China, Say Hi
To The Eye In The Sky
November 23 2004
Counterbias.com
Robert Furs
We're all familiar with the irony of China, a totalitarian,
one-party Communist state that also happens to be at the forefront
of world capitalism: the devouring of natural resources, the buy-out
of huge Canadian corporations, and the friendly second home of
Wal-Mart.
The economy is flourishing, freshly minted millionaires are moving
in on every Beijing block, and every toy you'll ever buy your child
(or future or inner child) will have a 'Made in China' stamp on it.
A recent Globe and Mail Saturday edition dedicated entirely
to the country as a rising power enforced the idea that China will
lead the world in the upcoming century.
Even Rebuilding America's Defenses, a 2000 document by the
influential Project For A New American Century think-tank, stated
that "Raising US military strength in East Asia is the key to coping
with the rise of China to great power status... The prospect is that
East Asia will become an increasingly important region, marked by
the rise of Chinese power".
Economically, the Chinese are almost as free as Westerners. Yet
that's where the 'freedom' stops. This fact was brought home with
news that the Chinese government plans to launch one hundred
satellites - "eyes in the sky" as Reuters put it, a "large surveying
network" as a Chinese government official put it - snooping on the
world's second most populous nation.
What is it all for? "To monitor water reserves, forests, farmland,
city construction and 'various activities of society'", a state
official proclaimed on China Central Television. It's nice to keep
track of water reserves, forests and development of cities, and even
a paranoid democracy wouldn't find much problem with that. Yet the
Orwellian monitoring of "various activities of society" goes above
and beyond any reasonable purpose, and completely detracts from
China's credibility of a nation undergoing extensive change and
personal liberation.
The CIA World Factbook mentions that for many centuries, "China
stood as a leading civilization, outpacing the rest of the world in
the arts and sciences." Although vast national problems in the
nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, along with the dastardly
dictatorship of Mao Zedong, took China downward, it has climbed back
up, once again outpacing the fight to lead civilization. How silly
all this eye-in-the-sky stuff seems - no, make that scary, since the
nation is on pace to be the dominant world power of the late
twenty-first century.
All of this should not come as much of a surprise. If China's goal
is to be the next American Empire, there is but one nation to
follow: the United States. In this case of geopolitical
observational learning, the U.S. is teaching China all the wrong
lessons. Rather than to serve as a beacon for personal and political
freedom, America has launched the controversial PATRIOT Act, as well
as the TIPS program (which called for Americans to report any
suspicious activity of any sort to the government, a project which
has been shut down due to intense citizen outrage) and the
Information Awareness Office (a Pentagon-based secretive
intelligence system to gather and centralize info on every American,
like credit card purchases, travel and medical history; it, too, was
stopped before it actually began). The US government is currently
funding study of a system to monitor online chatrooms. A former head
of the Justice Department's computer crimes unit told MSNBC that
such a system would bring America a step closer to the Information
Awareness Office.
If you can't spew random nonsense anonymously online, where can you?
In a few of the aforementioned freedom-fighting cases (the
government fighting against citizen's freedom, I mean), America's
citizens, watchdog groups and organizations fought back. The Chinese
don't have such an option.
If America's political and military leaders truly are committed to
freedom for the world's people, they would shoot those egregious
satellites down whenever the 'Star Wars' missile defense program is
implemented, activated and fully operational.
But then again, the US government doesn't seem so interested in
shooting down Big Brother in it's own country, so why would it aim
its sights at what a one-party dictatorship in capitalist-friendly
China does?