Kerry
Says Internet “Makes it Much Harder to Govern” and “Organize”
People
In
Brazil this week Secretary of State John Kerry paid respect to Henry
Kissinger and made statements about how difficult the internet has
made it for the ruling class to “govern” people
15
August, 2013
Speaking
to State Department personnel at the U.S. Embassy in Brasilia, Brazil
this past Tuesday, John Kerry made some very revealing comments. Not
only did he pay homage to Henry Kissinger, but he also took the
opportunity to demonize the internet and complain about how difficult
it has become to control people following the cold war.
In
other words, the slaves were easier to keep in line before they had
all this information.
Kerry
said:
“I’m
a student of history, and I love to go back and read a particularly
great book like [Henry] Kissinger’s book about diplomacy where you
think about the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and the balance
of power and how difficult it was for countries to advance their
interests and years and years of wars,” Kerry said to a gathering
of State Department employees and their families.
“And
we sometimes say to ourselves, boy, aren’t we lucky,” Kerry
continued.
“Well,
folks,” he said, “ever since the end of the Cold War, forces have
been unleashed that were tamped down for centuries by dictators, and
that was complicated further by this little thing called the internet
and the ability of people everywhere to communicate instantaneously
and to have more information coming at them in one day than most
people can process in months or a year.
“It
makes it much harder to govern, makes it much harder to organize
people, much harder to find the common interest,” said Kerry
As
we reported in the past Jay Rockefeller has been among the biggest
detractors of the internet, and earlier this year he even suggested
that the FCC should regulate the internet. This regulation would
come under the guise of “anti bullying” legislation, just as the
recently proposed internet regulations in the UK are being pushed
through under the guise of a pornography ban.
A
few years back Jay Rockefeller even suggested that the internet
should have never been invented:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=necfW5Dj5UQ#action=share
Although
Jay Rockefeller is nearing retirement, he is still hard at work
taking away the small amount of freedom that is left among everyday
people. Much like his support of gun control and censorship, when he
makes public statements about issues like this, you can be sure that
he will follow through when it comes time to push for a new law.
sometimes there is a glitch in the matrix. This is one of them.
ReplyDelete