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Greetings Troublemakers... welcome to Trouble.
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My name is not important.
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In our post-Snowden, smart gadget-laden world,
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it’s become clear to anyone paying attention
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that we live in an era of unprecedented mass surveillance.
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It seems like every day a new story
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pops up on our facebook feeds about how
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the NSA might be spying on us
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through our coffee makers or TV sets.
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One... two...
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Smith?
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6079 Smith W?
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Yes, you!
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Bend Lower!
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Or how the latest advancement in AI technology means that
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Amazon now knows what products we're gonna buy before we do.
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Lindor Chocolate Deluxe gift box... would you like to buy it?
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Yes!
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And while the mind-boggling capacity of state intelligence agencies
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and IT corporations to monitor our behaviour,
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habits and communications
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is a perfectly reasonable cause for alarm,
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the more unsettling reality is that
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this constant flow of data collection forms only one part
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of a much broader surveillance apparatus
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... one that still makes ample use of
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the same tried and tested dirty tricks
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that rulers have been using to keep tabs on dissent
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since proles first started scrawling
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Alpha Kappa Alpha Beta into the walls of the Parthenon.
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And on that note... before we jump right into it,
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we should point out that as we were putting this episode together
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we ran into some legal grey areas
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involving publication bans
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and laws against identifying undercover agents and informants.
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This is particularly relevant to our first segment,
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where we cover the multi-city organizing
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leading up to the 2010 G20 protests in Toronto,
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and the 2013 anti-fracking protests
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on the Mi’kmaq territory of Elsipogtog,
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both of which were the target of large-scale intelligence operations
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involving informants and/or undercover police.
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After mulling it over,
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in order to avoid putting our crew,
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or any of the people featured in the show in a sticky situation,
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we've made the call to only use footage and images
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of these state assets that are already freely available on the Internet
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... plus a few clips from some cheesy Hollywood movies
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to help fill in the gaps.
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So, with that little disclaimer out of the way
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... over the next 30 minutes, we'll share the voices of
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a number of individuals as they recount their first-hand experiences
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dealing with snitches and undercover cops,
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navigating the brave new world of digital surveillance
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... and making a whole lotta trouble!
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I was involved with the Anti-Capitalist Convergence
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in Montreal leading up to the G20.
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So several months before even the summit
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people had started to meet and organize.
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And the other main element was coordinating with Toronto
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and other cities in Southern Ontario
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with the groups that were already organizing there.
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I was part of the Toronto Community Mobilization Network.
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So that was a large umbrella group that was involved
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in doing all of the logistics and a lot of the organizing
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around the G20 Summit in Toronto.
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I was also involved in SOAR,
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the Southern Ontario Anarchist Resistance.
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We were specifically on the project Get Off the Fence,
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which was the militant street march that happened in Toronto in 2010.
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Brenda and Khalid,
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their real names are Brenda Carey and Bindo Showan.
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But we did not know that until later.
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They're both members of the Ontario Provincial Police (the OPP)
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and they both arrived on the scene much earlier than 2010.
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And entered mostly through above-ground organizing,
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but then had a much more complicated path
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in order to stay in the movement
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and get close to people who they wanted to target.
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Both of those people played on sort of these political values
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that exist within those spaces
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in order to both get close to certain people,
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and avoid being outed.
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Brenda was probably the more experienced cop,
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and she produced this kind of narrative of victimization.
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And so she had this story of escaping an abusive relationship,
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and this also allowed her to avoid answering questions
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about her past, and to be very evasive.
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And Khalid operated because anyone that questioned
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his legitimacy would instantly be called out as being racist.
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And because of all the internalized racism in our groups,
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that slight-of-hand worked.
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And they were both really reliable.
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So they worked really hard,
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they took on tasks and they always did them on time.
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Brenda in particular, I remember always wanted to take minutes.
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And we were like “great... take minutes! We don't want to.”
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So that was perfect because she could take all those notes
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and it was not drawing any attention to her.
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Most of the evidence that was introduced
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in the conspiracy case came from whatever they were able to collect
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in their interactions with anarchists,
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with activists, over this period of time.
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These notes were then sifted through,
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and they basically just pulled out selected elements
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that could conceivably constitute preparation for crimes.
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It was actually quite shocking to see
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how much of the information that she recorded
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was personal information about who didn't really like who,
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and who was dating who, and who had broken up with who.
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And who was maybe having some problems with the way
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things were being organized, and all of that stuff.
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And it became really obvious that that stuff
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was very very relevant to the intelligence gathering.
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A night drinking...
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going out with your friends and drinking,
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would first be presented as, y'know,
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“we went to the club and we noted all these things
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people talked about.”
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But then it would end up looking like a very detailed meeting
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that had on the agenda -- people might have made a joke
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about fighting cops,
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and it would just look like they planned to fight cops.
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It's not clear that there was ever really an actual case against us.
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But without their notes there definitely
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would not have been a case against us.
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The case of the Crown rested mostly with a recording
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that was done on June 25th,
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which was the day before the main action in Toronto.
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And it was a large spokes-council,
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so a lot of affinity groups were present and represented there.
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And Brenda was there with a recording device.
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And so on the night of the 25th they went to a judge
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and they got warrants for the arrest of around 20 people,
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one of which was me.
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In the end there were 17 of us against whom
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the charges were maintained the longest,
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and we were charged with conspiracy to obstruct police,
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conspiracy to assault police
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and conspiracy to commit mischief
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... which just means 'fuck shit up.'
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So I think there were at least seven police officers
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who had kind of medium-term infiltration roles.
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So there's people who infiltrated the medics group,
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who infiltrated the legal observers group,
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who were involved in different media projects.
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And there's probably a lot of other infiltrators
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we just never found out about.
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Like I can imagine that probably in the context of
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the anti-Olympics stuff happening at the same time,
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that there were probably a lot of infiltrations
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happening in Native communities.
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I'm Lieutenant Suzanne Patles of the Mi'Kmaq Warrior Society,
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and I'm from the Mi'Kmaq territory.
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It's evident that the Canadian Security,
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and Canada deems Indigenous people in general
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as a threat to national security.
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And they see development in the oil and gas industry as critical
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– and that's what they call it, 'critical infrastructure' –
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and they think that it's what Canada needs
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to be able to move forward as a so-called nation.
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So they see anybody who stands up
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against these developments as a threat.
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If they don't us veto over these infrastructure developments
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and if they don't listen to the Indigenous peoples' voice,
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the Indigenous people are going to rise up.
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They're going to take to the streets.
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They're going to take to the railroads.
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They're going to take to the roads.
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They're going to blockade.
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They're going to set up camps.
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It's kind of harder to infiltrate
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within the Indigenous communities
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because our Indigenous communities are so connected.
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And when we talk to one another
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we don't wanna know what you do.
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We wanna know about your family.
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We wanna know about where you come from... who you are.
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It's a built-in block where we're not going to give you
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all of our information.
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Like, we might be nice to you and say hello,
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and you may feel like you're a part of something,
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but actually you're still on the outside of it.
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We're warriors.
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We've been doing this for hundreds and hundreds of years,
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prior to Canada even being in existence.
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We had this one guy come in.
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And he came in on four different occasions.
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He came in as a journalist.
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He came in as militia.
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Then he came in bringing donations.
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And then he tried to approach us as being an international lawyer.
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So he was just bringing things in that were not wanted,
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and that we weren't supposed to have.
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That we'd never even asked for.
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He was trying to create a situation where our people
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will be criminalized for the things that he brought in.
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And once the men were already arrested after the raid,
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he was approached by several members of the Warrior Society
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and he was told: “We know you're an agent.
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You need to get out of here.”
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States go to incredible lengths to infiltrate resistance movements
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and plant undercover agents in our scenes.
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Such as the disgusting case of Mark Kennedy,
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AKA Mark Stone,
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who was outed in London in 2010
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after spending 8 years as a mole in the European anarchist
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and radical environmental movements
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- 6 of which he spent in a long-term relationship
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with one of the activists he was spying on.
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But as paranoia-inducing as these cases may be,
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they are exceptions to the rule.
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Not only are these operations incredibly expensive,
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but it takes a rare breed of psycho
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to be able to effectively maintain the sort of double-life
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required to carry out these long-term infiltrations.
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Your average cop tends to have a much harder time blending in.
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Black sleeves... that's gotta be hot, huh?
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Be a little cooler if we had some drugs...
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A much more common, and cost-effective method
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of gathering intelligence on political dissidents
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is through the use of informants and collaborators
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... or as they're more commonly known, snitches.
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Brandon Darby was a Texas activist
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who became an FBI informant in the mid-2000s.
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He was somebody who had just been on the fringe
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of the activist scene around Austin.
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Not a major organizer or anything.
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I was doing a lot of anti-fascist work at the time.
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We were doing community armed defense from about 2002
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... so he was very enamored with that.
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Brandon exhibited a lot of behaviours
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that were problematic from the beginning,
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but they're not because he was an informant.
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They're just because he was a fucked up person,
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just like many people.
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And political and social movements and engagements
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draw people who are damaged.
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He wanted to do something.
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He also wanted to work out his daddy issues.
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He wanted to work out his personal stuff in a public setting.
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My name is Brandon Darby
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and I work with the Common Ground collective
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in New Orleans, Louisiana.
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He didn't come to Common Ground until about mid-October,
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after we had done some initial rescue efforts.
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And Common Ground was really an established organization
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by the time he came in.
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But due to some of the things that he and I had engaged in,
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by taking up arms against white militias,
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taking up arms against the police in those early days,
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Malik Rahim, who was another co-founder
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of the Common Ground collective in New Orleans,
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gave him more power than he should have in the organization.
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And the out-of-control amount of power that he was given
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in these circumstances was just a toxic combination.
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Just really vicious.
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We made him leave Common Ground
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because he was so dysfunctional.
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And I was dysfunctional too,
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you have to understand many of us had severe post-traumatic stress.
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You cannot take up guns against people,
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you cannot see dead people everywhere
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and just, like, go “hey it's okay.”
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We're not trained soldiers.
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The people who lost their houses weren't trained.
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I mean these are hard traumas.
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We were able to take our privilege to leave,
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but he - of course he acted fucked up afterwards.
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But so did I
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.... so did many people who were there for months and months.
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A lot of people ask the million dollar question:
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when did Brandon Darby become an FBI informant?
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If I had to pick one particular time,
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I think it's some time between March and May of 2006.
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That's what it looks like in the FBI documents that I've
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already received from the Freedom of Information Act request.
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It looks like he starts giving information for free,
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and then they offered to pay him at some point.
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Recognize that he never did it for the money.
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He's a trust fund kid.
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Y'know, he's from a working-class background,
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but his grandmother came into money
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and he does have access to money through her.
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He did it for ideological reasons.
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And so we made him take a leave of absence.
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But then he finagled his way back in, in January of 2007.
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That means that he was actively working for the FBI at that point.
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But then there were some things that started to happen
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that really gave me pause and made me very uncomfortable.
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I was working with Anti-Racist Action
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and we were going to do some protests against this bookstore
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that was a libertarian or right-libertarian book store
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that had nativist books and stuff.
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They were big supporters of that shithead Alex Jones.
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But during that time he wanted us to
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burn the book store to the ground.
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And he kept at it.
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And I just told him I wasn't going to have anything to do with it
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because I thought it was a stupid idea.
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A prominent Austin-based activist named Brandon Darby
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has revealed he worked as an FBI informant
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in the 18 months leading up to the Republican Convention.
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While Brandon Darby has been involved in several activist groups,
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he's best known as a founder of
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the New Orleans-based group Common Ground Relief,
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which he helped start after Hurricane Katrina.
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He's expected to testify on behalf of the government
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later this month in the trial of two Texas activists
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who were arrested at the RNC
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on charges of making and possessing Molotov cocktails.
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In the lead-up to the Republican National Convention in 2008,
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the other thing that started to happen was he started to
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hound me about coming up there.
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And I was like “dude... I'm not interested.”
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So he started working with some other people,
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Brad Crowder and David McKay.
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And this is one of my biggest regrets, because
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Brad and David were very new and very enamored with Brandon.
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And so because of those two circumstances,
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he was able to lead them further down the road.
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You have to understand this,
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that he wrecked a bunch of people's lives
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through his being an informant and a provocateur,
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but also through just being a shitty person.
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Brad and David did prison time for that.
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Brandon tried to get me to commit a crime
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that I would have done forty years for.
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A friend of ours here in Austin,
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a Palestinian supporter and organizer named Riad Hamad,
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killed himself because of the FBI's harassment of him
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due to Brandon Darby.
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So those are the major ones,
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but there's tons of people that he just really damaged
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and injured those people for years afterwards.
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You may have heard of the Earth Liberation Front.
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The Attorney General himself says
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it's a domestic terrorist organization.
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The FBI says it is one of the most dangerous groups in the country.
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The Green Scare actions really started back in 1997 through 2001.
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They were a series of economic sabotage
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that used arson to target kind of a mix
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of private corporations as well as government targets.
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All the FBI agents that had been sent out in the late 90s
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to infiltrate and mess with Oregon, in particular,
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were completely unsuccessful.
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And then ten years later,
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one of the Earth Liberation Front co-conspirators,
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who had been a long-time heroin addict,
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succumbed to the addiction and his own paranoia
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by walking into the FBI office and basically saying,
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“if you pay me $150,000 and promise that I don't go to jail,
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I'll tell you everything I know.”
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And he became a snitch for them.
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He wore a wire all around the country
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attempting to entrap his co-conspirators.
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And it was the first crack in the case and it was a major crack.
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All of a sudden in December of 2005,
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the largest round-up of environmental
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and animal rights activists occurred.
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The government charged them with multiple counts
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of conspiracy and arson and possession of an incendiary device.
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And then slowly but surely,
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one after the other became snitches for the government.
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Joyanna Zacher, Nathan Block, Daniel McGowen,
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Jonathan Paul and Marius Mason
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never succumbed to the pressures put upon all of them.
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Nathan Block was 18 years old
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when he was involved in those acts of economic sabotage,
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and he was facing life plus 1,115 years in prison.
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And even though he was the youngest member
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of all the Green Scare defendants,
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he never even batted an eye towards the idea
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that he would ever cooperate with the state.
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Y'know, he served all of his prison time.
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He's out. He's back living his life.
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Same with Daniel McGowan, Jonathan Paul.
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But the bottom line is that even though these people
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were facing life plus 1,115 years in jail,
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they ended up doing between three and eight years in prison.
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Non-cooperating defendants basically got an additional penalty
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of an extra 18 months in prison compared to
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their similarly-situated snitch co-defendants.
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So the tax for being able to morally and ethically
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look people in the eye and say
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“I am not a snitch. I'm not a government informant.”
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That was a tax of 18 months of extra time in jail.
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Which all of them were more than willing to serve
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in order to be able to return to their communities
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and return to the movements that they
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literally risked their lives for.
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Nearly 70 years after it was first published,
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George Orwell's dystopian sci-fi novel, 1984
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is to this day, still held up as the gold standard for what
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an authoritarian police state underpinned by an all-pervasive
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surveillance apparatus would look like.
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But let's be real
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... who needs Big Brother when you've got Facebook and Google?
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Contemporary techniques of mass data collection and analysis,
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combined with a society where more and more
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of our communications take place through heavily-controlled
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and completely monitored corporate infrastructure,
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has produced a framework for social control
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that would have made Orwell throw up in his mouth.
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The world was given a terrifying glimpse of the true potential
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of this unholy alliance of state and corporate power in 2011,
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as the Gulf States were putting the finishing touches
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on the Arab Spring protests in Bahrain.
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After a Saudi-led occupation force viciously put down
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the revolutionary uprising,
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the Bahraini royal family used facebook to launch a wide-ranging
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witch hunt of activists, posting pictures of pro-democracy rallies
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and urging pro-regime loyalists
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to name and tag people in the pictures,
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in a mass doxing campaign that resulted in waves
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of targeted arrests and disappearances.
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Yes... the future is here comrades.
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Angry responses only.
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The term signals intelligence seems to come out of
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earlier histories of spying in communication
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where it was, like, classic Cold War between the US and Russia.
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Telecommunications, especially hard to decipher
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or hidden telecommunications, was not used very widely.
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And with computers becoming widespread
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and computers being able to do the math for encryption,
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increasingly the ways people are organizing and communicating
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with each other is happening through these computerized means.
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So the part of their social control apparatus that is dedicated
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to signals intelligence,
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this gathering of information that's happening electronically,
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is just ballooning.
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You can think of the types of surveillance
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that are done by these agencies in two different forms.
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They do mass surveillance,
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which is gathering all of the data they can,
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storing it, trying to analyze it and look at metadata.
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That's for hundreds of millions or billions of people
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all over the world, and what their communications are.
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And then they also do targeted surveillance,
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which is really different.
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That's like hacking into things,
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or trying to find a way to compromise an encryption system
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so that they can then read what people think is being protected.
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These sorts of attacks are way more expensive.
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This is why mass surveillance has become really important,
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because they can do it really really widely for relatively lower cost.
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Facebook and social media in general
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has been a treasure trove of information
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for the government and for corporations.
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These types of platforms are a way of instantly getting snapshots
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of your network, who your friends are,
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who've you talked to, what events you're going to.
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And they help facilitate more targeted attacks.
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Facebook is probably the worst out there.
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Government and corporations can literally look
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at all your friend groups and plot out maps
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of how different networks are connected to each other.
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And they use that information for conspiracy allegations,
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for RICO allegations,
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as well as finding weak links within those networks to target.
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The companies are better at gathering data.
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They have set up whole web infrastructures pretty much
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dedicated to gathering as much information as possible about people.
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For profit. For advertising means.
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Google, in its terms of use,
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says that you have no reasonable expectation of privacy
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when you use any of their products, including gmail.
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So basically that means nothing that you do
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in that platform is yours,
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and they can do whatever they want with it.
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They basically say “hey... know that we're
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giving all of your shit to the government,
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and we're going to use the shit to spy on you some more too.”
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That's not disputed that this is the relationship.
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Facebook also has facial recognition software
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for all those photos and videos that you post.
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North Dakota and DAPL used that facial recognition on facebook
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in order to issue arrest warrants for people,
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and literally arrested and charged people with crimes
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based on video and photographs that activists posted.
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Protest prediction software has been developed
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and is currently being used
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primarily in Latin American countries.
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By monitoring facebook and other social media,
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this software predicts when riots or protests,
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or public uprisings may happen
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... up to three days in advance.
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We have more direct confrontation right now with the state,
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and so we think of things in state terms: the capacity
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that the state has for repression,
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and for social control broadly.
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And that makes sense.
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But surveillance capitalism is creating whole new forms
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of social control that don't even depend on the state.
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I mean, they're still built on the foundation of the prisons
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and everything else that already exists.
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But they're doing a whole other level of thing
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that the state is kind of trying to use and catch up with,
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but isn't primarily behind
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and even isn't really necessarily that good at doing.
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One really important aspect of it is
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the degree to which it is marketed as voluntary.
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That everybody chooses to get a facebook account,
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and you have an option of not having a facebook account.
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But the way the society is being structured,
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there's less and less real choice involved
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in whether we have a facebook account,
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or whether we have a cell phone.
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Your cell phone, and especially your smart phone,
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is probably one of the largest vulnerabilities
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that you have as an activist.
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It's got your photographs, your contacts,
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your calendar, your email.
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Y'know, every aspect of your life
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can often be contained on this phone.
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Phones actually have two computers running in them.
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There's the main computer,
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and that can be mostly running free software.
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Then there's a second computer called the baseband,
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and it connects to the cell phone towers.
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That part of the phone is running software
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that we don't control at all.
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It seems, at least in some cases,
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that the tower has control of the phone via the baseband.
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And often the baseband kind of can just override the main CPU.
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Even if you turn off the phone,
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your phone can be used to locate you.
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It can be used as a microphone and/or a camera.
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And you really have no sure way of knowing
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whether any of those things are occurring,
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even if you turn off the phone.
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And then the tower is obviously controlled
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completely by the telecom companies,
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who are working closely with the state.
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Or, more directly, via stingrays,
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which are the things that police agencies are buying up
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all over the place that create a fake cell phone tower
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that the phones connect to, and then they get direct access.
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Back in the 16th century,
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when Sir Francis Bacon first coined the phrase
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“Knowledge is Power”,
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he was talking about how awesome
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he thought the Scientific Method was.
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But it wasn’t long before this homage to scientific empiricism
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was twisted and appropriated
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by the cheerleaders of authoritarian rule.
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These days, the adage is more likely to be framed
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and used as an ominous desk ornament
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by some mid-level party member of a national intelligence agency,
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in order to pad their ego and impress their secretary.
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Maybe in Latin... if they’re really edgy.
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The truth contained in these words,
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however, goes both ways.
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It's undoubtedly true that states and surveillance capitalist firms
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have unprecedented levels of knowledge at their disposal,
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which they use to increase their already considerable
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military and policing power.
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But it's also true that their methods
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for gathering intelligence depend,
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at least in part, on our ignorance of what they're up to,
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and our willingness to fall for their traps.
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Arming our movements with the knowledge
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of how our enemies gather intelligence,
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and adapting our tactics accordingly,
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is an important component of building our own power.
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Power that grows as we more effectively challenge
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their systems of social control.
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Don't overestimate the state's capacity, or the cops' capacity.
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Don't underestimate it, but don't overestimate it.
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They know some things, but they don't know shit.
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Their intelligence gathering, unless you are absolutely the target,
-
is not very good.
-
Each bureaucracy is doing its own intelligence gathering,
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has its own chain of command, and then intelligence tends to stay
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in each of those bureaucracies and become trapped in like a silo.
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As much as states and empires try to be, like,
-
“we're all powerful.... we can stop whatever we want”,
-
they very obviously cannot stop encryption.
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And that's something to build on.
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Digital encryption is basically a way of using computers
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to hide information.
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One of the most basic kinds of encryption is
-
you have data stored somewhere... you encrypt it in that place.
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Local disk encryption can be done
-
using a program called Veracrypt.
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It gets more complicated obviously,
-
when there's multiple people involved,
-
like when you're doing encrypted communication.
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For email the best way that I've found
-
is using Thunderbird and an add-on called Enigmail.
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If you have a smart phone you can do everything
-
in a program called Signal.
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You need to use tools that you understand, based on the risk threat.
-
So I can drive around a car
-
and I don't understand exactly how that car works,
-
but I need a basic understanding of that tool set.
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However if I'm using that car in such a way
-
where if the car breaks down,
-
me and the people I love get thrown in jail for a decade or more,
-
then I better have a really good fucking understanding
-
of exactly how that car works.
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We have to support infrastructures that are based more
-
in the social relations that we want to be reflected in our world.
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It's not just about surveillance.
-
It's ultimately about social control,
-
which is a more active process
-
than just knowing what people are saying.
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Facebook is controlling people.
-
When we say their business model is based on advertising,
-
really what that's saying is get enough information about people
-
to be able to control their behaviour.
-
And it can be like a literally person-by-person
-
individualized version of the world,
-
to try to influence how they're going to act
-
and what they're going to say.
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We decided that these would be the social norms now,
-
and we just went for it.
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Security culture, at its core,
-
involves knowledge and understanding.
-
Developing personal relationships, face-to-face relationships,
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affinity groups, trusting friendships and comradery
-
is probably the most effective form of security culture that we have.
-
Things like Brandon Darby create media sensation for us
-
because they are so rare.
-
Because it costs so much in resources for them
-
to actually do infiltration,
-
for them to actually do the heavy surveillance.
-
Whenever Brenda and Khalid were “on a play”,
-
and that's what they call when they're at work,
-
it's not just them that's being paid,
-
but it's also their two handlers who are sitting in a car.
-
It's also all of the people who are, y'know, typing out their notes,
-
and who are holding the debriefs,
-
and who are doing all of the bureaucratic work.
-
So it's a really expensive operation.
-
So there's absolutely no way that they could afford
-
to do that unless they had a big event to use as an excuse.
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What we didn't factor in was that
-
there was a billion dollar security budget for the G20.
-
I mean there's a lot of explanations we could give
-
for our kind of unpreparedness towards that,
-
and one is that we don't necessarily take ourselves
-
super seriously as threats.
-
And that we might have this rhetoric of wanting to
-
produce radical transformation
-
and destroy all forms of authority.
-
But that we don't necessarily take ourselves
-
as seriously as that intention merits.
-
One of the main goals of surveillance and infiltration
-
is to disrupt the organizing that we're doing.
-
The police are always going to be kind of testing you
-
and sending in informants and seeing if they can get
-
different kinds of information,
-
because of what of your ideas are and because of your decision
-
to situate yourself as an enemy of this society.
-
It is the modus operandi of the state
-
to use informants, infiltrators, and forms of disruption
-
to keep political and social engagements
-
and movements from happening.
-
Sometimes folks will try to say that
-
when you have a cop in your group
-
it doesn't matter if you're not doing anything illegal.
-
And in this situation, we totally were doing illegal things.
-
Like, I was doing exactly what they accused me of doing.
-
But even if the police aren't trying to build up charges,
-
their goal is to maintain this sort of permanent level of disruption.
-
There's only one golden rule when it comes to talking to cops,
-
is “don't fucking talk to cops.”
-
If you suspect someone of being a snitch or a cop,
-
don't come out to your movement
-
or to the public before you are absolutely sure.
-
You don't have to snitch-jacket someone
-
in order to protect yourself and to further your strategic,
-
effective organizing efforts.
-
I think if we had a way to talk to each other
-
about these things in a way that wasn't gossipy
-
and didn't start rumours,
-
we would have caught on a lot earlier
-
that a lot of people had concerns about Khalid.
-
Having some level of practice in which you get to know each other
-
and kind of check each others' back stories a little bit
-
can be a way of just building trust
-
and of demonstrating a kind of seriousness and commitment.
-
We need to build explicit parameters for what we're vouching.
-
So we could be vouching
-
“is this person who they say that they are?”
-
And then we need to set a criteria for how we know.
-
And you need to make all these uncomfortable conversations
-
about vouching explicit.
-
Being intentional about checking each others' stories,
-
so that it's not just something you do to people you don't trust,
-
but something you do to people you want to trust more.
-
If we don't build trust with each other,
-
fear becomes the winner.
-
And you cannot make revolution,
-
you cannot create liberatory spaces,
-
you cannot create liberatory openings based solely on fear.
-
We must stand on the edge of our potential
-
and see what's on the other side.
-
And be willing to take those risks.
-
But we must do that pragmatically.
-
If we understand the role that intelligence plays,
-
it can maybe allow us to try to be a little more opaque ourselves,
-
to be a little bit less easily surveilled.
-
But also to be a bit more resistant to the inevitable repression,
-
and be a little bit less scared of it when it does fall.
-
Because ultimately we can't prevent repression
-
... I don't think it's useful to try to.
-
I think it's useful to ask ourselves how can we achieve our goals,
-
and how can we be prepared for the consequences.
-
As states and corporations scramble to develop
-
increasingly sophisticated ways to monitor and control dissent,
-
in a desperate attempt to predict threats
-
that might challenge their continued dominance,
-
it is critical that our resistance movements develop
-
strategies and effective techniques that allow for
-
the decentralized spread of self-organization,
-
and methods of communication that thwart their attempts
-
to stay one step ahead of us.
-
So at this point, we’d like to remind you
-
that Trouble is intended to be watched in groups,
-
and to be used as a resource to promote discussion
-
and collective organizing.
-
Feel like anarchists and other activists in your town
-
could use a primer on security culture?
-
Please consider getting together with some comrades,
-
screening this film and discussing what steps people can take
-
to help protect your communities from infiltration and surveillance.
-
Interested in running regular screenings of Trouble
-
at your campus, infoshop, community center,
-
or even just at your home with friends?
-
Become a Trouble-Maker!
-
For 10 bucks a month, we’ll hook you up
-
with an advanced copy of the show,
-
and a screening kit featuring additional resources
-
and some questions you can use to get a discussion going.
-
If you can’t afford to support us financially, no worries!
-
You can stream and/or download all our content for free
-
off our website: sub.media/trouble.
-
If you’ve got any suggestions for show topics,
-
or just wanna get in touch,
-
drop us a line at trouble@sub.media
-
We’re excited to see that people have been
-
supporting our work by becoming troublemakers,
-
and wanna send a shout-out to Justin, Ram Philly,
-
Alex, SIU, Douglas, Jay, Adam, Joe, Scott, Michael,
-
Matt, Filip, Stephen, Zach and David.
-
We also wanna send a big shout out
-
to new Troublemaker chapters in Toronto & Washington DC.
-
This episode would not have been possible
-
without the generous support of Ryan, Matthew, Rodrigue and Amelie.
-
Now get out there, and make some trouble!