Sunday, September 13, 2015

How government owns people: Australia by Jon Rappoport


How government owns people: Australia
by Jon Rappoport
September 12, 2015
(To read about Jon's mega-collection, The Matrix Revealed, click here.)
"I once worked for a corporation.  I quit.  I wondered whether I could do the same thing to the government.  It was like trying to balance a greased watermelon on one finger." (The Underground, Jon Rappoport)

There are various ways to calculate how government owns people.  The simplest is: through money.

Aside from taxes, this would translate into government jobs and welfare.

People who receive some or all of their income through their rulers tend to be on the side of government.  They're certainly dependent on government.

Look at Australia, a nation with a population of 23.1 million people.

As The Guardian reports (8/13), out of a total of 11.5 Australian million jobs, 1.9 million (16.4%, 1 out of 6) are for government.  And this does not include the Defence Department (58,000 jobs).

As reported by Peter Whiteford, in "FactCheck: Is half to two-thirds of the Australian population receiving a government benefit?", at theconversation-dot-com, about 50% of all Australian households receive some form of government $$ assistance.

I haven't found figures for how many Australian companies are government contractors, but you can be sure the number and the money are large.  All those employees are receiving government money.

Then there are numerous "state-owned enterprises," which are companies wholly owned by government.  Their employees are ultimately getting their paychecks via government $$.

Seeing the picture?

You can analyze other industrialized nations and find similar conditions.

But of course, no one who favors "the collective good" sees all this as a problem.  The problem for them, as always, is not enough "government support."

Because for them, government is the answer and the ultimate benefactor and the primary force inventing the future.  All hail.

Half a century ago, intellectuals who had a clue about what was going on called government The State.  They viewed it as a monolithic force bent on expanding its power and subjugating the individual.  Now, many of those same people, or their descendants, view government as the escape hatch from injustice.

This delusion is bolstered by the multiplication of victim groups seeking special treatment from their political leaders.

We would be wise to consider Albert Camus' statement in his 1951 essay, The Rebel:

"The slave begins by demanding justice and ends by wanting to wear a crown. He must dominate in his turn."

Starting in the 1960s, several generations of people began applying New Age "rainbow thoughts" to politics.  By the 1990s, this practice spread to the point where its advocates actually believed The State could and would deliver a far better world.

In a detailed November 2013 article (independentaustralia-dot-net), "The surveillance state: How Australia spies on its own," Murray Hunter writes, "The revelations released by Edward Snowden... are only the tip of the iceberg when it comes to Australian security surveillance operations...Through rapid technology advances, the Australian security apparatus has grown to an Orwellian scale."

Author Hunter then describes the system: "The Australian Government database is a highly sophisticated group of electronic document and records management system(s) (EDRMS) for collating, storing, and matching data between various agencies and levels of government on citizens. Consequently data collected by the Australian Taxation Office (ATO), social security (Centrelink), Medicare, immigration, customs, and police enforcement agencies are integrated with relational databases and query systems. This is supplemented by individual agency databases with extremely detailed information on citizens. They carry an almost complete personal history of residential details going back decades, income, occupation, spouses, children, social security benefits, medical, and travel information, etc. These systems can be accessed by almost anybody within the public service. Every agency within the government has become part of the intelligence collection network."

This gargantuan apparatus is the work of a government that "really cares" about the population?

"You people work for us.  You take home a paycheck from us (derived from your taxes).  You depend on us.  But that's not enough.  We need to spy on you all day every day."
The Matrix Revealed by Jon Rappoport
Australian political leaders and their massive bureaucracies are aware of an important fact: although at one level citizens' dependence on The State makes them supporters of The State, on a deeper level the individual always resents his dependence and wants to be free.  That makes him dangerous.

Shackling a human is a risky proposition.  When he tries to break out, he is unpredictable.

The shift in talking about "The State" to talking about "government" reflects the degree to which the individual has been trivialized.  The State was once seen as the pre-eminent threat to the free and independent individual.  But since almost no one in the mainstream cares about "free and independent," the word "government" suffices.

Government is the "benevolent helper" and adjudicator of populations, masses.

Maybe in the next half-century, the Australian government will employ everybody in the country.

Why not?  It makes for a very efficient bookkeeping (surveillance) system.  Everybody is on board.  Everybody is tracked.  Everybody is in the collective, at the bottom---except for those who rule from the top.
You can find this article and more at NoMoreFakeNews.com.
Jon Rappoport
The author of three explosive collections, THE MATRIX REVEALED, EXIT FROM THE MATRIX, and POWER OUTSIDE THE MATRIX, Jon was a candidate for a US Congressional seat in the 29th District of California. He maintains a consulting practice for private clients, the purpose of which is the expansion of personal creative power. Nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, he has worked as an investigative reporter for 30 years, writing articles on politics, medicine, and health for CBS Healthwatch, LA Weekly, Spin Magazine, Stern, and other newspapers and magazines in the US and Europe. Jon has delivered lectures and seminars on global politics, health, logic, and creative power to audiences around the world.
Use this link to order Jon's Matrix Collections.

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