It's good to see well-informed people in a Free Software community, let alone
being Portuguese-speaking as I am :-)
I do not study the subject itself, although the things you said are not new
to me. I wonder if you know of some specific historical study on the relation
between globalism(s) and the formation of the modern IT market, mainly under
the perspective of cultural revolution (e.g., the word "hacker", which was
used to describe someone creatively good at something in many areas, became a
word to qualify a digital criminal (and so "criminalizing" creativity,
putting people to reject acting by themselves), mainly by the influence of
big media, which are in the hands of globalists; or the use of marketing on
technology to put people in a subjective magical world etc.).
Also, seeing your recommended readings at
http://blackfernando.blogspot.com/p/leitura-recomendada.html , I believe you
would find (if haven't found yet) most interesting the reading of the debate
"The USA and the New World Order" -- http://debateolavodugin.blogspot.com/ --
between the Brazilian philosopher Olavo de Carvalho and Putin's geopolitical
strategist Alexandr Dugin (mentor of the Evrasianism). The debate was held
officially in English, being Dugin's writings translated to Portuguese (the
mother tongue of Carvalho, which I think you will appreciate because he is a
great writer and knows very much about the subject: "What are the historical,
political, ideological and economic factors and actors that now define the
dynamics and configuration of power in the world, and what is the U.S.
position in what is known as New World Order?"). The English version was
compiled here (PDF); the Portuguese one was published as a book, which I
don't know if is available in Portugal:
http://www.videeditorial.com.br/VIDE-Editorial/Os-EUA-e-a-Nova-Ordem-Mundial/flypage.tpl.html
, but I bet you could find a PDF version in Portuguese on the Internet too.
I mention this debate because Carvalho's theory that "the historic forces
that today contend for power in the world array themselves into three
projects of global dominance, [...] the 'Russian-Chinese,' the 'Western'
(sometimes mistakenly called 'Anglo-American') and the 'Islamic' projects" is
much more complete than Daniel Estulin's and Alex Jones' views. For example,
I could cite
http://www.aim.org/aim-column/russian-dupes-behind-bilderberger-protests/ as
a view that makes much sense under that teory -- which doesn't contradicts
(instead, reinforces) the usefulness of Estulin's and Jones' work in
unveiling the "ocidental" scheme, which I bet all this "proprietary software"
stuff belongs to.