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● 12.27.10


●● Apple and Bill Gates Serve Power, Serve Themselves, Harm the Population


Posted in Apple, Bill Gates at 3:46 am by Dr. Roy Schestowitz


National heroes or national felons with PR facelift?(Photo by Joi Ito from Inbamura, Japan)


Summary: How powerful people with excessive wealth ensure the population beneath them remains ignorant and obedient, using control of information (media acquisition and censorship)


COMPANIES like PayPal, MasterCard and Visa are known to be defending their government’s bad behaviour. It was all over the news this month. Amazon arguably falls under the same category, but guess who else? “Apple removes Wikileaks app? North Korea are more open than Apple,” wrote Gordon Sinclair regarding this very recent news. Yes, Apple censored Wikileaks without specifying a reason, but there are excuses. TechDirt is not typically hostile towards Apple but its latest headline says: “Apple The Latest To Convict Wikileaks Despite No Charges Or Trial; Kills Wikileaks App For Violating Unnamed Laws”


this very recent news

↺ excuses

↺ latest headline


> The thing is, Wikileaks hasn’t even been charged with a crime yet, let alone found guilty of one, so it’s not clear why all these companies claim that the app does not comply with he law. Also, while we’re still waiting for evidence of anyone actually put in “harm’s way” due to Wikileaks, that reasoning doesn’t make any sense either. The information found on Wikileaks is being written about in all sorts of major news publications — so if a Wikileaks app is putting people in harm’s way, then so is the Safari browser on the iPhone that can be used to access all the same information.


Asher Wolf adds: “‘Flipping Skirts’ iPhone app still available at iStores. Wikileaks app censored. What does this say about Apple’s values?” In a later post TechDirt lumps Apple together with all the Wikileaks censors (“Visa, MasterCard, Paypal, BofA & Apple”) and says:


↺ Asher Wolf

↺ lumps Apple together with all the Wikileaks censors


> But, an even bigger point is buried towards the end in an update, where Greenwald asks: Why aren’t Visa, MasterCard, Paypal, their web hosting company and various banks terminating their relationships with The New York Times, the way they all did with WikiLeaks: not only for the NYT’s publication of many of the same diplomatic and war cables published by WikiLeaks, but also for this much more serious leak today in which WikiLeaks was completely uninvolved? And, I think, we can add Apple to that list. After all, if these companies keep claiming that Wikileaks “broke the law” (as most of the companies listed here are saying), why do they not feel the same way about the NY Times?


Let this teach us an important lesson. Supporting Apple is supporting a vision where people have no perceived individuality/superiority (everyone uses Apple) and everyone is digitally ‘jailed’. That’s the type of vision tyrants tend to have and speaking of tyrants, watch out for Bill Gates’ hijack of the press, which in turn he uses to promote his power ploy (taking over schools, libraries, and so on). One journalist has just published an article titled “The Gates Foundation conspiracy to take over the media” (similar to the idea of suppressing Wikileaks’ content):


hijack of the press

↺ “The Gates Foundation conspiracy to take over the media”


> Bill Gates is too shrewd a businessman to want to actually take over a money-losing, failing industry like the media. (Though newspapers today do have something in common with software; one person produces the original product and then millions obtain copies of it for free.)No, what I want to talk about is the Gates Foundation’s funding of media. I’ve already written plenty about this … maybe too much.More accurately, I wanted to talk with the media folks at the Seattle philanthropy about their perspective on “partnering” with the media.These kind of arrangements confuse or disturb some people and I’ve given the media folks at the Gates Foundation a bit of grief over the past few months about the nature of some of these partnerships. This might seem kind of odd, I know, since I work for NPR, which also has been funded by the world’s largest philanthropy to report on global health and development issues — and which is what I do (even though I get no Gates money).


The world needs access to real information and not PR, which Gates spends over one million dollars on per day. That’s why we maintain this Wiki about the Gates Foundation — a page which we really hope to extend next week (time permitting). It gets mean where Gates insults the intelligence of Americans in order to justify Microsoft's approach towards cheap(er) labour in/from other countries. It’s extremely dangerous when information is controlled by the nation’s wealth and disinformation disseminated with the justification that ignorance is bliss. █


↺ this Wiki about the Gates Foundation

↺ insults the intelligence of Americans

justify Microsoft's approach towards cheap(er) labour


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