The Military-Industrial Complex | Jim Garrison

In 2023, the United States military’s annual budget was $1 trillion. Both political parties in our government have been influenced by the war industry, defense contractors, and private interests. As President Eisenhower warned in his farewell address, “the potential for the disastrous rise of misplaced power exists and will persist” unless we, the people, become an informed citizenry and begin dismantling the National Security State and the Military-Industrial Complex.
At the core of the Military-Industrial Complex are private defense contractors, who are reported to be in possession of exotic non-human technology, often referred to as Technologies of Unknown Origin (TUO).
These private entities are working to reverse engineer Non-Human Intelligence (NHI) technologies to create next-generation weaponry. It’s imperative that we prevent this technology from being weaponized.
Join our Citizens for Disclosure movement and demand UFO/UAP transparency *

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Peace Diplomacy & Anomalous Aerial Phenomena

I hope you are all doing well.   Here in the Caribbean time seems to stand still, however…

UAP Research Library

I very much feel that we, the Planet Earth, needs to start a conversation on Peacemaking and Diplomacy, both for our planet, our nation states, the Earth, as well to keep our Exreaterrestrial Visitors viewing us, without our typical warlike attitude, but rather in a calm and civilised manner..

My feelings in this regard are strengthened when I hear Steven Greer  and other researchers, speaking of UAPs (UFOs, UAPs, Anomalous Aerial Phenomena) being shot or brought down, some allegedly by members of the the defense industry and also by the US government.
Given that our neighbours from afar have proven themselves to be far more advanced than we are, we Homo Sapiens, may come off  as the losers.

I am shall to speak to a few academic colleague who were with me at the Peace Studies Department, University of Bradford where I was doing a nMasters degree. I shall also email my thesis supervisor to see if he may want to contribute to a White Paper which perhaps would publish be published by a newly formed foundation in California.

My premise is to start, as well as steer,  a conversation on Peacemaking and Diplomacy, and the  necessity  to have ongoing conversations on these topics in the short term, before  we reach a conflict flash point.

I see this point in time as an opportunity that could be used to bring all major nation states together with a common goal, as President Ronald Reagan’s Address to the United Nations General Assembly in New York City, New York on September 21, 1987
‘Transcript: https://bit.ly/43C2z0v
with the payoff being the equitable and peacefull sharing of all previously discovered Non Human Technology, for the benefit of all beings on Planet Earth.

President Regan said: “Perhaps we need some outside universal threat to make us recognize this common bond’.

This project may be a way to keep peace on this planet, particularly between China, Russia and the United States, as well keep peacefull relations  with our extraterrestrial visitors.

I look forward to your feedback and suggestions.

https://substack.com/profile/13252843-nicholas-robson/note/c-52533244?r=7w1yj&utm_medium=ios&utm_source=notes-share-action

Pax Americana – Or Not Noticing American Bases

It's not that I knew nothing about U.S. military bases before I met Chalmers Johnson.

In certain ways, my idea of the good life had been strongly shaped by such a base. Admittedly, it wasn't in Germany or Japan or South Korea or some other distant land, but on Governor's Island, an Army base just off the southern tip of New York City. In the 1950s, my father ran a gas station there. On Saturday mornings, I would often accompany him to work on a ferry from downtown Manhattan and spend a dreamy suburban-style day there amid zipping Jeeps and marching troops and military kids, playing ball, wandering freely, catching cowboy or war flicks at the island's only movie house, and imagining that this was the best of all possible worlds. And yet between that moment and the moment in September 1998 when Johnson's proposal for a book to be called Blowback: The Costs and Consequences of American Empire fell into my editorial hands, I probably never gave our country's bases another thought.

In that, I was like millions of Americans who, as soldiers or civilians, had cycled through such bases at home and around the world and never considered them again. And we were hardly alone when it came to the hundreds and hundreds of foreign garrisons that made up what Johnson termed our “empire of bases.” Historians, political scientists, and journalists, among many others, paid them little mind. Our overseas garrisons were seldom discussed or debated or covered in the media in any significant way. No one in Congress challenged their existence. No president gave a speech about them. Though I hesitate to use the term, there was something like a conspiracy of silence around them — or perhaps a sense of discomfort that they even existed led everyone to act as if they didn't. And yet they were the face of this country to significant parts of the world. In their profusion and their reach, they represented a staggering reality for which there was no historical precedent. Billions and billions of dollars poured into them. Hundreds of thousands of troops and their dependents were stationed on them. It should have told us all something that they were quite so unremarked upon, but until Johnson came along, they were, in essence, not so much our little secret as a secret we kept even from ourselves. As he wrote with a certain wonder in the second book in his Blowback Trilogy, The Sorrows of Empire: Militarism, Secrecy, and the End of the Republic, “The landscape of this military empire is as unfamiliar and fantastic to most Americans today as Tibet or Timbuktu were to nineteenth-century Europeans.”

Johnson broke the silence around them — repeatedly. And yet, in an era in which such bases, still being built, have played a crucial role in our various wars, conflicts, bombing and drone assassination campaigns, and other interventions in the Greater Middle East, they remain a barely acknowledged aspect of American life. Why this is so should be considered both a curiosity and a mystery. Is it that a genuine acknowledgement of the existence of a vast network of global garrisons would lead to uncomfortable conclusions about the imperial nature of this country? I'm not sure myself. That they remain largely surrounded by an accepted and acceptable silence, however, continues to be an American reality.

Thank heavens, then, that, almost five years after Chalmers Johnson's death, David Vine has produced a groundbreaking new book, Base Nation: How U.S. Military Bases Abroad Harm America and the World, which should once again bring that empire of bases back into the national discussion. Today, in “Garrisoning the Globe,” Vine offers an overview of what it means for this country to continue to encircle the planet with such bases 24/7. Posted: 09/14/2015 By Tom Engelhardt More

 

 

Ukraine shows uselessness of NATO nukes in Europe

Many people in Germany, Belgium, and the Netherlands wonder why there are still US tactical nuclear weapons on their soil. These B-61 nuclear gravity bombs were stationed in Europe during the Cold War to deter the Soviet threat, but while this may (or may not) have once made sense, most pundits nowadays agree that at least from a military point of view, the weapons are irrelevant. More

Editorial

Given the tremendous damage the we humans have already done to the Earth, our home planet, the use of nuclear weapons in a conflict would be beyond insane.

We have already gone a long way to poisoning our atmosphere, making our oceans, one of the major sources of food, so acidic that we may be at a tipping point that will wipe out the shellfish and crustaceans that compose a large part of the ocean food chain. Fish stocks are in many areas depleted leading the FAO to suggest banning commercial fishing in some areas of some oceans.

We also have to face global heating which may bring with it changing rainfall patterns, which may lead to water and food shortages. Many inhabitants of our world are already living on barely enough food and water to keep them alive. Furthermore, the planetary population is growing and heading for nine billion by mid-century. Experts are questioning whether or not we will be able to feed this many.

We have to keep in mind that we have only this small fragile planet. A planet in a backwater of our local galaxy. There are no inhabitable worlds to go to nor the transport to get there on. If we do not take care and preserve our world, which will take a global effort to accomplish, the human race may perish. Think of your children and family members,your friends and colleagues If we use nuclear weapons all will certainly perish.

Chernobyl and Fukushima and all the nuclear testing carried out by the UN's P5 have spread more than enough nuclear pollution through the planet. A nuclear conflict would seal our fate.

Pope Francis said recently, “Even today we raise our hand against our brother… We have perfected our weapons, our conscience has fallen asleep, and we have sharpened our ideas to justify ourselves as if it were normal we continue to sow destruction, pain, death. Violence and war lead only to death”.

As H.H. 14th Dalai Lama said, “Peace does not mean an absence of conflicts; differences will always be there. Peace means solving these differences through peaceful means; through dialogue, education, knowledge; and through humane ways.” Editor