime hobbyists are free to purchase and assemble small unmanned aerial vehicles that can hoover close to the earth and offer literally a bird’s eye view of the ground. One police department in Colorado has already logged close to 200 hours with their search-and-rescue drones, and the Department of Homeland Security has its own personal fleet for border patrol. But as America enters the dawn of the drone age, will law enforcement agencies be the only ones benefiting from unmanned aerial vehicles?

“In 2015, when the FAA is set to begin to relax its prohibition on use and integrate civilian use of drones, then I would think the first folks in the door would be media because there’s such an obvious use,” Ryan Calo, a law professor at the University of Washington, testified during a Senate hearing earlier this week. Congress is currently trying to put together guidelines for a domestic drone program that will be ready for the big UAV boom expected in just a matter of months, but commercial services and police department won’t be the only ones that will benefit. As Calo explained to Congress, using a drone to gather news is an option not often considered.

Some would beg to differ. Take Bill Allen, for example. Allen, a science and journalism professor at the University of Missouri, is already making his j-school students use remote controlled drones to help discover what they could do to the industry.

“We have a class here of journalism students who are learning to fly J-bots, for journalism robots, or drones,” Allen told ABC News. “So they learn to fly them, and also do what reporters do: brainstorm ideas, go out and do reporting, do drone based photography and video. We’re trying to see if this is going to be useful for journalism.”

By giving journalists controls over small light-weighted drones, reporters are allowed to have another set of eyes that can scour hard-to-get-to-places where a hit story might otherwise be unobtainable. One scenario described by the university’s radio station content director to ABC exemplified exactly what a drone could do in the hands of the right reporter:

“Scott Pham, director of content at the University of Missouri’s public radio station KBIA, described the story of a drone hobbyist flying a camera-equipped helicopter over a field in Texas near his home capturing images. When the man looked at the images later, he noticed a creek he had never seen before that was flushed red. When he looked into it, he discovered a meat processing plant that was illegally dumping into the creek”

“That’s news gathering that can happen in your backyard,” Pham added to ABC. “That’s where the real value is. From my perspective that’s what actually expands journalism. Tools that allow us to get new information and report it, and that’s what I think a drone can do.”

Matthew Dickinson, a system administrator and instructor for the Information Technology Program in the MU Computer Science Department, explains to the school’s engineering department that drones are indeed providing students with a powerful tool unmatched in their industry this side of a costly chopper.

“It’s giving the journalism people the chance to get what they could get with a helicopter at one-one thousandth of the price,” Dickinson tells the department’s Marie French.

What so-called “j-drones” also do, though, is enough to raise a few worries. National discussion on domestic drones has already focused significantly on the potential privacy violations that could exist if the government is given the go-ahead to use small surveillance UAVs to spy on suspects. Privacy advocates call the likely onslaught of drones an Orwellian nightmare that would render the Fourth Amendment of the US Constitution almost nonexistent. Such is the reason for congressional committees to investigate the matters now before privacy is pulverized forever.

“Rules are necessary to ensure that fundamental standards for fairness, privacy and accountability are understood,” Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) Director Amie Stepanovich testified before the Senate earlier this week. Even Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-California), who has openly advocated for drone use in the past, seemed unsure at the hearing of what the right thing to do would be to protect Americans from all-watching aircraft.

“What altitude can they fly? What kind of facial recognition are they capable of at various activities? Can they take pictures of individuals through windows of their home?” Feinstein asked. “Drones are hard to spot for the untrained eye, so your ability to protect yourself is not great.”

But as Congress and the Federal Aviation Administration accelerate their studies on what drones should and shouldn’t do, hobbyists, educators and students can still operate small aircraft — some as inexpensive as only $300 — to play with what could be the next generation of journalist’s most must-have tool. The University of Nebraska-Lincoln’s has already joined Missouri by adding a Drone Journalism course of its own that is teaching other college students not to necessarily be scared of flying, robot devices that can stream images anywhere on Earth.

“Drones tend to have a negative connotation in today’s media,” University of Nebraska student Robert Partyka told Fast Company. “The public mostly hears the word drone when associated with war and destruction. However, drone technology can be used in many other aspects, including field reporting. Part of this project’s goal is to discover how best to utilize this technology in the field of journalism.”

Source: RT


VIDEO — CrossTalk: Syrian Tipping Point?

Russia Today
April 29, 2013

The US has urged NATO to reconsider its role in Syria, as there are allegations of chemical weapons use. What is NATO’s next move? What are the options to resolve the conflict? And if Assad were to leave, what would change on the ground? CrossTalking with John Glaser and Mark Jacobson.

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