Thanks for informing all of us of this very valuable information.

For life and liberty,
David Macko

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "John Perna" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, December 08, 2005 5:54 PM
Subject: [Libertarian] The UN's Desire to Control the Internet - Relevant to 
the entire internet


  The UN's Desire to Control the Internet - Relevant to the entire internet

  http://www.thenewamerican.com/artman/publish/printer_2712.shtml

                                                            United Nations 
Last Updated: Dec 6th, 2005 - 08:23:55
---------------------------------

The UN's Desire to Control the Internet
by Steven J. DuBord
December 12, 2005

UN pirates sailed into Tunis this November 16-18, looking to take the helm 
of Internet supervision from U.S. hands.
  Do you treasure the freedom to wade out into the vast sea of information 
that is the Internet and surf the World Wide Web? Then look out for what is 
coming over the horizon: a fleet of ships is bearing down on you and your 
little surf(key)board, and they are flying the blue Jolly Roger of the 
United Nations.
  You will see among them such ships of state as Russia, China, Cuba, Iran, 
Sudan, and Zimbabwe, hardly paragons of liberty and human rights. All of 
them are waving their cutlasses in outrage that the United States is 
refusing (for now) to relinquish its supervisory role over the 
private-sector, not-for-profit Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and 
Numbers (ICANN). Even the European Union has revealed its true colors and 
fired a broadside of protest against supposed U.S. dominance of the 
Internet. The captain of this bunch is none other than the UN 
secretary-general himself, Kofi "oil-for-food" Annan.
  Treasure That Should Stay Buried
  ICANN is essentially the mapmaker for the Internet. It handles the 
technical operations of the root servers of the Internet, mapping the 
relatively easy-to-remember domain names like apple.com or whitehouse.gov to 
the unique numerical address assigned to that domain. Since its inception in 
1998, ICANN has plotted this map with a minimum of governmental interference 
and for only nominal fees.
  Even without the UN's meddling, ICANN is a collaborative effort of the 
global community. The ICANN website notes that "citizens of Australia, 
Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, China, France, Germany, Ghana, Japan, Kenya, 
Korea, Mexico, the Netherlands, Portugal, Senegal, Spain, the United 
Kingdom, and the United States" have all served on the organization's board 
of directors. "ICANN's President directs an international staff, working 
from three continents," ensuring that "all users of the Internet can find 
all valid addresses" through the organization's domain name map.
  Now, Captain Annan has his eye trained on this map, looking not only for 
control of cyberspace, but for the buried treasure of taxing access to it. 
To this end, he convened the first World Summit on the Information Society 
in Geneva from December 10-12 of 2003, and also a second such summit this 
November 16-18 in Tunis.
  To get a good idea of what the summit in Tunis was all about, one need 
only pay heed to Senator Norm Coleman's (R-Minn.) preview of the Geneva 
summit in the November 7, 2005 Wall Street Journal: "It sounds like a Tom 
Clancy plot. An anonymous group of international technocrats holds secretive 
meetings in Geneva. Their cover story: devising a blueprint to help the 
developing world more fully participate in the digital revolution. Their 
real mission: strategizing to take over management of the Internet from the 
U.S. and enable the United Nations to dominate and politicize the World Wide 
Web. Does it sound too bizarre to be true? Regrettably, much of what 
emanates these days from the U.N. does." Sen. Coleman should know: his 
Senate investigation into the UN's oil-for-food scandal has exposed the 
entrenched bureaucratic corruption of the world body.
  Anti-American Audacity and Duplicity
  In "Make Way for the UNternet?" in our January 26, 2004 issue, this 
publication quoted the blunt statement of a UN official at the Geneva 
summit: "What we are looking at is the future management of the Internet. 
It's [about] what is the best way to manage what has become a natural 
resource for all humanity." The summit in Tunis took up where Geneva left 
off, holding fast to this course of audacity and duplicity.
  The audacity comes in the form of declaring the Internet to be a "global 
resource" belonging to the world. While this "resource" is global in scope, 
it clearly bears the stamp "Made in the U.S.A." Its origin can be traced 
back to U.S. Defense Department efforts in the 1960s to build an 
interconnected network -- or "Internet" -- of computers that could survive a 
nuclear war. Although others have contributed to the Internet, the primary 
technology and hardware that make it possible belong to the United States. 
To declare that the U.S. has done such a good job of creating the Internet 
that it is now obligated to give it up for the sake of the world is 
ludicrous.
  Through the technical know-how of automobile manufacturers such as 
Volkswagen and BMW, Germany has excelled at making automobiles. Is Germany 
going to turn over these companies to the United Nations because everyone in 
the world deserves an affordable, fuel-efficient vehicle? Nokia of Finland 
owns 32 percent of the global cellphone market. Is Finland going to turn 
Nokia over to the UN's International Telecommunication Union because 100 
percent of the world's inhabitants deserve to have a cellphone? Sony 
Corporation of Japan has become the leader of the home game console market 
with its PlayStation 2, and is gearing up to release a powerful new version 
next year. Is Sony going to turn over this technology to UNICEF because 
every child in the world deserves to play games? Don't hold your breath 
waiting for these or any other members of the UN to put a new car, 
cellphone, or game console under your Christmas tree.
  It is through sheer anti-American bias that the nations of the world, via 
the UN, want to steal control of technology that the United States has 
developed. What other country would have shared the immense benefits of this 
technology with the world while asking so little in return?
  In the October 25 Deseret Morning News, Representative Chris Cannon 
(R-Utah) noted that the Internet's "potential contributions to economic 
growth in less developed countries dwarf anything the United Nations could 
conceivably provide." Yet "there is no other country on the face of the 
earth whose government would have had the restraint to permit the freedom of 
thought and action that has produced the present benefits and future promise 
of the Internet." Rep. Cannon concludes that "it is nothing short of 
preposterous to suggest that any aspect of management of this amazing engine 
of knowledge and development be turned over to bureaucrats under the sway 
and direction of some of the most brutal and controlling tyrants in the 
world whose antipathy to the free flow of information is pathological."
  These brutal, pathological tyrants would have us believe that they only 
want to help manage the Internet because it has "become a natural resource 
for all humanity." They are eager to see the Internet controlled, regulated, 
and taxed by the UN supposedly for the good of humanity. But the UN's choice 
to hold the second summit in Tunisia -- of all places -- reveals the 
duplicity of such feigned concern.
  Consider what the journalistic organization Reporters Without Borders has 
to say about Tunisia in their 2005 report: "The Tunisian media work in a 
strait-jacket. The press code stipulates heavy fines or prison sentences for 
the author of any overly critical article or comment." The report also 
notes: "Repressive laws, bureaucratic harassment, the withdrawal of state 
advertising, corruption, police violence, political trials and torture are 
all common practices that have been condemned by human rights organizations. 
Self-censorship has become second nature for journalists confronted by a 
brutal and ubiquitous apparatus of repression." Yet this is where Captain 
Annan had his crew digging for the root servers of the Internet.
  Running under a false flag of neutrality and magnanimity, Annan tried to 
plunder public opinion in a November 5 Washington Post article, claiming to 
believe that "censoring cyberspace, compromising its technical underpinnings 
or submitting it to stringent governmental oversight would mean turning our 
backs on one of today's greatest instruments of progress. To defend the 
Internet is to defend freedom itself." Aye, aye, Captain! But if you mean 
one word of what you say about the Internet, then tell me how you can 
justify "defending" it with a summit in Tunisia? After all, I'm sure that 
China would have been happy to make Tiananmen Square available.
  Reasons to Sound "Battle Stations"
  At the risk of sounding like the parrot on Captain Annan's shoulder, to 
protect the Internet really is to protect freedom itself. It's time to sound 
"battle stations" in defense of the current system of private oversight 
under the auspices of the United States. ICANN is, in a sense, the Internet 
Service Provider to all other Internet Service Providers. The UN covets this 
role of "master" Internet Service Provider because most of its members are 
repressive governments who lust for this control, while the organization 
itself drools at the thought of limitless income. You still can't think of 
any other reasons to get involved in preventing the UN from pirating control 
of the Internet? I can.
  When was the last time a chief executive officer of your Internet Service 
Provider was deeply involved in allowing a tyrannical dictator to swindle 
billions of dollars in humanitarian aid? UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan is 
deeply implicated in the UN oil-for-food scandal, which netted Saddam 
Hussein as much as $10 billion in illegal revenues and lined the pockets of 
UN Undersecretary-General Benon Sevan, Annan's protégé, to the tune of $1 
million. Can you imagine a better choice for master Internet Service 
Provider than Annan and his cronies? I can.
  When was the last time you typed in some search terms to your favorite 
search engine and found that a member of your Internet Service Provider's 
board of directors had blocked access to all results using those words? If 
you were a resident of Communist China, you would find that your government 
had coerced even American companies such as Microsoft, Yahoo!, and Google, 
which operate search sites in China, into blocking words like "freedom," 
"democracy," "human rights," and "Taiwan independence." (For further 
information, read "A World Wide Web of Oppression" in our August 8, 2005 
issue.) How strange, then, that Communist China has not only replaced the 
free republic of Taiwan at the UN, it has become a permanent member of the 
UN's Security Council -- the board of directors, if you will. Can you 
imagine a better choice for master Internet Service Provider than a body 
that promotes such an oppressor to its board of directors? I can.
  When was the last time you heard that the human resources department of 
your Internet Service Provider was abusing the very people they are supposed 
to protect? "Dilbert" cartoons notwithstanding, the best example of this is 
the UN's own Commission on Human Rights. China, Cuba, Sudan, and Zimbabwe 
sit on this commission, all of them known for violating the human rights of 
their own citizens. If the UN allows the fox to guard the henhouse, so to 
speak, it surely can't be trusted to oversee fairly the use of the Internet 
to promote freedom and human rights. Can you imagine a better master 
Internet Service Provider than an organization that allows the worst 
criminals to judge what constitutes a crime? I can.
  When was the last time you heard that employees and security guards at 
your Internet Service Provider were guilty of running prostitution rings, 
even forcing children into sexual servitude? In recent years, UN personnel 
and peacekeepers in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia, Burundi, 
Haiti, Kosovo, and other locations have been awash in allegations of sexual 
misconduct. On March 13, 2005, the Washington Post noted that these "reports 
of sexual abuse have come from U.N. officials, internal U.N. documents, and 
local and international human rights organizations that have tracked the 
issue. Some U.N. officials and outside observers say there have been cases 
of abuse in almost every U.N. mission." The charges range from outright rape 
of women and children to coercing them into exchanging sex for food, 
medicine, and other relief supplies. Can you imagine a better master 
Internet Service Provider than one which employs pimps and sexual predators? 
I can.
  And so, apparently, can Sen. Coleman. On October 19, Reuters reported his 
concern for the Internet: "Is it going to become a vehicle for global 
taxation of domain names? Are you going to allow folks who have demonstrated 
a pattern of suppression of content, are they going to be put in charge of 
running this thing?" Because of his investigation into the oil-for-food 
scandal, the gentleman from Minnesota knows that of which he speaks. When he 
says, "I really think you're talking about the future of the Internet here," 
only a fool would ignore his warning.
  Thankfully, Sen. Coleman has put some bite behind his bark and sponsored 
Senate Resolution 273, "Expressing the sense of the Senate that the United 
Nations and other international organizations shall not be allowed to 
exercise control over the Internet." He is definitely not alone. On November 
17, the House passed unanimously Rep. John Doolittle's (R-Calif.) House 
Concurrent Resolution 268, "Expressing the sense of the Congress regarding 
oversight of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers." These 
legislative measures are a good beginning, but concerned Americans also need 
to set their sights at a longer range.
  Gradual Permission to Come Aboard
  Too many officials at the highest levels of the U.S. government have an 
internationalist mind-set. Even though the United Nations is irredeemably 
corrupt, these officials remain committed to it as a fledgling world 
government. Many are even members of globalist organizations such as the 
Council on Foreign Relations. For them, and for other key members of the 
global power elite outside as well as inside government, the UN is merely a 
vehicle for consolidating power and creating a world government controlled 
by themselves.
  Because of the influence the American power elite exerts over U.S. 
government policy, that policy is generally steered toward a course of 
apparent resistance to UN demands while actually implementing its edicts 
slowly over time. U.S. refusal to sign the Kyoto treaty, for instance, has 
not stopped the federal government from implementing intrusive environmental 
regulations to combat the supposed threat of global warming.
  Even more telling is the existence of a plan that President John F. 
Kennedy unveiled before the UN General Assembly in 1961. The plan was 
detailed in a State Department document entitled Freedom From War: The 
United States Program for General and Complete Disarmament in a Peaceful 
World. According to this plan, nations would gradually surrender their 
military forces to the United Nations. According to Freedom From War, 
"States would retain only those forces, non-nuclear armaments, and 
establishments required for the purpose of maintaining internal order." 
There would be no allowance for unrestricted civilian ownership of firearms. 
This plan of eventual subservience to the UN, originally articulated in 
Freedom From War, is still official U.S. policy.
  Even before the plan was put into writing, the process of subordinating 
our military was well underway. Not since World War II have our troops been 
sent abroad with a proper, constitutionally mandated declaration of war from 
Congress. They have been sent everywhere from Korea to Iraq by imperial 
presidents who instead have either sought approval from the United Nations 
or, at the very least, paid lip-service to enforcing UN decrees.
  Sadly, the same patient, gradual process of surrender, this time regarding 
the Internet, has already begun in Tunis. By even attending a UN summit and 
seeking the world's permission to retain Internet superintendence, the U.S. 
government is assuming an inferior status, granting validity to baseless 
claims, and manifesting a predilection for appeasement.
  In Tunis, appeasement was the order of the day. As the Associated Press 
reported on November 16, the United States reached a consensus -- at a 
price -- with the delegates from more than 100 other countries "to leave the 
United States with oversight of the computers that act as the Internet's 
master directories." The negotiated price was an agreement to "create an 
open-ended international forum for raising important Internet issues." The 
new group will address "any issue, such as spam or cybercrime, not currently 
covered by ICANN." As if the group's purpose were not clear enough already, 
it will be called the Internet Governance Forum.
  It is claimed that, for now, the forum "would have no binding authority." 
But with such a vague mandate to address "any issue . not currently covered 
by ICANN," this forum gives the UN one foot on the command deck of the 
Internet. If it were not so, then why did EU spokesman Martin Selmayr exult: 
"What we see here is a clear indication that what [the U.S.] said . is not 
the last word and that we are back on track towards internationalization." 
David Gross, "the U.S. State Department's top official on Internet policy," 
was for some unfathomable reason "thrilled by the last-minute deal," 
claiming it "preserved the unique role of the U.S."
  But for how long? According to AP, "many delegates . did not believe the 
Americans emerged victorious," and "even traditional allies of Washington 
considered it to have opened the door to the possibility of more shared 
governance." Though Captain Kofi claimed at the summit that the UN "does not 
want to take over, police or otherwise control the Internet," he is expected 
to "open the forum's first meeting perhaps as early as next year in Athens." 
With this old sea dog at the helm, the Internet Governance Forum is sure to 
navigate the UN into a position of ever-increasing cyberspace dominance.
  Making the UN Walk the Plank
  For now, it is time to load your e-mail cannons and fire off a salvo in 
support of Senate Resolution 273 and against any form of UN control over the 
Internet.* Furthermore, we must remain vigilant to oppose all attempts by 
the Internet Governance Forum to give the UN any degree of power over 
cyberspace. We must also guard against any other plan that compromises with 
the UN in even the slightest way. The ultimate solution, of course, is to 
pressure your representative and senators to support U.S. withdrawal from 
the UN, eventually making the UN walk the plank and ship its headquarters 
off our soil.
  Whether the question is, "Who should oversee the Internet?" or "Can I help 
save the Internet?" there is only one answer that will keep cyberspace 
freedom afloat: "ICANN."
  * Sample letters can be found by visiting http://capwiz.com/jbs/home/ and 
clicking on the link to "Say NO to UN Control of the Internet!"


---------------------------------
       © Copyright 2005 American Opinion Publishing Incorporated




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