Wednesday, 30 September 2020

SEPTEMBER 29, 2020 Bill Gates’ Global Agenda and How We Can Stop the Machine and Defend Our Humanity "In reimagining education, children will be monitored through surveillance systems to check if they are attentive while they are forced to take classes remotely, alone at home. The dystopia is one where children never return to schools, do not have a chance to play, do not have friends. It is a world without society, without relationships, without love and friendship."

 

Bill Gates’ Global Agenda and How We Can Stop the Machine and Defend Our Humanity

SEPTEMBER 29, 2020
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By Vandana Shiva

In March 2015, Bill Gates showed an image of the coronavirus during a TED Talk and told the audience that it was what the greatest catastrophe of our time would look like. The real threat to life, he said, is “not missiles, but microbes.” When the coronavirus pandemic swept over the earth like a tsunami five years later, he revived the war language, describing the pandemic as “a world war.”

“The coronavirus pandemic pits all of humanity against the virus,” he said.

In fact, the pandemic is not a war. The pandemic is a consequence of war. A war against life. The mechanical mind connected to the money machine of extraction has created the illusion of humans as separate from nature, and nature as dead, inert raw material to be exploited. But, in fact, we are part of the biome. And we are part of the virome. The biome and the virome are us. When we wage war on the biodiversity of our forests, our farms and in our guts, we wage war on ourselves.

The health emergency of the coronavirus is inseparable from the health emergency of extinction, the health emergency of biodiversity loss and the health emergency of the climate crisis. All of these emergencies are rooted in a mechanistic, militaristic, anthropocentric worldview that considers humans separate from — and superior to — other beings. Beings we can own, manipulate and control. All of these emergencies are rooted in an economic model based on the illusion of limitless growth and limitless greed, which violate planetary boundaries, and destroy the integrity of ecosystems and individual species.

New diseases arise because a globalized, industrialized, inefficient agriculture invades habitats, destroys ecosystems, and manipulates animals, plants and other organisms with no respect for their integrity or their health. We are linked worldwide through the spread of diseases like the coronavirus because we have invaded the homes of other species, manipulated plants and animals for commercial profits and greed, and cultivated monocultures. As we clear-cut forests, as we turn farms into industrial monocultures that produce toxic, nutritionally empty commodities, as our diets become degraded through industrial processing with synthetic chemicals and genetic engineering, and as we perpetuate the illusion that earth and life are raw materials to be exploited for profits, we are indeed connecting. But instead of connecting on a continuum of health by protecting biodiversity, integrity and self-organization of all living beings, including humans, we are connected through disease.

According to the International Labour Organization, “1.6 billion informal economy workers (representing the most vulnerable in the labour market), out of a worldwide total of 2 billion and a global workforce of 3.3 billion, have suffered massive damage to their capacity to earn a living. This is due to lockdown measures and/or because they work in the hardest-hit sectors.” According to the World Food Programme, a quarter of a billion additional people will be pushed to hunger and 300,000 could die every day. These, too, are pandemics that are killing people. Killing cannot be a prescription for saving lives.

Health is about life and living systems. There is no “life” in the paradigm of health that Bill Gates and his ilk are promoting and imposing on the entire world. Gates has created global alliances to impose top-down analysis and prescriptions for health problems. He gives money to define the problems, and then he uses his influence and money to impose the solutions. And in the process, he gets richer. His “funding” results in an erasure of democracy and biodiversity, of nature and culture. His “philanthropy” is not just philanthrocapitalism. It is philanthroimperialism.

The coronavirus pandemic and lockdown have revealed even more clearly how we are being reduced to objects to be controlled, with our bodies and minds as the new colonies to be invaded. Empires create colonies, colonies enclose the commons of the indigenous living communities and turn them into sources of raw material to be extracted for profits. This linear, extractive logic is unable to see the intimate relations that sustain life in the natural world. It is blind to diversity, cycles of renewal, values of giving and sharing, and the power and potential of self-organizing and mutuality. It is blind to the waste it creates and to the violence it unleashes. The extended coronavirus lockdown has been a lab experiment for a future without humanity.

On March 26, at a peak of the coronavirus pandemic and in the midst of the lockdown, Microsoft was granted a patent by the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). Patent WO 060606 declares that “Human Body Activity associated with a task provided to a user may be used in a mining process of a cryptocurrency system….”

The “body activity” that Microsoft wants to mine includes radiation emitted from the human body, brain activities, body fluid flow, blood flow, organ activity, body movement such as eye movement, facial movement and muscle movement, as well as any other activities that can be sensed and represented by images, waves, signals, texts, numbers, degrees or any other information or data.

The patent is an intellectual property claim over our bodies and minds. In colonialism, colonizers assign themselves the right to take the land and resources of indigenous people, extinguish their cultures and sovereignty, and in extreme cases exterminate them. Patent WO 060606 is a declaration by Microsoft that our bodies and minds are its new colonies. We are mines of “raw material” — the data extracted from our bodies. Rather than sovereign, spiritual, conscious, intelligent beings making decisions and choices with wisdom and ethical values about the impacts of our actions on the natural and social world of which we are a part, and to which we are inextricably related, we are “users.” A “user” is a consumer without choice in the digital empire.

But that’s not the totality of Gates’ vision. In fact, it is even more sinister — to colonize the minds, bodies and spirits of our children before they even have the opportunity to understand what freedom and sovereignty look and feel like, beginning with the most vulnerable.

In May 2020, Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York announced a partnership with the Gates Foundation to “reinvent education.” Cuomo called Gates a visionary and argued that the pandemic has created “a moment in history when we can actually incorporate and advance [Gates’] ideas…all these buildings, all these physical classrooms—why with all the technology you have?”

In fact, Gates has been trying to dismantle the public education system of the U.S. for two decades. For him students are mines for data. That is why the indicators he promotes are attendance, college enrollment, and scores on a math and reading test, because these can be easily quantified and mined. In reimagining education, children will be monitored through surveillance systems to check if they are attentive while they are forced to take classes remotely, alone at home. The dystopia is one where children never return to schools, do not have a chance to play, do not have friends. It is a world without society, without relationships, without love and friendship.

As I look to the future in a world of Gates and Tech Barons, I see a humanity that is further polarized into large numbers of “throw away” people who have no place in the new Empire. Those who are included in the new Empire will be little more than digital slaves.

Or, we can resist. We can seed another future, deepen our democracies, reclaim our commons, regenerate the earth as living members of a One Earth Family, rich in our diversity and freedom, one in our unity and interconnectedness. It is a healthier future. It is one we must fight for. It is one we must claim.

We stand at a precipice of extinction. Will we allow our humanity as living, conscious, intelligent, autonomous beings to be extinguished by a greed machine that does not know limits and is unable to put a break on its colonization and destruction? Or will we stop the machine and defend our humanity, freedom and autonomy to protect life on earth?

The above is excerpted from Vandana Shiva’s book Oneness vs. the 1%: Shattering Illusions, Seeding Freedom (Chelsea Green Publishing, August 2020) and is reprinted with permission from the publisher via Independent Science News.

Vandana Shiva is a world-renowned environmental thinker and activist, a leader in the International Forum on Globalisation, and of the Slow Food Movement. Director of Navdanya and of the Research Foundation for Science, Technology and Ecology, and a tireless crusader for farmers’, peasants’, and women’s rights, she is the author and editor of a score of influential books, among them Making Peace with the Earth; Soil Not Oil; Globalization’s New Wars; Seed Sovereignty, Food Security: Women in the Vanguard; and Who Really Feeds the World?. Her latest book is Oneness vs the 1% (Chelsea Green Publishing, August 2020).

Tuesday, 29 September 2020

Alone Together: Emotional paintings by Katherine Fraser encourage us to look on the bright side. 13 paintings to inspire. Creative Boom

 

https://www.creativeboom.com/inspiration/katherine-fraser-alone-together/
https://www.creativeboom.com/
Alone Together: Emotional paintings by Katherine Fraser encourage us to look on the bright side

Insight, 2020 © Katherine Fraser. All images courtesy of the artist.

Whilst many of us have struggled to stay creative over the last six months, American artist Katherine Fraser has found comfort in picking up a brush and rediscovering the physical joy of painting once again.

Her latest oil on canvas series, Alone Together, is much like her earlier works: almost autobiographical and revealing some of her lived experiences and emotions. But these latest paintings, made under quarantine, are probably her most vulnerable yet, as we see Katherine's interpretation of a world facing unprecedented times.

On show at Paradigm Gallery in Philadelphia from 25 September, the featured characters in Alone Together are fantastical, tethered by human emotion and Katherine's mythology. The imagery of boats, water, and rain are all direct references to the artist's childhood and a recurring cat is a metaphor for how she views her creativity, as something akin to nature, which "can be harnessed but never controlled".

Under lockdown and faced with a seemingly unlimited time to paint, Katherine found herself questioning what meaning art could have for herself and others during such a difficult time. "By ultimately relinquishing the burden of defending art's purpose, and leaning into her relationship to it, she experienced newfound trust in the process and deeper satisfaction in the simultaneous act of creation and communication," explains the gallery.

Looking more closely at her process, Katherine will initially sketch the works, but rarely does she have the entire composition planned out before she begins painting. She takes time to decide the stories behind her characters and by doing so, puts herself in a dialogue with the work; actively making decisions, but also allowing herself to "quietly listen to what the paintings may need". The resulting paintings are full of complex, human emotion – from hope to despair to humour, grief, and love.

Through this new series, Katherine shows us that by being flexible and open, we can find moments of beauty, vulnerability, and harmony. You could say that during a historically uncertain time, Alone Together invites all of us to be more present and empathetic towards ourselves and others. "I paint out of my sincere desire to respect, express, and share the tender qualities that unite us. Compassionately and with a generous heart, I seek to portray our continual need to reckon expectations with truth, and the struggles we endure to feel satisfaction with our choices. My goal is not just to make aesthetically beautiful paintings, but to create works that touch and resonate with the complexity of real-world experience," Katherine says.

Alone Together by Katherine Fraser opens at the Paradigm Gallery in Philadelphia on 25 September and runs until 17 October 2020.

That's How Rumours Get Started, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

That's How Rumours Get Started, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

Living the Dream, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

Living the Dream, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

Winning, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

Winning, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

An Elaborate Fiction , 2020 © Katherine Fraser

An Elaborate Fiction , 2020 © Katherine Fraser

I Dare You, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

I Dare You, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

The Illusion, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

The Illusion, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

Mysterious to Ourselves, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

Mysterious to Ourselves, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

What Might Have Been, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

What Might Have Been, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

Prevailing Wind, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

Prevailing Wind, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

With or Without You, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

With or Without You, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

The Hero's Journey, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

The Hero's Journey, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

The Messenger, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

The Messenger, 2020 © Katherine Fraser

‘WE DO NOT CONSENT’ – THOUSANDS RALLY IN LONDON TO OPPOSE ANOTHER COVID-19 LOCKDOWN September 28, 2020

 

‘WE DO NOT CONSENT’ – THOUSANDS RALLY IN LONDON TO OPPOSE ANOTHER COVID-19 LOCKDOWN

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Tyler Durden, Zero Hedge
Waking Times

Six months after parliament passed the Coronavirus Act 2020, which gives the government powers to impose lockdowns and other restrictive social distancing measures (measures that have been accompanied by stiff fines), thousands of Britons packed London’s Trafalgar Square bearing signs reading “We Do Not Consent” and “Think Before It’s Illegal” during a rally that was billed as a “We Do Not Consent” anti-lockdown demonstration.

The event was organized by a coalition of political groups, and supporters have been galvanized by the talk of another London lockdown by mayor Sadiq Khan, as well as PM Boris Johnson’s assurances that a lockdown would be imposed if the government felt all other measures had failed.

Protests are exempt from the rule of six, a rule that threatens fines for groups of more than six people, which has created much aggravation in the UK. Organizers of the rally had to submit a “risk assessment” and agree to comply with social distancing rules. While police told the press that the organizers had completed these requirements, the metropolitan police promised to crack down on those not wearing masks and violating other rules.

They added that enforcement “remains a last resort but will be undertaken if required.”

Demonstrators waved signs and British flags and cheered as speakers – including several notable “conspiracy theories”, according to the Guardian – addressed the crowd. Crowds chanted “freedom” as people whistled and clapped.

At points, police fulfilled their promise to break up crowds. Before they began, the protests received a warning from the Metropolitan Police, which said it would intervene if the protesters don’t abide by social distancing guidelines.

Toby Young, General Secretary of the Free Speech Union, expressed hope that law enforcement would allow the group to protest “as they did with [Extinction Rebellion] and BLM.”

Attending the protest, Kerry Dunn, 41, from Bath, claimed her son, Beau, suffered adverse affects after being vaccinated.

“I’ve been shouting that mandatory vaccines are coming, no one believed me,” she said. “Now we can see it’s just around the corner, we’ve never been closer.”

Another event, billed as a “People’s network and family picnic”, is also being organised by the same activists for Sunday in Hyde Park.