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In a message dated 17/07/01 15:07:17 Eastern Daylight Time, 
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

<< Subj:     san: "Taking Over the World: Militarism and Corporate 
Globalization"
 Date:  17/07/01 15:07:17 Eastern Daylight Time
 From:  [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Richard Sanders)
 Sender:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Reply-to:  <A HREF="mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]";>[EMAIL PROTECTED]</A>
 To:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 
 Here is the table of contents for our next issue of Press for Conversion!
 
 The theme of this 46-page issue is: "Taking Over the World: Militarism and
 Corporate Globalization."
 
 Let me know if you'd like any extra copies:
 5 copies=3D$15;  10 copies=3D$20;  25 copies=3D$42;  50 copies=3D$75
 
 I can also send out free sample copies within Canada (to those who haven't
 received a sample before).  If you'd like a free copy, you'll need to send
 me your address before this Thursday mid-morning, July 19.  (If all goes
 well, that's when we are doing our mailing.)  After then, I can mail out
 copies in exchange for $5 to COAT.
 
 Richard Sanders, coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade (COAT)
 
 P.S.  Below you'll find an article written by yours truly, called: "War
 Technology: The Cutting Edge of Economic Power."  (Check out the web link
 to Leonardo Da Vinci's drawing of a "scythed assault chariot.")
 --------------
 
 
 Press for Conversion!            Issue 45                    July 2001
     Quarterly magazine of the Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade
 
    Taking Over the World:
    Militarism and Corporate Globalization
 
 
    ***** Origins of Globalization *****
 
 War Technology:  The Cutting Edge of Economic Power
    By Richard Sanders, Coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade
 
 The Hidden Agenda: Pax Americana and Postwar Corporate Rule
    By Richard K. Moore
 
 The U.S. versus the World: Globalization or Global Hegemony?
    By Naseer Aruri, Jerusalem-born professor of Political Science at the
 University of Massachusetts in Dartmouth.
 
 
    ***** Making the Links *****
 
 The UN: Getting into Bed with Big Business
    By George Monbiot, author of Poisoned Arrows, Amazon Watershed and No
 Man=92s Land
    Lecturer in philosophy and environmental science at the Universities of
 Keele and East London.=20
 
 The Rise of Global Corporate Power
    By Sarah Anderson, Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) Fellow and John
 Cavanagh, IPS Director.
 
 A Convergence of Globalization and Militarization
    By Theresa Wolfwood, Board member, Vancouver Island Public Interest
 Research Group and director, Barnard-Boecker Centre Foundation.
 
 Definitions of Globalization: Let=92s Not Get Confused
    By Felicity Hill, Director, Women=92s International League for Peace and
 Freedom - UN office in New York City.
 
 Nike=92s Armies: How the Military Enforces Global Capitalism
    By Jeff Ballinger, founder and director of Press for Change, a New
 Jersey-based consumer-information NGO monitoring workers=92 rights issues in
 Asia. =20
 
 
    ***** Military Industries ***** =20
 
 War and Globalization Support American Business
    By Michel Chossudovsky, Professor of Economics, University of Ottawa;
 author of The Globalization of Poverty, 1998.
 
 Dealers in Death: A Visit to an International Arms Bazaar
    By Robert Fisk, Middle East correspondent for the London Independent.
 
 Did Canadian Weapons Kill Protesters in Papua New Guinea?
    By Richard Sanders, Coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade
 
 The Pentagon and International Mega-Mergers
    By the Federation of American Scientists
 
 
    ***** Weapons in Space *****=20
 
 The Spaceman Cometh: Corporate Rule and Control
    By Bruce Gagnon, Coordinator, Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear
 Power in Space=09
 
 U.S. Military Plans to Fight Wars in Space
    By Karl Grossman, professor of journalism, State University of New
 York/College at Old Westbury; author of The Wrong Stuff: The Space
 Program=92s Nuclear Threat to our Planet; convener, Global Network Against
 Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space.
 
 
    *****  FTAA *****
 
 From the WTO to the FTAA
    By Steven Staples, Chair, International Network on Disarmament and
 Globalization and Issue Campaigns Coordinator, Council of Canadians.
 
 FTAA and Plan Colombia: Partners in Imperialism
    By the Seattle Colombia Committee=09
 
 The Poisoned Fruits of Neo-Liberalism
    By Fidel Castro Ruz, President of Cuba.
 
 
    ***** Events and Resources *****=20
 
 Conference, Teach In, List Serve, Publication
 
 
 -----------
 Press for Conversion also includes:
 VANA UPDATE
 National Newsletter of Veterans Against Nuclear Arms
 
 =93Missile Defense=94
 Insanity is No Defence
 The New Star Wars
 Missile Proliferation, Globalized Insecurity & Demand-side Strategies
 
 Notes
 ... on Canada
 ... on Europe
 ... on NATO
 ... on the U.S.
 ... on other Countries
 
 Reports
 DREC and VANA Executive and Branch Reports
 
 Short Shots
 
 ----------------------------------------------
 Here's one article from Press for Conversion! (#45) July 2001
 
 NOTE: The graphic that goes with this article is a drawing by Leonardo Da
 Vinci of a "scythed assault chariot." This is one of Leonardo's many very
 wicked inventions, described in the article below).  Check it out at:
 <http://www.umiacs.umd.edu/~kuijt/dba169x/assaultchariot.jpg>
 
 
 War Technology: The Cutting Edge of Economic Power
 By Richard Sanders, Coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade
 
 --------------------------
 Machiavelli meets Da Vinci
 In 1499, a civil servant named Niccol=F2 Machiavelli recruited a local
 engineer named Leonardo da Vinci to devise a plan to change the course of
 the Arno River.  Diverting that river would deprive Florence=92s enemy, the
 nearby city-state of Pisa, of a dependable water supply.  It would also
 make the Arno River navigable for ocean-going vessels from the inland city
 of Florence.  Machiavelli and da Vinci devised a hydrological plan that was
 extraordinarily promising, at least on paper.  The flood-prone Arno,
 however, made the task an impossible challenge.  Their failure brought
 official disfavor on Machiavelli and da Vinci alike.  Leonardo transferred
 his studio to Milan and then Rome, where he produced remarkable work, while
 Machiavelli retreated from public life and used his forced leisure to write
 The Prince.=94  (Review of Roger Masters=92 book Fortune is a River: Leonard=
 o
 Da Vinci and Niccolo Machiavelli=92s Magnificent Dream to Change the Course
 of Florentine History, 1998.)
 --------------------------
 
 The relationship between technology, politics, warfare and wealth hasn=92t
 changed much over the centuries.  The Machiavellis of the world have
 devised more and more diabolical means to increase the power of their
 rulers.  They=92ve used military assaults, political deception, economic
 warfare =96 even hydrological projects =96 to strengthen themselves and
 vanquish their enemies.  Planning such vast crimes requires assistance from
 great minds, like Leonardo Da Vinci =96 whose scientific imagination far
 surpassed his moral scruples.
    Besides creating transcendent religious art to inspire reverence for the
 =93Prince of Peace,=94 Da Vinci contracted out his services to build war
 machines for =93The Prince.=94  Da Vinci=92s sketch of an armoured tank is
 well-known.  He also designed a bewildering array of deadly devices such as
 building-sized crossbows and cannons, catapults and even a primitive
 machine gun. =20
    But the killing machines that best betray Da Vinci=92s evil genius and 
mora=
 l
 depravity, are his =93scythed assault chariots.=94  His drawings show large
 spinning blades cutting a swath through a crowd =96 mowing people down like
 stalks in a field of ripe wheat =96 covering the ground with severed limbs
 and heads.  Gruesome indeed! =20
    Although war machines these days are far more brutal, they are
 surprisingly disassociated from blood and gore.  Shiny new warplanes
 perform at =93air shows=94 as glorious objects of children=92s entertainment=
 .
 Space weapons, heralding a whole new era in global warfare and economic
 domination are sold to the gullible public as a defensive shield against
 =93rogue states.=94
    New innovations in war technology have always been at the cutting edge of
 economic power.  The powerful rulers of Babylon, Egypt, Rome, Greece and
 other empires used military technology to enforce their economic dominion
 over others.  Just as these elites have funded advances in war technology,
 they have also promoted developments in transportation, communication,
 mapping and industrialization. These developments have allowed smaller and
 smaller cliques to administer more and more sophisticated social systems,
 in order to exploit labour and to extract resources from increasingly vast
 territories.
    By the 18th century, European colonial powers had carved up much of the
 world into =93spheres of influence.=94 They used their military superiority =
 to
 kidnap millions from Africa, transport them to the =93New World=94 and ensla=
 ve
 them to produce raw materials for processing in Europe.  Revolutionary
 industrial techniques produced such vast amounts of finished goods, that
 global markets were required. =20
    As weapons become deadlier and economic injustice more pervasive, it
 becomes increasingly difficult to justify the excesses of empire.  So, to
 maintain their grip on power, ruling elites continually develop more
 sophisticated propaganda systems.  They rely as heavily on deceiving their
 own populations as they do on violently subjugating others.  As such, good
 public relations are as important as militarism in the task of propelling
 forward the grinding wheels of =93progress.=94=20
    Financial incentives are also used to grease the wheels of militarism and
 corporate globalization, but they are not enough.  It is not always enough
 to bribe scientists to design increasingly brutal instruments of death or
 to pay off bureaucrats to devise economic programs that steal from the poor
 and give to the rich.  It is also essential to perpetuate cultural myths
 about =93humanitarian wars=94 and bogus economic =93trickle down=94=
  theories.
    For as long as there have been technological and social engineers helping
 the rich to get richer at the expense of the poor, there have been those
 who struggle for peace and advocate justice for the downtrodden.  Unable to
 match the weapons or wealth of corporate elites, such advocates have
 =93spoken truth to power.=94  By exposing the lies and hypocrisy of those wh=
 o
 control vast arsenals of violence and deception, seemingly powerless
 individuals and organizations strive to undermine the elite=92s ability to
 recruit public support and to build consent for wars that increase their
 wealth.
 
 ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- -----
                         Richard Sanders
        Coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade (COAT)
 =20
               A national peace network supported by=20
            individuals and organizations across Canada
        =20
           541 McLeod St., Ottawa Ontario K1R 5R2  Canada
             Tel.:  613-231-3076      Fax: 613-231-2614
      Email: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   Web site: <http://www.ncf.ca/coat>
 
  Help build opposition to NATO PA meetings in Ottawa, Oct. 5-8, 2001! =20
             Join the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" list serve: =20
    Send the message:  subscribe no_to_nato   to  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
  >>




______________________________________________________________________
To unsubscribe, write to [EMAIL PROTECTED]


Here is the table of contents for our next issue of Press for Conversion!

The theme of this 46-page issue is: "Taking Over the World: Militarism and
Corporate Globalization."

Let me know if you'd like any extra copies:
5 copies=3D$15;  10 copies=3D$20;  25 copies=3D$42;  50 copies=3D$75

I can also send out free sample copies within Canada (to those who haven't
received a sample before).  If you'd like a free copy, you'll need to send
me your address before this Thursday mid-morning, July 19.  (If all goes
well, that's when we are doing our mailing.)  After then, I can mail out
copies in exchange for $5 to COAT.

Richard Sanders, coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade (COAT)

P.S.  Below you'll find an article written by yours truly, called: "War
Technology: The Cutting Edge of Economic Power."  (Check out the web link
to Leonardo Da Vinci's drawing of a "scythed assault chariot.")
--------------


Press for Conversion!            Issue 45                    July 2001
    Quarterly magazine of the Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade

    Taking Over the World:
    Militarism and Corporate Globalization


    ***** Origins of Globalization *****

War Technology:  The Cutting Edge of Economic Power
    By Richard Sanders, Coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade

The Hidden Agenda: Pax Americana and Postwar Corporate Rule
    By Richard K. Moore

The U.S. versus the World: Globalization or Global Hegemony?
    By Naseer Aruri, Jerusalem-born professor of Political Science at the
University of Massachusetts in Dartmouth.


    ***** Making the Links *****

The UN: Getting into Bed with Big Business
    By George Monbiot, author of Poisoned Arrows, Amazon Watershed and No
Man=92s Land
    Lecturer in philosophy and environmental science at the Universities of
Keele and East London.=20

The Rise of Global Corporate Power
    By Sarah Anderson, Institute for Policy Studies (IPS) Fellow and John
Cavanagh, IPS Director.

A Convergence of Globalization and Militarization
    By Theresa Wolfwood, Board member, Vancouver Island Public Interest
Research Group and director, Barnard-Boecker Centre Foundation.

Definitions of Globalization: Let=92s Not Get Confused
    By Felicity Hill, Director, Women=92s International League for Peace and
Freedom - UN office in New York City.

Nike=92s Armies: How the Military Enforces Global Capitalism
    By Jeff Ballinger, founder and director of Press for Change, a New
Jersey-based consumer-information NGO monitoring workers=92 rights issues in
Asia. =20


    ***** Military Industries ***** =20

War and Globalization Support American Business
    By Michel Chossudovsky, Professor of Economics, University of Ottawa;
author of The Globalization of Poverty, 1998.

Dealers in Death: A Visit to an International Arms Bazaar
    By Robert Fisk, Middle East correspondent for the London Independent.

Did Canadian Weapons Kill Protesters in Papua New Guinea?
    By Richard Sanders, Coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade

The Pentagon and International Mega-Mergers
    By the Federation of American Scientists


    ***** Weapons in Space *****=20

The Spaceman Cometh: Corporate Rule and Control
    By Bruce Gagnon, Coordinator, Global Network Against Weapons and Nuclear
Power in Space=09

U.S. Military Plans to Fight Wars in Space
    By Karl Grossman, professor of journalism, State University of New
York/College at Old Westbury; author of The Wrong Stuff: The Space
Program=92s Nuclear Threat to our Planet; convener, Global Network Against
Weapons and Nuclear Power in Space.


    *****  FTAA *****

>From the WTO to the FTAA
    By Steven Staples, Chair, International Network on Disarmament and
Globalization and Issue Campaigns Coordinator, Council of Canadians.

FTAA and Plan Colombia: Partners in Imperialism
    By the Seattle Colombia Committee=09

The Poisoned Fruits of Neo-Liberalism
    By Fidel Castro Ruz, President of Cuba.


    ***** Events and Resources *****=20

Conference, Teach In, List Serve, Publication


-----------
Press for Conversion also includes:
VANA UPDATE
National Newsletter of Veterans Against Nuclear Arms

=93Missile Defense=94
Insanity is No Defence
The New Star Wars
Missile Proliferation, Globalized Insecurity & Demand-side Strategies

Notes
... on Canada
... on Europe
... on NATO
... on the U.S.
... on other Countries

Reports
DREC and VANA Executive and Branch Reports

Short Shots

----------------------------------------------
Here's one article from Press for Conversion! (#45) July 2001

NOTE: The graphic that goes with this article is a drawing by Leonardo Da
Vinci of a "scythed assault chariot." This is one of Leonardo's many very
wicked inventions, described in the article below).  Check it out at:
<http://www.umiacs.umd.edu/~kuijt/dba169x/assaultchariot.jpg>


War Technology: The Cutting Edge of Economic Power
By Richard Sanders, Coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade

--------------------------
Machiavelli meets Da Vinci
In 1499, a civil servant named Niccol=F2 Machiavelli recruited a local
engineer named Leonardo da Vinci to devise a plan to change the course of
the Arno River.  Diverting that river would deprive Florence=92s enemy, the
nearby city-state of Pisa, of a dependable water supply.  It would also
make the Arno River navigable for ocean-going vessels from the inland city
of Florence.  Machiavelli and da Vinci devised a hydrological plan that was
extraordinarily promising, at least on paper.  The flood-prone Arno,
however, made the task an impossible challenge.  Their failure brought
official disfavor on Machiavelli and da Vinci alike.  Leonardo transferred
his studio to Milan and then Rome, where he produced remarkable work, while
Machiavelli retreated from public life and used his forced leisure to write
The Prince.=94  (Review of Roger Masters=92 book Fortune is a River: Leonard=
o
Da Vinci and Niccolo Machiavelli=92s Magnificent Dream to Change the Course
of Florentine History, 1998.)
--------------------------

The relationship between technology, politics, warfare and wealth hasn=92t
changed much over the centuries.  The Machiavellis of the world have
devised more and more diabolical means to increase the power of their
rulers.  They=92ve used military assaults, political deception, economic
warfare =96 even hydrological projects =96 to strengthen themselves and
vanquish their enemies.  Planning such vast crimes requires assistance from
great minds, like Leonardo Da Vinci =96 whose scientific imagination far
surpassed his moral scruples.
    Besides creating transcendent religious art to inspire reverence for the
=93Prince of Peace,=94 Da Vinci contracted out his services to build war
machines for =93The Prince.=94  Da Vinci=92s sketch of an armoured tank is
well-known.  He also designed a bewildering array of deadly devices such as
building-sized crossbows and cannons, catapults and even a primitive
machine gun. =20
    But the killing machines that best betray Da Vinci=92s evil genius and mora=
l
depravity, are his =93scythed assault chariots.=94  His drawings show large
spinning blades cutting a swath through a crowd =96 mowing people down like
stalks in a field of ripe wheat =96 covering the ground with severed limbs
and heads.  Gruesome indeed! =20
    Although war machines these days are far more brutal, they are
surprisingly disassociated from blood and gore.  Shiny new warplanes
perform at =93air shows=94 as glorious objects of children=92s entertainment=
.
Space weapons, heralding a whole new era in global warfare and economic
domination are sold to the gullible public as a defensive shield against
=93rogue states.=94
    New innovations in war technology have always been at the cutting edge of
economic power.  The powerful rulers of Babylon, Egypt, Rome, Greece and
other empires used military technology to enforce their economic dominion
over others.  Just as these elites have funded advances in war technology,
they have also promoted developments in transportation, communication,
mapping and industrialization. These developments have allowed smaller and
smaller cliques to administer more and more sophisticated social systems,
in order to exploit labour and to extract resources from increasingly vast
territories.
    By the 18th century, European colonial powers had carved up much of the
world into =93spheres of influence.=94 They used their military superiority =
to
kidnap millions from Africa, transport them to the =93New World=94 and ensla=
ve
them to produce raw materials for processing in Europe.  Revolutionary
industrial techniques produced such vast amounts of finished goods, that
global markets were required. =20
    As weapons become deadlier and economic injustice more pervasive, it
becomes increasingly difficult to justify the excesses of empire.  So, to
maintain their grip on power, ruling elites continually develop more
sophisticated propaganda systems.  They rely as heavily on deceiving their
own populations as they do on violently subjugating others.  As such, good
public relations are as important as militarism in the task of propelling
forward the grinding wheels of =93progress.=94=20
    Financial incentives are also used to grease the wheels of militarism and
corporate globalization, but they are not enough.  It is not always enough
to bribe scientists to design increasingly brutal instruments of death or
to pay off bureaucrats to devise economic programs that steal from the poor
and give to the rich.  It is also essential to perpetuate cultural myths
about =93humanitarian wars=94 and bogus economic =93trickle down=94=
 theories.
    For as long as there have been technological and social engineers helping
the rich to get richer at the expense of the poor, there have been those
who struggle for peace and advocate justice for the downtrodden.  Unable to
match the weapons or wealth of corporate elites, such advocates have
=93spoken truth to power.=94  By exposing the lies and hypocrisy of those wh=
o
control vast arsenals of violence and deception, seemingly powerless
individuals and organizations strive to undermine the elite=92s ability to
recruit public support and to build consent for wars that increase their
wealth.

----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- ----- -----
                        Richard Sanders
       Coordinator, Coalition to Oppose the Arms Trade (COAT)
=20
              A national peace network supported by=20
           individuals and organizations across Canada
       =20
          541 McLeod St., Ottawa Ontario K1R 5R2  Canada
            Tel.:  613-231-3076      Fax: 613-231-2614
     Email: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>   Web site: <http://www.ncf.ca/coat>

 Help build opposition to NATO PA meetings in Ottawa, Oct. 5-8, 2001! =20
            Join the "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" list serve: =20
   Send the message:  subscribe no_to_nato   to  <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>




Reply via email to