Thứ Ba, 16 tháng 5, 2017

Waching daily May 16 2017

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I'M KEITH KOUNTZ.HERE ARE YOUR

TUESDAY HEADLINES FROM NEWS 8.

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NEW HAVEN'S NEW POLICE CHIEF--

HAS BODY CAMERAS áHIGHá ON THE

LIST OF CHANGES FOR THE

DEPARTMENT.A PUBLIC HEARING

WILL BE HELD TONIGHT TO

DISCUSS FINANCING THE MORE

THAN ONE MILLION PURCHASE.

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THE BOARD OF EDUCATION IN

GROTON.. IS TRYING TO DECIDE

WHICH PROGRAMS SHOULD BE CUT

AND WHICH ONES NEED TO BE

SAVED. A TOWN MEETING

ON THURSDAY.. WILL DETERMINE

WHETHER 700 THOUSAND DOLLARS

CAN BE PUT BACK INTO THE

BUDGET.

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NEW HAVEN MAYOR TONI HARP..

OFFICIALLY ANNOUNCING THAT SHE

WILL SEEK A THIRD TERM!THAT

ACCORDING TO THE NEW HAVEN

REGISTER.HARP HAS BEEN MAYOR

SINCE 20-14.. AND IS THE ELM

CITY'S FIRST FEMALE MAYOR.

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THAT'S IT FOR NOW.BE SURE TO

STAY WITH NEWS 8 AND W-T-

For more infomation >> News Express Tuesday morning - Duration: 0:47.

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Showbiz News :"확 다른, 걸크러시"…'프리스틴', 스페셜 활동 돌입 - Duration: 1:47.

For more infomation >> Showbiz News :"확 다른, 걸크러시"…'프리스틴', 스페셜 활동 돌입 - Duration: 1:47.

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The Arms IndustryCreating Enemies To Maximize Profit - tech and science - Duration: 9:41.

The Arms Industry: Creating Enemies To Maximize

Profits

Beginning in 1917, Western technology was the most important factor in the early phase

of economic development of the U.S.S.R.

The Western countries which have been the prime technical subsidizers of the U.S.S.R.

are also the countries with the largest expenditures on armaments against a presumably real threat

from the Soviet Union.

[i]

To the average citizen, it seems like the East is aligned against the West.

The evidence reveals that an ideological battle has been deliberately constructed to deceive

the people of the world and to deliberately create a so-called enemy.

The West not only created the Soviet industrial and military systems but has subsidized it

since 1917.

Dr. Antony C. Sutton (1925�2002), the former Research Fellow at the Hoover Institute on

War, Revolution, and Peace at Stanford University from 1968 to 1973, was a British and American

economist, historian, and writer.

He is the author of a three-volume exhaustive and scholarly work titled Western Technology

and Soviet Economic Development (1917�1965), National Suicide: Military Aid to the Soviet

Union (1973), and Wall Street and the Bolshevik Revolution (1974), among others.

Professor Richard Pipes, of Harvard, said this in his book, Survival Is Not Enough:

Soviet Realities and America�s Future:

In his three-volume detailed account of Soviet Purchases of Western Equipment and Technology

. . . Sutton comes to conclusions that are uncomfortable for many businessmen and economists.

For this reason, his work tends to be either dismissed out of hand as �extreme� or,

more often, simply ignored.[ii] Zbigniew Brzezinski, national security adviser

(1977�1981), in his book Between Two Ages: America�s Role in the Technetronic Era,

wrote the following:

For impressive evidence of Western participation in the early phase of Soviet economic growth,

see Antony C. Sutton�s Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development: 1917�1930,

which argues that �Soviet economic development for 1917�1930 was essentially dependent

on Western technological aid� (p. 283), and that �at least 95 percent of the industrial

structure received this assistance.� (p. 348)[iii]

In Western Technology and Soviet Economic Development: 1945�1965, Sutton has this

to say:

The Soviets employed more than 350 foreign concessions during the 1920s.

These concessions enabled foreign entrepreneurs to establish business operations in the U.S.S.R.

The Soviet intent was to introduce foreign capital and skills, and the objective was

to establish concessions in all sectors of the economy and thereby introduce Western

techniques into the dormant post-revolutionary Russian economy.

The foreign entrepreneur hoped to make a normal business profit in these operations.

. . .Most of the 350 foreign concessions of the 1920s had been liquidated by 1930.

. . . The concession was replaced by the technical-assistance agreement, which together with imports of

foreign equipment and its subsequent standardization and duplication, constituted the principal

means of development during the period 1930 to 1945.

In the late 1950�s the Soviets turned their attention to the deficient chemical, computer,

shipbuilding, and consumer industries.

A massive complete-plant purchasing program was begun in the late 1950s�for example,

the Soviets bought at least 50 complete chemical plants between 1959 and 1963 for chemicals

not previously produced in the U.S.S.R.

A gigantic ship-purchasing program was then instituted so that by 1967 about two-thirds

of the Soviet merchant fleet had been built in the West.

[iv] In the chapter, �Economic Aspects of Technical

Transfers,� Sutton writes,

In each case of exceptional rates of growth between 1913 and 1967, in iron, steel, chemicals,

fertilizers there was a significant acquisition of Western technology at the start of the

rise in growth; it is a matter of record that increments in output were planned to be at

least initially dependent on the West.

The planned increment in production was achieved in a conscious manner, not by internal technical

resources, but by the purchase of high-productivity advanced units in the West.[v]

More difficulty was met in the acquisition of computers and similar advanced technologies,

but a gradual weakening of Western export control by the end of the 1960s enabled the

Soviets to purchase almost the very largest and fastest of Western computers.

Throughout the period of 50 years from 1917 to 1970, there was a persistent, powerful,

and not clearly identifiable force in the West to continue the transfers.

And it continues: In 2013, the U.S. government approved the sale of 20% of America�s uranium

production capacity to Rosatom, the nuclear energy arm of the Russian state.

Rosatom�s acquisition of Toronto-based miner Uranium One Inc. made the Russian agency,

which also builds nuclear weapons, one the world�s top five producers of the radioactive

metal and gave it ownership of a mine in Wyoming.

In view of the aggressive nature of declared Soviet world objectives, such policies seem

incomprehensible if the West�s objective was to survive as an alliance of non-communist

nations.

One barrier to understanding recent history is the notion that all capitalists are the

bitter and unswerving enemies of all Marxists and socialists.

This idea is erroneous.

In fact, an alliance between international political capitalists and international revolutionary

socialists is to their mutual benefit.

This alliance has gone unobserved largely because historians are locked into the impossibility

of any such alliance existing.

One should bear two clues in mind: monopoly capitalists are the bitter enemies of free

enterprise entrepreneurs; and, given the weaknesses of socialist central planning, the totalitarian

socialist state is a perfect captive market for monopoly capitalists.

If American monopoly capitalists were able to reduce a planned U.S.S.R. to the status

of a captive technical colony would not this be the logical twentieth-century internationalist

extension of the Morgan monopolies and the Rockefeller petroleum trust of the late nineteenth

century?[vi]

That the Soviets had openly and consistently advocated the overthrow of Western democratic

systems from 1917 is a fundamental starting point for the development of U.S. national

security policies.

Rationality suggests, therefore, that either the West�s policy regarding technical transfers

to the U.S.S.R was in error or the U.S.A�s inflated annual defense expenditure was unnecessary.

Either there is no valid rationale for much of our technical transfers to with the Soviets,

or there is no valid rationale for the armaments expenditures to defend against the Soviets.

The two policies are incompatible.

. . . [vii]

There is adequate reason to believe that Western policy toward the U.S.S.R. in the field of

economic relations is based on an inadequate observation of facts, and on invalid assumptions.

In no other way can one explain the 50 years of policies which prescribe first the establishment

and then the continuing subsidy of the technological development of the U.S.S.R. that simultaneously

calls forth massive armaments expenditures against a threat from the U.S.S.R.

Those countries which have been the prime technical subsidizers of the U.S.S.R. are

also the countries with the largest expenditures on armaments against a presumably real threat

from the Soviet Union.

. . .

The choice, therefore, is clear; either the West should have abandoned its massive armaments

expenditures because the U.S.S.R. was not an enemy of the West, or it should have abandoned

the technical transfers that made it possible for the U.S.S.R. to pose the threat to the

Free World which was the raison d�etre for such a large share of Western expenditures.[viii]

What motive explains this coalition of Western capitalists and the U.S.S.R.?

The simplest explanation is that a syndicate of Wall Street financiers and corporations

enlarged their monopoly ambitions and broadened horizons on a global scale.

The gigantic Russian market was to be converted into a captive market and a technical colony

to be exploited by a few high-powered American financiers and the corporations under their

control.

. . .

A legacy of no-win wars has been costly in dollars and lives, with no other major

purpose but to generate multi-billion-dollar armaments contracts.

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