Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby JackRiddler » Fri May 23, 2014 10:58 am

bks » Fri May 23, 2014 8:48 am wrote:
This can also be independently verified through forensic scrutiny of imperfectly applied censorship on related documents released to date and correlations with other NSA programs (see http://freesnowden.is).


This is very interesting, as it means no one had to share the Snowden documents with Wikileaks for them to figure it out. Occupational hazard of mass surveillance - you're bound on occasion to screw up your efforts to keep your criminal activity secret.


Except, from what they're saying otherwise, they have access to these.
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 16007
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby vanlose kid » Fri May 23, 2014 12:04 pm

Saw this two days ago. No, it's the other way round.


Afghanistan's government split as Karzai suspends special forces chiefs

President overrules cabinet opposition to target commanders praised for anti-Taliban operations in Kabul and beyond

Emma Graham-Harrison in Kabul
theguardian.com, Wednesday 21 May 2014 16.54 BST

Afghanistan's government has suspended the three police special forces commanders responsible for securing the capital during crucial presidential elections, and plans to try them in a court martial for making illegal detentions and desecrating a mosque.

The three men have also been accused of collaborating with US and British commandos to serve foreign rather than Afghan aims, although they will not be tried as spies, according to an official source with first-hand knowledge of events.

Since they were removed from their positions in late April, all special operations raids by police commandos have been suspended, raising questions about security in Kabul as insurgents arrive from safe havens in Pakistan and the country prepares for the annual "fighting season".

The commanders come from one of the most respected parts of the Afghan security forces, which overall are still grappling with serious problems from corruption to drug addiction, despite years of western training and billions of dollars in funding.

The charges they are expected to face appear to be relatively minor. They will be accused of temporarily holding a man without a warrant during a night raid on a group of suspected insurgents, and entering a mosque with dogs, the source said. They will deny both charges.

President Hamid Karzai, who has for years been an outspoken critic of both night raids and illegal detentions, personally ordered the investigation and trial, in the face of opposition from top ministers and security officials.

The allegations were made by a prosecutor who works with special forces and an intelligence official responsible for monitoring police behaviour. Both have since been promoted – one given the rank of general and the other the top prosecutor's job in Panjshir province, north of Kabul.

A government official who asked not to be named confirmed that there was an investigation under way into the conduct of some special forces officers, but denied that anyone had been detained or suspended from his position. The interior ministry declined to comment on the case.

The men facing trial, whom sources declined to name because of their position as commandos, were the officers leading two elite police squads, and a third senior official who organised their logistics.

One officer headed the 333 commando unit which tackles threats nationwide, while a second was in charge of the crisis response unit, which tackles security emergencies in Kabul and also tries to preempt insurgent assaults by disrupting networks around the capital.

The final man charged was director of operations for the special forces, who organised and signed off on all the logistics for their operations and briefed others about what they did.

All three are in their early 30s, from ordinary families rather than the elite clans who dominate many sectors of Afghan politics, and have studied at military academies overseas.

It is the latest serious crisis to hit a commando force which has been celebrated across Afghanistan for its impressive track record fighting the Taliban, and is seen as critical to the country's security, but whose leadership has been buffeted by a string of political crises.

Last year the general in charge of all police special forces units sought asylum in Denmark, exhausted by internal politics. The interior ministry insisted at the time that he was on an extended leave to deal with family issues, but they have since admitted he abandoned his post.

The head of the crisis response unit had also previously been suspended from his position after Al-Jazeera broadcast a report on Afghan special forces. Karzai was outraged by the footage of his own troops searching homes and taking detainees much as foreign troops do, and demanded the commander be fired – though not the disbanding of the unit.

The commander was restored to his post in March after concerns about how security forces tackled a deadly Taliban attack on a luxury Kabul hotel, and his unit was widely praised both for their handling of a string of assaults that followed, and helping ensure election day was peaceful in the capital.

The latest dispute has consumed hours of government time and soured Karzai's ties with sections of his cabinet and with top security officials, including interior minister Omar Daudzai, who personally signs off on every special forces raid and has strongly defended his officers.

The crisis began in mid-April, when Karzai met the two men who made the allegations. It is unclear how they bypassed the hierarchy of their own organisations, and layers of presidential security, but once they laid out their charges he called key officials to the palace for an immediate meeting.

The men repeated their accusations to a gathering that included the ministers of defence and the interior, the army chief of staff and the head of the intelligence service. Karzai said he wanted the trio arrested and court-martialled, despite Daudzai and others mounting a fierce defence.

Two days later the men were called to the interior ministry and were told they would be imprisoned pending an investigation, and the next regular meeting of the national security council was dominated by discussion of the allegations.

General Ayub Salangi, who is currently a deputy interior minister but for years commanded the Kabul police, begged Karzai to reconsider in an emotional speech. "Mr President, I've been next to these guys in fights against suicide bombers in the city, that's all they do," he reportedly said.

Karzai is close to many of the ministers pleading for the commandos. Daudzai was once his chief of staff and after the meeting the president used a family nickname when discussing Salangi's speech. "Del Agha seems to be taking things very seriously today," he told aides.

But he overruled them, and demanded an investigation. After a week in jail, the three men were released to help prosecutors with their research, which they finished last week.

The specific allegations are expected to be presented in court later this month and include the illegal detention of a man called Abdullah in the night raid in eastern Kapisa province filmed by Al-Jazeera, and the use of dogs to search a mosque in a raid nine months ago. That is a violation in Afghanistan because the animals are considered unclean.

The attorney general and Daudzai presented a preliminary report to Karzai in mid-May. It found, the source said, that all operations were in accordance with Afghan law, and the accusation they searched mosques with dogs was spurious because the units do not have any working animals.

There was no record of a man called Abdullah being detained in the Kapisa raid in the pages of documentation required for all operations. The prosecutor who made the allegations signed off on these documents at the time, and did not raise any concerns, the source said.

But Karzai rejected the findings and personally called for a trial. "I'm not satisfied, I want this to go to court," he reportedly said. The men are expected to be officially charged within days.

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/m ... abul/print


*
"Teach them to think. Work against the government." – Wittgenstein.
User avatar
vanlose kid
 
Posts: 3182
Joined: Wed Oct 17, 2007 7:44 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby bks » Fri May 23, 2014 12:16 pm

JackRiddler » Fri May 23, 2014 9:58 am wrote:
bks » Fri May 23, 2014 8:48 am wrote:
This can also be independently verified through forensic scrutiny of imperfectly applied censorship on related documents released to date and correlations with other NSA programs (see http://freesnowden.is).


This is very interesting, as it means no one had to share the Snowden documents with Wikileaks for them to figure it out. Occupational hazard of mass surveillance - you're bound on occasion to screw up your efforts to keep your criminal activity secret.


Except, from what they're saying otherwise, they have access to these.


Which I favor. Let a thousand flowers bloom.

Do you favor this, or no? Important point.
bks
 
Posts: 1093
Joined: Thu Jul 19, 2007 2:44 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby bks » Fri May 23, 2014 1:30 pm

WikiLeaks ‏@wikileaks 8h
Google Idea's director Jared Cohen was tasked with getting Afghan telcos to move towers to US bases when at DoS



Remember, this is the same Jared Cohen Assange called Google’s “Director of Regime Change” at the time.
http://wikileaks.org/Op-ed-Google-and-t ... Who-s.html

Cohen goes from the State Department from Google, after a career of surreptitiously efforting to influence the emergence of dissent in the Middle East through social media channels, and also using traditional media outlets to keep his activity and that of others hidden. Remember this, written in 2011, shortly after the tribulations of Cohen’s “Google co-worker” Wael Ghonim?

Cohen’s last significant media appearance was in the summer of 2009. During peak moments in the June Iranian demonstrations a Twitter co-founder was emailed and asked to delay a scheduled maintenance downtime. Who made the request? Jared Cohen, who was then working for the State Department. His major contribution during his tenure there was as co-founder of something called the Alliance of Youth Movements (AYM).
http://mediacommons.futureofthebook.org ... n-networks


AYM would be an example of high-level actors using the tools of movement politics in the social media age to try to influence the direction dissent takes. It’s not quite conspiracy, more like “social genetic engineering”. Bratich calls it a "genetically modified grassroots organization."
bks
 
Posts: 1093
Joined: Thu Jul 19, 2007 2:44 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby JackRiddler » Sat May 24, 2014 12:22 pm

Sure, I approve of Wikileaks also having access.

I'd approve of everyone having access, too. At the same time, Snowden took the risks, paid the price, isn't a total anti-statist and wanted a plan for best results. With Greenwald, he agreed on a strategy of gradual disclosure, which I have found highly effective, as I've said many times here. This is so obvious that Wikileaks followed the exact same strategy back in late 2010 with the State Department files. They were also sharing with corporate outlets and redacting as they saw fit, for which they were attacked as a "limited hangout," largely by the same people with the same faulty reasoning. The State Department files were disclosed in full only after Nick Davies gave away the password in his book (ostensibly by mistake because he is a moron, but probably because he knew all the other media morons would just blame Assange, which they did). It wouldn't surprise me if Cryptome now says the Assange-Greenwald break is also a limited hangout to distract from ____(take your pick)____. Tarpley will obviously do this.

As for Schmidt, of course I know him, posted those links here myself before.

WikiLeaks cables also reveal that previously Cohen, when working for the State Department, was in Afghanistan trying to convince the four major Afghan mobile phone companies to move their antennas onto US military bases. In Lebanon he covertly worked to establish, on behalf of the State Department, an anti-Hezbollah Shia think tank. And in London? He was offering Bollywood film executives funds to insert anti-extremist content into Bollywood films and promising to connect them to related networks in Hollywood. That is the Director of Google Ideas. Cohen is effectively Google’s director of regime change.


Once upon a time, the security state needed the appearance that the CIA was being reined in. I think part of the long-term solution was to have the State Department take the policy functions as a legal if shameless front, while much of the parapolitics was folded into corporations on a self-serve basis (like Booz and Google).
We meet at the borders of our being, we dream something of each others reality. - Harvey of R.I.

To Justice my maker from on high did incline:
I am by virtue of its might divine,
The highest Wisdom and the first Love.

TopSecret WallSt. Iraq & more
User avatar
JackRiddler
 
Posts: 16007
Joined: Wed Jan 02, 2008 2:59 pm
Location: New York City
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby bks » Sun May 25, 2014 8:48 am

As for Schmidt, of course I know him, posted those links here myself before.


You mean Cohen, yes? I know you know who he is, I didn't post that for you.

Once upon a time, the security state needed the appearance that the CIA was being reined in. I think part of the long-term solution was to have the State Department take the policy functions as a legal if shameless front, while much of the parapolitics was folded into corporations on a self-serve basis (like Booz and Google).


Expand, please! The usual explanation regards the shift from HUMINT to SIGINT enabled by big data technologies, which just so happened to kinda correspond in time with the post-9/11 fear climate, but which we know was already underway well before (ain't that so, Joe Nacchio? Wouldn't mind chatting with him now that he's out of jail.)
bks
 
Posts: 1093
Joined: Thu Jul 19, 2007 2:44 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby Nordic » Tue Jun 03, 2014 3:30 am

http://pando.com/2014/05/31/ebay-shrugg ... ut-profit/

eBay Shrugged: Pierre Omidyar believes there should be no philanthropy without profit

BY MARK AMES
ON MAY 31, 2014

“I had a long debate with Pierre,” [Nobel Peace Prize winner] Yunus told me, referring to Omidyar. “He says people should make money. I said, Let them make money—but why do you want to make money off the poor people?” — The New Yorker

This week, India’s newly-elected ultranationalist leader Narendra Modi unveiled his cabinet, three-quarters of whom come from a fascist paramilitary outfit, the RSS (Rashtriya Swayamsevak Sangh) — including one minister accused by police last year of inciting deadly Hindu-Muslim violence that left over 50 dead.

The RSS was founded in 1925 by open admirers of Mussolini and Hitler; in 1948, an RSS member assassinated pacifist Mahatma Gandhi. In 1992, it was the RSS that organized the destruction of the Ayodha Mosque, leaving 2000 dead, mostly Muslims; and in 2002, the RSS played a key role in the mass-murders of minority Muslims in Gujarat, according to Human Rights Watch, when the state of Gujarat was ruled by Narendra Modi — himself a product of the RSS.

Earlier this week, Pando reported that Modi’s election received help from unlikely sources in Silicon Valley including Google, and to a much more serious extent, Omidyar Network, the philanthropy fund of eBay billionaire and First Look publisher Pierre Omidyar.

From 2009 through February of this year, Omidyar Network India Advisers was headed by Jayant Sinha, a longtime Modi adviser and newly-elected MP in Modi’s ultranationalist BJP party ticket. The Omidyar Network partner and managing director played a double role, investing funds in Indian nonprofits and for-profits, some with distinctly political agendas; while privately, the Omidyar man “worked in Modi’s team” in 2012-13, and served as director in the ultranationalist BJP party’s main think tank on security and economic policy, the India Foundation. This week, Modi appointed the head of the India Foundation, former intelligence chief Ajit Doval, as his National Security Advisor.

Modi was the “hi-tech populist” candidate: London techies managed Modi’s 3-D hologram campaign, beaming 10-feet-tall Modi holograms to rallies across India. And India’s techies played a key role both in campaigning for Modi and voting for Modi.

Despite the sunny progressive Silicon Valley gloss we’ve been fed these past few decades, Modi’s appeal shows that the tech industry is as prone to far-right authoritarian politics as any other industry.

And that is what makes the Omidyar Network story so revealing: Perhaps no other figure embodies the disconnect between his progressive anti-state image, and his factual collaboration with the American national security state and the global neoliberal agenda, than Pierre Omidyar.

The role of Omidyar Network in so many major events of the past week — helping elect India’s ultranationalist leader Narendra Modi; co-funding Ukraine regime-change NGOs with USAID, resulting in a deadly civil war and Monday’s election of Ukrainian billionaire oligarch Petro Poroshenko; and now, this week’s first-ever sit-down TV interview with Edward Snowden, through an arrangement between NBC News and Pierre Omidyar’s First Look Media — shows how these contradictions are coming to the fore, and shaping our world.

Omidyar’s central role in the US national security state’s global agenda may still come as a shock to outsiders and fans of First Look media’s roster of once-independent journalists. But to White House foreign policy hawks, Pierre Omidyar represents the new face of an old imperial tradition.

Liberal Hawks: Samantha Power, Omidyar & USAID

“For Washington, NGOs are nothing less than ‘America’s invisible sector’ of influence.”

—James Peck, Ideal Illusions

In November 2013, UN Ambassador and neocon favorite Samantha Power gave a speech at the Freedom Award ceremony, honoring George Soros’ role in advancing America’s foreign policy strategy through the Open Society-USAID private-public partnership. The Freedom Award is one of the Cold War establishment’s top honors; past honorees include George H. W. Bush, Bill Clinton, Winston Churchill, and OSS spy agency founder “Wild” Bill Donovan.

This is Soros’ second Freedom Award, and for good reason, as Ambassador Power explained: Soros’ vision for the world — a world of free markets and “open government” — perfectly synched with President Obama’s vision:

A couple of years ago, I had the privilege of listening from the gallery of the United Nations General Assembly when President Barack Obama addressed the heads of state of the world and built an entire affirmative agenda around Karl Popper’s vision, which is George’s vision and which George popularized and resourced: open economy, open government, open society.

After noting that “private donations now equal more than two-thirds of the amount that the U.S. government gives in foreign aid,” Ambassador Power praised Soros’ contributions and singled out his Silicon Valley heir, Intercept publisher Pierre Omidyar:

The new philanthropists—the Soros-modeled philanthropists — donate money, but they do so while they’re still in the prime of their lives… And through his example, George [Soros] has given definition to what it means to be a modern philanthropist, to be a doer, paving the way for Bill and Melinda Gates, Warren Buffet, Pam and Pierre Omidyar, and others. George was first.

Samantha Power would know: In November 2010, while serving in Obama’s National Security Council, she posted on the White House website a glowing description of President Obama’s meeting with an Omidyar-funded Indian NGO, Janaagraha, just one month after the organization received a $3 million grant from Omidyar Network to launch its iPaidABribe anti-corruption campaign. The $3 million grant was Omidyar’s first to an Indian NGO under managing director Jayant Sinha – who, as Pando reported, had a second job as advisor to ultranationalist Narendra Modi.

Curiously, before receiving Omidyar’s money and Obama’s personal blessing, the NGO’s co-founder, Ramesh Ramanathran, expressed his support for Obama’s counter-insurgency strategy in Afghanistan. With one caveat: even more NGOs:

…for all its celebration of local services, the counter-insurgency strategy doesn’t go far enough to realize the full potential of this approach. Specifically, two key aspects need to be added: first, having local governments be at the centre of civic service improvements; and second, well-defined participatory decision-making processes that empower citizens.

…In other words, counter-insurgency could be thought of as ‘bottom-up nation-building’, not just asymmetric war strategy.

Ramanathran is a former Citibank executive and a Yale MBA. Besides fighting corruption in India through his NGO, Ramanathran also runs a microfinance company that targets India’s urban poor borrowers — “maids, vegetable sellers, security guards” according to one description. His microfinance company suffered early on from high default rates and alleged underworld pressures, but has since expanded lately thanks to large private equity investors like Morgan Stanley and KKR.

By taking a closer look at Omidyar Network’s investments in India, we gain insight into where the common interests between Big Tech, the US national security state, and neoliberalism align — and Omidyar’s strategic thinking aligning eBay/PayPal with Omidyar Network and First Look media.

Let’s start with Omidyar Network’s investments in the Rural Development Institute, founded by one of the godfathers of American counterinsurgency strategy: Roy Prosterman.

“Property Rights”: Omidyar and “Phoenix Program” guru Roy Prosterman

Omidyar Network identifies “property rights” (or “property titling”) as one of its five areas of focus. One of Omidyar’s personal heroes and largest grant recipients is neoliberal economist Hernando de Soto, the former right-hand man to jailed dictator Alberto Fujimori. De Soto is the world’s leading peddler of “property titling” as the answer to global poverty: rather than giving aid, De Soto says we should give the world’s poor private property titles, which slum dwellers can presumably collateralize into microloans for their slum-based startups. The results have often been catastrophic — but that hasn’t stopped De Soto from being admired by the world’s ruling elite, ranging from Bill Clinton, to the Koch brothers — to Pierre Omidyar, who gave $5 million to De Soto’s neoliberal think tank, and gushes on Twitter:


India, like many developing countries around the world, has what Anglo-Americans consider a weak legal structure on property rights. In particular, local indigenous peoples lay ancient claims to lands they live on, and have resisted state attempts to forcibly evict them to make way for industry, mining, and other powerful interests. The Naxal Maoist insurgencies raging in parts of India are fueled in part by displaced, landless peoples. Since Modi’s election landslide, global investors have been hopeful that India’s land will now be made easier to buy and sell. Omidyar Network’s longtime top man in India, Jayant Sinha—now an MP in Modi’s far-right ruling party — told CNBC that Modi’s first job should be making land acquisition easier:

We have to start with land acquisition. We have to make land acquisition a lot better in terms of both the people that are acquiring the land from the farmer’s and so on as well as for industry.

So perhaps it’s little surprise that Omidyar’s first major India grant, in 2008, went to the Rural Development Institute’s (renamed “Landesa”) program “to help secure land rights for the rural poor” in India’s Andhra Pradesh state. By 2009, Omidyar Network had committed $9 million to the RDI land rights program, the largest grant in the outfit’s history.

And what a history: The Rural Development Institute was founded in 1967 by Roy Prosterman, whose land reform programs were a key element in the Vietnam War counterinsurgency strategy, the “Phoenix” assassination program. The Phoenix program became the template for modern American counterinsurgency — violent terror, combined with soft-power land “reforms” cooked up by Prosterman’s Institute.

During the Vietnam War, Prosterman teamed up with USAID to implement his “land-to-the-tillers” reforms, granting land to peasants as the carrot, while at the same time CIA death squads assassinated tens of thousands of Vietnamese village leaders and terrorized restive regions into submission. The result, Prosterman later boasted, was that Viet Cong recruitment dropped 80 percent.

A decade later, Prosterman sold the same land reform program to El Salvador’s junta, just as the junta was ramping up its deadly attacks on rural civilians that left 75,000 killed by US-backed government forces. Prosterman also served as “land reform” advisor to Philippines dictator Ferdinand Marcos. And in the 1990s, Prosterman was contracted by Booz Allen to advise land reforms in Moldova, according to journalist Tim Shorrock.


A few years ago, Prosterman’s Rural Development Institute changed its name to Landesa. But Prosterman’s Cold War outfit hasn’t changed its close cooperation with USAID, or its core strategic mission, tying land ownership to security (and counterinsurgency) — neatly summed by Landesa’s India director’s article: “Connecting the Dots Between Security and Land Rights in India.”

Leaving aside the alleged benefits to India’s poor of giving them land title to the commons — 400,000,000 Indians live on less than $1.25 a day — for the more powerful interests funding land titling programs, there are endless advantages. It helps create a mass tax base for governments that want to shift more taxes onto the masses; it formalizes and legalizes transfer of property from the commons to the strongest and richest; it makes foreign investors happy; it helps the government and businesses track and keep data on its citizens; and, to quote Omidyar Network managing partner Matt Bannick — recently appointed by the Obama White House to a special taskforce — Prosterman’s land reforms made Omidyar “excited about how micro-land ownership can empower women and help them to pull themselves out of poverty.”

That’s because micro-land ownership helps create the real focus of Omidyar Network investments in India: Microfinance.

“Financial Inclusion”: Omidyar, Microfinance & Suicide-By-Pesticide

Omidyar Network’s ugliest disaster — besides co-funding Ukraine regime-change groups with USAID — was its role in funding SKS Microfinance, whose predatory lending and debt collecting practices led to a rash of gruesome suicides in rural Andhra Pradesh.

First, a quick word on the theory and practice of microlending. In theory, the original microfinance concept — a nonprofit extending micro-loans to the poor, under favorable terms, below market rates — could be beneficial, and under the right circumstances, it often was. But to the neoliberals, the original microfinance concept smacked of do-gooder state socialism — so microfinance floundered in the margins of the development community until 1992. That year, USAID commercialized a Bolivian microfinance nonprofit called Prodem, creating a new for-profit micro-lender, BancoSol in its place. BancoSol ballooned overnight — both in loans and in profits, making millionaires of the former nonprofit directors before BancoSol nearly collapsed at the end of the decade.

USAID liked the for-profit neoliberal model for microfinance, and it persuaded the World Bank and other global financial institutions to load in and sing its praises. That brought microfinance to the attention of Wall Street funds, eventually pushing out “old” “unsustainable” nonprofit microfinance institutions, and seducing the likes of Nobel Peace Prize winner and microfinance industry guru Muhammad Yunus into the for-profit sector as well. As we now know, it ended in disaster — particularly in India’s Andhra Pradesh state, where Omidyar-funded land title programs had been busy creating legions of rural poor “micro-land owners” now ready to load up on Omidyar-funded microfinance loans. The result would be scores of women driven to grisly suicides, forced prostitution, and despair.

It’s hard to overstate just how central the for-profit microfinance model is to Pierre Omidyar’s “vision.” In a 2006 New Yorker article detailing Omidyar’s near-religious zeal for commercializing microfinance, we learn that the eBay billionaire not only rejected the Nobel Peace Prize winner’s appeals to soften his monomaniac focus on profiting off the world’s poor — we also learn that Omidyar was committed to wiping out whatever remained of charitable non-profit microlending, so as not to “distort the market.” Omidyar rejected on principle entreaties from his fellow billionaires to invest in a nonprofit microfinance fund. Because on principle, Omidyar refused to believe that good could come from anything but the self-interested profit motive. Here’s the New Yorker:

[Omidyar] often cites Adam Smith’s doctrine that unrestrained market forces and self-interest drive the most efficient—and socially beneficial—use of resources. Omidyar sees Smith’s principles at work in eBay; he believes that eBay’s commercial success was linked to a profound social good.

Omidyar’s faith in the eBay model is so great that he is convinced that it can be applied to solving humanity’s problems, including poverty — and that is why Omidyar singled out for-profit microfinance as his life’s mission. After rejecting Yunus as an “old thinker” wedded to old do-gooderism non-profit thinking, Omidyar announced a $100 million donation to Tufts University, the largest in school history, with the stipulation that the Omidyar-Tufts Microfinance Fund went “specifically” into “investments that would promote microfinance’s commercialization.”

To manage the fund, Omidyar hired a Senior Credit Officer from USAID — the agency that originally commercialized microfinance in 1992 — who channeled Joseph Schumpeter to the New Yorker:

“One of the things we need and we will get is a cycle of creative destruction,” said Tryfan Evans, the director of investments at the Omidyar-Tufts fund, who previously worked at U.S.A.I.D. “If you’re inefficient, you will get overtaken by competitors.”

What is rather shocking in hindsight is how fanatical Omidyar’s faith is in the free market, to the point that he’s willing to risk exploiting the most vulnerable poor on earth to prove that Adam Smith is right. The dangers of for-profit microfinance lending to India’s poor were no secret: the New Yorker article references a string of microfinance related suicides in Andhra Pradesh back in 2006, before Omidyar’s millions poured oil on that fire.

Yunus failed to dissuade Omidyar:

“Let them make money—but why do you want to make money off the poor people?”

To Omidyar’s mind, Yunus just didn’t get it. This was about something far more important— Omidyar was proving a theory. To the New Yorker reporter, the eBay billionaire explained:

“Omidyar views the fund as a way of testing his theories about commercializing the sector. ‘It’s really the demonstration impact I’m looking for, primarily,’ he said.”

And so Omidyar tested his theory: plowing millions into India’s SKS Microfinance via investments into murky microfinance outfit Unitus. In 2010, SKS Microfinance listed a $350 million IPO that netted insiders and early investors like Unitus obscene profits. The murky, interlocking nonprofit/for-profit structures ensured that only those on the inside knew whether Omidyar made money on his investment.

The only sure thing was that the explosion of microfinance lending in the state of Andrah Pradesh, led by SKS Microfinance, wound up saddling the world’s poorest and most vulnerable village women with debts they could not pay, causing a wave of suicides. An AP investigation directly implicated Omidyar-funded SKS Microfinance agents in several suicides:

One woman drank pesticide and died a day after an SKS loan agent told her to prostitute her daughters to pay off her debt. She had been given 150,000 rupees ($3,000) in loans but only made 600 rupees ($12) a week.

Another SKS debt collector told a delinquent borrower to drown herself in a pond if she wanted her loan waived. The next day, she did. She left behind four children.

One agent blocked a woman from bringing her young son, weak with diarrhea, to the hospital, demanding payment first. Other borrowers, who could not get any new loans until she paid, told her that if she wanted to die, they would bring her pesticide. An SKS staff member was there when she drank the poison. She survived.

An 18-year-old girl, pressured until she handed over 150 rupees ($3) – meant for a school examination fee – also drank pesticide. She left a suicide note: “Work hard and earn money. Do not take loans.”

In all these cases, the report commissioned by SKS concluded that the company’s staff was either directly or indirectly responsible.

After the report, Omidyar Network scrubbed SKS Microfinance from its website. An old cached webpage shows Omidyar hailing SKS Microfinance for “serving the rural poor in India” and claiming that the murky Unitus private equity fund’s IPO “exit strategy” will “attract more capital to the market.”

Instead, Unitus dissolved its microfinance NGO, a wave of resignations and murky millions moved hands, SKS Microfinance became a pariah, and Andhra Pradesh passed laws regulating microfinance institutions. A tiny handful of insiders and investors pocketed obscene millions, over 200 killed themselves, and entire Indian rural communities were devastated. Self-interest and profit motive did not create the greatest social good that Omidyar believed in; and yet, Omidyar Network continues to expand its portfolio of microfinance — or “financial inclusion” — investments.

eBay Shrugged

“Omidyar stopped talking about microfinance as a way to end world poverty, and instead described its mission in a way congruent with the eBay experience.” —New Yorker

The key to understanding the enigmatic eBay billionaire and his many contradictions — an active participant in Washington’s global empire on a scale unrivaled in publishing, while also founder of a quarter-billion dollar “adversarial journalism” startup and privatizer of the Snowden NSA files, the largest cache of leaked national security secrets in US history — is understanding Omidyar’s eBay-centric vision.

Omidyar is a vision man, as his star employee Jeremy Scahill constantly reminds us. And his vision was shaped, for understandable reasons, by his experience making ten billion dollars overnight off of eBay, which Omidyar believes is proof of a larger philosophical and moral structure at work, rather than a combination of smarts, luck, privilege… and other less savory factors.

In 2000, Omidyar confided to his New York Times biographer, Adam Cohen, that he founded eBay to create a “perfect market” after feeling cheated by the way tech IPOs in the early 1990s let insiders “spin” IPOs for a quick profits before dumping them onto the market to regular investors — like the pre-eBay Omidyar. Cohen writes:

When 3DO announced plans to go public in May 1993, Omidyar placed an order for stock through his Charles Schwab brokerage account…. 3DO went public at $15 a share, but when Omidyar checked his account, he learned that the stock had soared 50 percent before his order had been filled…. it struck him that this was not how a free market was supposed to operate—favored buyers paying one price, and ordinary people getting the same stock moments later at a sizeable markup.

Omidyar’s solution was an online auction.

Cohen, a member of the New York Times editorial board, found Omidyar’s story convincing. There was only one problem: At the very time Omidyar spun this yarn to Cohen, Omidyar was under investigation in the largest IPO stock spinning scandal in history. According to a House investigation, in return for giving Goldman Sachs the lucrative eBay IPO, the “vampire squid” bank set up private secret accounts for Omidyar and CEO Meg Whitman letting them spin dozens of tech IPOs before they went to market — ripping off both retail investors and startup investors. Omidyar settled a shareholder fraud lawsuit in 2005 without admitting wrongdoing, ironic for a visionary who believes so deeply in accountability.

More recently, Omidyar was subpoenaed by a federal grand jury criminal investigation into his and other eBay executives’ alleged roles in stealing Craigslist’s “secret sauce” for eBay’s profit.

As grubby as Omidyar’s greed might sound, it is in perfect keeping with his radical free-market ideology, an ideology that prioritizes self-interest and the profit motive as the greatest engines for good in the world. Of course, the real Omidyar has little in common with the Omidyar of journalistic fairytales — the “civic minded billionaire” and “the billionaire exception” (Columbia Journalism Review), whose “commitment to the investigative form and an open society ” is so great, we “should pray he lives a long and lucid life” (Reuters) — or, the Omidyar that Pulitizer Prize winner Glenn Greenwald described to Amy Goodman:

“…if you look at Pierre’s record of advocacy over the last several years….He would not start a new business in order to make money. He would only start a new business for some goal, some civic-minded goal.”

Actually, the real Omidyar would never, on principle, start a new business, or pursue a civic-minded goal, without putting profit at the very center of the project. On principle — because in Omidyar’s mind, no good could possibly come from defying the free markets. That is why he fought with Yunus over the principle of getting rich of the world’s poorest people through microfinance. As the New Yorker explained it:

“EBay would be his template for the future. In 2004, he founded Omidyar Network, which makes for-profit investments as well as philanthropic donations, and as he began to search for vehicles with eBay-like properties he decided that microfinance was an amazing fit. Both eBay and microfinance allow people to discover that they can be entrepreneurs…. Both can be viewed as demonstrations of free-market principles. Both can be seen as businesses whose profitability is linked to their social impact. Omidyar stopped talking about microfinance as a way to end world poverty, and instead described its mission in a way congruent with the eBay experience.”

It is impossible for us non-billionaires to grasp how profoundly Omidyar Network’s “philanthropy” is shaped by eBay/PayPal’s corporate interests: his enthusiasm for microfinance to the world’s poor is shaped by eBay, and even First Look media — which structurally resembles Omidyar Network’s murky profit/nonprofit pretzel — is turning out to be an eBay-vision-in-progress.

As with Omidyar’s vision for self-supported microfinance as the best means for “social impact,” Omidyar has made it clear he wants First Look to be “self-supported” from the profits of First Look’s “technology company” that will “develop new media tools for First Look properties.” Ebay — which gives people “tools to pursue their goals,” and whose “vast scale” demonstrates “business could also be an effective tool for social good” — is the model for Omidyar Network’s philanthropy; and finally, the circle is closing as eBay transforms itself into a “digital magazine of all things,” according to a former Omidyar employee writing in the Atlantic:

eBay is hiring editors and long-form writers to help turn its site into a “digital magazine,” according to president of eBay Marketplaces Devin Wenig…. He wants eBay to be a retail-publisher, not a social network.

“We’re now in the content business,” Wenig said. “So, for the first time, eBay has a voice. We’re telling stories. We have an editor. We have curators. And we have writers on-staff. You’ll see that evolve to some longer-form stories, some really beautiful pictures… It’s media-like.”

Viewed through Omidyar’s own lens, and through Omidyar’s own words, the contradictions between the White House insider-Omidyar who works hand in glove with the national security state, and maverick publisher-Omidyar pledging to fight the national security state, aren’t really contradictions. Because there is always one right answer whenever those two interests collide, one synthesis to that alleged dialectic: The interest of the shareholders is always right. Omidyar himself explained, in his own words, his eBaysian vision in the case of WikiLeaks, when he chose the self-interest of eBay/PayPal’s shareholders — Omidyar being the number one shareholder — over everything, including the principle of protecting free speech and resisting government repression of WikiLeaks. In his PayPal-WikiLeaks editorial, Omidyar wrote:

Today, it appears, notification of a criminal investigation is enough to force businesses whose cause is not the First Amendment to cut off a publisher the way Amazon, PayPal, Visa and Mastercard each have done WikiLeaks. (Disclosure: Civil Beat Publisher Pierre Omidyar is chairman of eBay, which owns PayPal.) Unlike the press barons of old, the executives of these businesses cannot tell their shareholders that it will hurt their company more to cave on a matter of principle than to drop a customer. It is their right and common practice to shut a customer down when they receive complaints from criminal investigators, even without a court order. This even though the existence of a criminal investigation is no indication of guilt.

The executives have a fiduciary duty to do what’s best for their shareholders. And if they didn’t respond to government warnings, they very well could risk their own business being shut down.

There is no doubt, and no difference between the Omidyar who argued with Nobel Peace Prize winner Yunnus about the need to profit off the world’s poorest borrowers; or the Omidyar who pursued the self-interest of eBay’s shareholders over less valuable principles like freedom of expression; or the Omidyar who chooses to collaborate with USAID in Ukraine, or violent ultranationalists in India whose policies could help eBay’s bottom line.

The contradictions exist only in the minds of those who hope and dream of a different Omidyar, an Omidyar of liberal fairytales.

(Special thanks to Aditya Velivelli for helping educate me about India’s complex politics and social fabric—M.A.)
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
Nordic
 
Posts: 14230
Joined: Fri Nov 10, 2006 3:36 am
Location: California USA
Blog: View Blog (6)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby Sounder » Wed Jun 18, 2014 10:14 pm

As grubby as Omidyar’s greed might sound, it is in perfect keeping with his radical free-market ideology, an ideology that prioritizes self-interest and the profit motive as the greatest engines for good in the world. Of course, the real Omidyar has little in common with the Omidyar of journalistic fairytales — the “civic minded billionaire” and “the billionaire exception” (Columbia Journalism Review), whose “commitment to the investigative form and an open society ” is so great, we “should pray he lives a long and lucid life” (Reuters) — or, the Omidyar that Pulitizer Prize winner Glenn Greenwald described to Amy Goodman:

“…if you look at Pierre’s record of advocacy over the last several years….He would not start a new business in order to make money. He would only start a new business for some goal, some civic-minded goal.”

Actually, the real Omidyar would never, on principle, start a new business, or pursue a civic-minded goal, without putting profit at the very center of the project. On principle — because in Omidyar’s mind, no good could possibly come from defying the free markets. That is why he fought with Yunus over the principle of getting rich of the world’s poorest people through microfinance.


This was such a laughfer to see the socialist-libertarian Glenn Greenwald stand up for the uber capitalist Omidyar, by suggesting that 'he would not start a new business in order to make money'?

OK, you betcha Bob.
Sounder
 
Posts: 4054
Joined: Thu Nov 09, 2006 8:49 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby DrEvil » Thu Jun 19, 2014 12:16 am

Socialist libertarian? How does that work?
"I only read American. I want my fantasy pure." - Dave
User avatar
DrEvil
 
Posts: 4156
Joined: Mon Mar 22, 2010 1:37 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby Lord Balto » Thu Sep 04, 2014 12:12 pm

Spiro C. Thiery » Sun Apr 06, 2014 12:42 pm wrote:
RocketMan » Today, 15:38 wrote:
Spiro C. Thiery » Sun Apr 06, 2014 1:56 pm wrote:
Lord Balto » Today, 11:17 wrote:
RocketMan » Wed Dec 11, 2013 6:35 am wrote:I usually agree with you Nordic, but here I gotta agree with JackRiddler. A weird barrage of bitterness and ad hominems with a dash of cheap moralism on the side. Jealous much?

Sibel Edmonds is indeed a hero but... she might be jumping the shark here.


Once national security state, always national security state. That has been my policy for a while now. And it tends to explain a lot, including folks like Jim Fetzer, former marine and propagator of more than one far out conspiracy theory clearly meant to discredit the entire movement for truth in government. So, I have to agree with Riddler and yourself. Snowden's in hiding and in fear of his life, and Edmunds is running an apparently profitable blog and begging for money every week, like some public radio station. So who's the real whistle blower? And, of course, you have folks like Webster Tarpley who insist that folks like Snowden are "limited hangouts," by which he apparently means that they haven't had access to all of the spooks' deep dark secrets and blabbed them to the world. Tarpley is just an alternative historian in the Lyndon LaRouche vein--nothing wrong with that per se--not national security by any open documentation, but he seems to be playing the same game tarring and feathering the very folks who release the information.


In Snowden's own words:
http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/2332899/edward-snowden-testifies-to-the-european-parliament-about-the-nsa
I love my country, and I believe that spying serves a vital purpose and must continue.


Once national security state, always national security state.


Daniel Ellsberg was a right-wing RAND analyst who claimed patriotism even after his whistleblowing.

In addition to having to discard his entire previous life and live as a fugitive in a foreign, hostile land, does Snowden have to carve FUCK THE US on his forehead with a dull knife to count as a credible whistleblower?


I included the patriotic boilerplate part of the quote for context, but couldn't care less about that either way. It's the spying part of the quote from the former spy that is revealing (more revealing than his revelations). Either he's whistleblowing or he's not. What model is this in-some-circumstances-spying advocation suppose to take? He's playing both sides of a fence that shouldn't be there if you care anything about being unmolested by the national security state.


Someone recently pointed out, I believe it was Doug Campbell on his Dallas Action podcast at http://www.spreaker.com/show/the-dallas-actions-tracks, that Ellsberg was working for Ed Lansdale, of all people, when Ellsberg was in Vietnam.

As for Fetzer, his Veterans Today blatherings are now being referenced by Citizens for Legit Government. The CIA counter operations seem to be working.
User avatar
Lord Balto
 
Posts: 733
Joined: Sat Jul 28, 2007 5:34 pm
Location: Interzone
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby conniption » Sun Nov 02, 2014 12:40 pm

Empire Burlesque

Revenge of the Interceptors: Oligarch's Team Mugs Renegade Taibbi

Written by Chris Floyd
Friday, 31 October 2014


A few random thoughts on the imbroglio over Matt Taibbi leaving the media stable of oligarch Pierre Omidyar -- and the remarkable response to this by the oligarch's remaining celebs, led by Glenn Greenwald.

1. The Intercept article on Taibbi's departure -- bylined under the names of Greenwald, Laura Poitras, Jeremy Scahill, and John Cook, but almost certainly written mostly by Greenwald -- is, at its core, a scurrilous piece of work. Purporting to be a boldly transparent piece -- it even (lightly) criticizes the Boss! -- it is instead, transparently, an attempt by the oligarch's organization to get its side of the story out first before the famously acerbic Taibbi makes any statement.

2. It is also a means for the authors to laud themselves as "fiercely independent journalists" (yes, Greenwald actually wrote that about himself) who, despite being radical bohemians who "view corporate cultures and management-speak with disdain," were able to heroically grapple with their employer and procure for themselves "a sizable budget, operational autonomy, and a team of talented journalists, editors, research specialists, and technologists working collaboratively and freely in the manner its founders always envisioned" … unlike that loser Taibbi, who obviously lacked their moxie and got slapped around by the Big Boss Man.

3. The poison shiv of the article is buried deep in the acres of Greenwald's ever-deadening slabs of prose (as well as deep in Taibbi's back): the accusation of sexist behavior on Taibbi's part when he was upbraiding one of his staff. To be sure, the Interceptors make great show of saying that an internal investigation of the charge found that his action did not rise "to the level of legal liability" (libel-dodging weasel-wording at its best!) -- and added, as an appendix, an encomium from another Omidyar stablemate as to Taibbi's good character and lack of sexism. But the damage was done, as was obviously intended. The quick takeaway of anyone wondering about the situation will be: "What happened with Taibbi and First Look?" "Well, he was facing some kind of sex abuse charge or something, wasn't he? Abusing the women there, threatening or yelling at them, something." "What an asshole. They were right to get rid of him." Or maybe just a quick headline in the NY Post or Drudge Report: "Taibbi Leaves First Look After Sexism Row."

4. Anyone who has ever known or worked with Taibbi -- as I did in Moscow years ago -- knows that he is indeed a combative, abrasive personality. The Interceptors point this out repeatedly, ostensibly in his defense, as if to say, "Well, Taibbi's volatile ways were a known quality, part of what made his work so powerful; no wonder he clashed with the corporate structure of the organization." But this too is actually a subtle defense of the Big Boss Man, carrying a counter-implication: "Look, everybody knows Taibbi is an angry jerk; no wonder the Boss had to come down hard on him."

5. I have no way of knowing how Taibbi behaved toward the staff he hired with the "multimillions" Omidyar gave him to play with. I certainly don't know if he made a sexist remark to a staffer or not. I do know that when he and Mark Ames (whose work, like Taibbi's, I've frequently referenced here) edited The eXile magazine in Moscow, it was filled with relentless misogyny -- visceral, juvenile, contemptuous, and often highly personal, especially when directed at Taibbi's female former colleagues at the Moscow Times. But that was a long time ago, and I assume that both writers have grown up a bit since then in regards to their attitude toward women. I've certainly seen nothing of that sneering contempt in any of their work since their eXile days. If there was some blow-up with a staffer at Omidyar's shop, involving harsh and abrasive language, I would imagine it was more general then gendered. But in his editorship of The eXile, Taibbi did indeed give many hostages to fortune in terms of defending himself against later charges of sexism.

6. That's why bringing up already investigated and apparently dismissed sexism charges is a doubly effective technique for the Inteceptors: the insinuation poisons Taibbi's present reputation, while his past makes it harder for him to defend himself. "You say you aren't sexist? What about all that shit in The Exile?"

7. That said, I know for a fact that Greenwald will tell lies -- knowing, demonstrable falsehoods -- to blacken a person's reputation when it suits him. I know because he did it to me, just a few months ago. In response to some criticism of his journalistic methods, Greenwald spewed out a very nasty, petty, personal smear -- an outright lie which he had to know was a lie when he wrote it. [See here for details.] He was willing to do this in order to discredit criticism from what, in his position, could only be considered the most marginal of sources. How much more might he do to defend the billionaire oligarch who has given him "a sizable budget, operational autonomy, and a team of talented journalists, editors, research specialists, and technologists" from a high-profile PR threat like the renegade Taibbi? In any case, when it comes to discussing matters such as Taibbi's behavior, Greenwald has zero credibility.

8. As others have pointed out, the Interceptors' article actually confirms many of the suspicions and criticisms that have been voiced about the oligarch's media operation from the beginning. Contrary to the Interceptors' insistent denials, Omidyar obviously has been deeply involved in the editorial operations of his "fiercely independent" hirelings, exerting control over personnel decisions, management -- even the petty cash, such as taxi receipts. And now we learn from Greenwald's latest slab that Omidyar is no longer interested in journalism at all, but in "products" -- "new technologies for delivering and consuming news." A techno-billionaire more concerned with enriching himself with more techno-product than forging a powerhouse of dissident journalism -- wow, who could have seen that coming? Anyone and everyone -- except, of course, for our leading dissident journalists.

9. In the end, this particular imbroglio is just a minor tempest in a celebrity teapot. There are more important -- and more sinister -- aspects to the oligarch's growing empire of profit-seeking political influence. Mark Ames (as it happens) has just published a very important article on Omidyar's continuing machinations in Ukraine and his continuing collusion with neo-fascists there and in India. I hope to take a closer look at his article and its implications soon. It certainly puts the Interceptors' proud association with the oligarch -- demonstrated by their hatchet job on Taibbi -- in a new, darker light.

10. As for Taibbi himself, I can say only this: You lie down with dogs, Matt, you get up with fleas. What the hell else did you think would happen?
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby conniption » Sun Nov 02, 2014 1:40 pm

OpEdNews
(embedded links)

Does Glenn Greenwald Believe in Santa Claus?

By Michael Collins
10/31/14


I have two stories for you. Tell me which one is more believable.

A) The most powerful organized crime boss in New York City invested tens of millions of dollars to launch a hard hitting newspaper that will investigate all levels of crime in the city. A crew of crime reporters came on board. Along with the owner, they insisted that there were no barriers to their investigations.

B) One of the world's wealthiest men with a history funding programs in tandem with U.S. foreign and intelligence interests, invested tens of millions of dollars to launch a hard hitting, web based independent journalism group. A crew of seasoned journalists came on board. Along with the owner, they insisted that there were no barriers to their investigations.

Which story is true? A -- B -- None of the above?


An OEN repost by Glenn Greenwald from The Intercept triggered my multiple-choice question above and the brief analysis below. Founded in 2013, Intercept presented itself as a breakthrough effort to create a new, truly independent venue for investigative journalism. Glenn Greenwald of Edward Snowden fame was the first recruit. When Marcy Wheeler of Firedoglake and others leading investigative web journalists came on board, some had high hopes for a hard hitting, fearless journalism exposing the ugliness of the national security state. Pierre Omidyar, one of the wealthiest men in the world, liberally funded the operation called First Look Media.

When I read the article, I realized that this was classic "inside baseball" journalism preoccupied with personalities over actual news, designed to cover up something painfully obvious and embarrassing. Greenwald and three other headliners from The Intercept try to explain away the departure of Wall Street muckraker extraordinaire, Matt Tiabbi. He headed up a another First Look property called Racket.

The Inside Story Of Matt Taibbi's Departure From First Look Media By Glenn Greenwald, Laura Poitras, Jeremy Scahill, and John Cook , Oct 30 (OpEdNews version here)

The article's only news value is that Tiabbi left the operation. He didn't stop writing. He'll publish somewhere else. The bulk of the article tries to convince us that this had nothing to do with the politics, economic or otherwise, of the billionaire owner.

This isn't the first time Greenwald tried to stop people from making the obvious connection between a billionaire owner and editorial policy.

First Look Media's owner, billionaire Pierre Omidyar, was a strong ally of the U.S.Agency for International Development's (USAID) campaign to destabilize Ukraine. He funded projects that led to the violent coup and establishment of a oligarch-neo Nazi alliance government (see Pando). Marcy Wheeler, formerly of Intercept, dug this up. That triggered a controversy -- just how independent is The Intercept? Wheeler left in May. After that, Greenwald made the case that his billionaire boss, ally of intel friendly USAID, and major source of funding for Ukraine's revolution was a swell guy who left the newsies alone.

This assertion that Omidyar's direct involvement in Ukraine has nothing to do with editorial policy at The Intercept is utter, total, and complete bull sh*t.

Here's a simple proof for the argument that Intercept's editorial policy reflects the views of the owner. If Intercept is truly independent, there should be quite a few stories on Ukraine's crazy junta in Kiev; attacks on civilians in the Donbass region by the Obama administration supported government; White House serial lying; and, billionaire involvement in supporting U.S. policy.

Look a the following site search of OpEdNews.com for "Ukraine" and notice 10 or more pages of articles.

ukraine site:opednews.com

Do the same site search for The Intercept.

ukraine site:firstlook.org

Shocking as it may seem, The Intercept has just one page of articles for one of the most important and compelling stories of our time.

We don't need a Julian Assange to deliver a Wikileaks set of documents to show us that First Look Media's Intercept took a dive on the tragic, failed, death and destruction story about the the suffering of millions in Southeastern Ukraine. Just look at the evidence from the searches. The absence of stories aligns exactly with Omidyar's position as a patron for some; of the forces that ended up in power.

To believe otherwise is like believing in Santa Claus, the tooth fairy, or the Easter Bunny when it's really Donnie Darko we're talking about.

Here's a brief memo to Glenn Greenewald and the other Intercept authors trying to convince us that things are all good with First Look Media.

We are not chumps. Stop treating us like we are.

Do what Robert Parry and citizen journalist George Eliason are doing - write some stories about atrocities in Ukraine and see if they're censored.

Creative Commons 3.0

Also see, Omidyar-funded candidate takes seat in new Ukraine parliament - Mark Ames, pandodaily, Oct 28

32 comments
conniption
 
Posts: 2480
Joined: Sun Nov 11, 2012 10:01 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby Nordic » Mon Nov 03, 2014 10:20 pm

Greenwald can regain his credibility by leaving The Intercept, like Wheeler and Taibbi.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
Nordic
 
Posts: 14230
Joined: Fri Nov 10, 2006 3:36 am
Location: California USA
Blog: View Blog (6)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby seemslikeadream » Mon Nov 03, 2014 10:34 pm

:wave:


“To this day,” Greenwald says, “I’ve never met Pierre in person.”

THE PIERRE OMIDYAR INSURGENCY
The eBay founder was a mild-mannered Obama supporter looking for a way to spend his time and fortune. The Snowden leaks gave him a cause — and an enemy.
Illustrations by Matthew Woodson

Every September, for a siren-snarled week, much of midtown Manhattan surrenders to a pair of occupying powers: the United Nations and the Clinton Global Initiative. The U.N.’s annual General Assembly brings in the foreign excellencies and tin-pot dictators, but it’s Bill Clinton’s event that attracts the billionaires. This year’s edition, co-sponsored by, among others, a Greek shipping magnate’s wife and a Ukrainian oligarch, took place inside the barricaded Times Square Sheraton, where the Clintons made evangelical “calls to action” on issues like water scarcity and women’s empowerment.

One evening, in conjunction with CGI, Pierre Omidyar threw a reception across the street. Omidyar, the programmer who created eBay, is one of America’s richest men, a 47-year-old philanthropist intent on giving away the fortune he made when he was 31. He is on collegial terms with the Clintons and has been a partner in their charity work. His guests, sipping wine inside a vaulted glass atrium, represented foundations and banks, governments and NGOs, tech start-ups and McKinsey. Omidyar’s foundation had just unveiled a $200 million Global Innovation Fund, established in partnership with the U.S. Agency for International Development. The announcement was timed to coincide with President Obama’s speech to the conference that afternoon on nurturing civil society.

Omidyar was late to the party, however — he’d spent much of his day hatching plans with some of Obama’s most uncivil opponents. Down in the Flatiron District, he has been building a ­digital-media organization dedicated to a scorching brand of “fearless, adversarial journalism.” Its prime target is the U.S. intelligence apparatus, and its marquee voice is Glenn Greenwald, the columnist who shared a Pulitzer Prize this year with documentarian Laura Poitras and others for obtaining and publishing Edward Snowden’s leaks about NSA surveillance. Since that story broke, Snowden, Greenwald, and Poitras have become heroes of a crypto-insurgency. More quietly, Omidyar has become the movement’s prime benefactor, financing an operation to disseminate government secrets.

Earlier this year, Greenwald, Poitras, and a third comrade in arms — former Nation writer Jeremy Scahill — launched a website called the Intercept. It is meant to be the prototype for a fleet of publications funded by Omidyar’s flagship company, First Look Media, to which Omidyar has initially committed $250 million. “We have the luxury of doing something different because we have this kind of infinite-resource backer,” Greenwald told me on the phone from Brazil, where he is based. “We’re thinking about how to do journalism structurally differently.” At the time of Omidyar’s visit, a second site, Racket, was also revving up for its launch. Headed by the polemical magazine writer Matt Taibbi, it was going to offer scabrous satire of the financial industry and politics.

Omidyar’s organization operates a little like WikiLeaks, except it is staffed by well-salaried journalists and backed by Silicon Valley money. It aims to unite strident ideology with publishing technology, cryptography, and aggressive legal defense. The Intercept has become the custodian of Snowden’s immense archive of classified documents, which it continues to mine for stories. Greenwald says the site also plans to share them with outside reporters and is building a secure “reading room” in its Fifth Avenue headquarters building, where it is currently renovating three floors. The Intercept is encouraging others in the intelligence world to leak via an encrypted system called SecureDrop. Between its periodic scoops, it serves up regular doses of acidic commentary by critics of Obama’s national-security policies.

Omidyar was an admirer of Obama’s right up to the moment the Snowden story broke, and many people who know him well, the types you might meet at CGI, struggle to explain his sudden turn toward confrontation. “He’s a very serious and public-spirited person,” says General Wesley Clark, who has been friendly with Omidyar since he raised money for his 2004 presidential campaign. Clark has publicly dismissed concerns about NSA surveillance and told me he couldn’t really explain why Omidyar was so agitated. Omidyar is mellow by nature; he lives in Hawaii and is a devotee of Buddhism. “He’s not this hard-core, radical maverick,” Greenwald says. “Back before this all happened, he just seemed like the normal, average, amicable billionaire.” Omidyar has communicated little about his motivations beyond a handful of abstruse public statements. He remains a remote and somewhat mysterious figure, even to his collaborators.

“To this day,” Greenwald says, “I’ve never met Pierre in person.”

There he was, though, inside the throng of the reception: a thin man in a hounds­tooth blazer, peering intently through rimless glasses. His thick black hair, once worn in a luxuriant ponytail, is now short and streaked by a single gray forelock. Omidyar has an aura of reserve, shuns personal publicity, and seems allergic to the pitching and prostration that his $8 billion net worth inspires in others. He found Jeff Skoll — his partner in eBay, now a philanthropist too — and immersed himself in conversation. Then he broke away to embrace a red-robed Buddhist monk, a fellow acolyte of the Dalai Lama’s.

Dutifully, Omidyar came forward to speak, clinking his glass next to a microphone in an ineffective effort to quiet the conversation. He began to read remarks off a stack of oversize notecards, but he stopped, visibly annoyed by the squealing brakes of a passing truck. “Isn’t New York wonderful? All this ambient sound,” he said. Then he forged onward. “As some of you may know, we’ve been exploring my interest in journalism. We’re really looking for new ways to bring more transparency and accountability to our government and to society as a whole.”

Omidyar’s soft words were nearly drowned out by the cocktail-hour din. But billionaires have many ways to voice their inner displeasure. That morning, Greenwald had published an Intercept column excoriating Obama’s move to bomb ISIS in Syria, suggesting he was intentionally driving recruits to the terrorist army. “At this point, it’s more rational to say they do all of this not despite triggering those outcomes but because of it,” Greenwald wrote. “Continuously creating and strengthening enemies is a feature, not a bug. It is what justifies the ongoing greasing of the profitable and power-vesting machine of Endless War.” Omidyar later tweeted a promotional link.

Omidyar was aware I had made interview requests, but he had remained reticent about his fight for radical transparency. There were rumors of turmoil behind the scenes at First Look — angry conflicts that reflected the inherent contradictions of a leftist offensive funded by a billionaire whose idiosyncratic belief system didn’t fit into neat political categories. When I approached Omidyar after his speech, he handed me his business card, flipping it over to point out one of those square UPC-like symbols, a code that linked to his website. “This is like a tracking chip,” he joked. “It’s like our version of the NSA tracking thing.” Then he courteously turned away.

Related Stories
Matt Taibbi Leaves Omidyar’s First Look Media [Updated]
It is possible to begin to discern Omidyar’s motivations with a little online surveillance. Within his natural habitat, he can be as voluble as he is personally shy. These days, his preferred medium is his Twitter account, @pierre, but the web is strewn with dormant blogs and avatars. His accounts offer granules of self-disclosure in the form of complaints (about the difficulty of ordering vegan room service), enthusiasms (the Segway), and philosophical musings (on “Star Trek ethics”).

As an engineer, Omidyar thinks of the world in terms of structures, and when he sees weaknesses, he becomes alarmed. Before the 2004 election, he blogged that the voting system was “headed towards a disaster,” and he excitedly quoted an anonymous inside source who described flaws in electronic machines that could lead to fraud. He is fascinated by diseases like Ebola and thinks the public-health system could be helpless in a crisis. “Since we know a pandemic is coming,” he wrote in a blog post for a flu initiative, “it’s only a matter of time until we’re sick and we have to take care of ourselves.”

Electronic privacy is another long-standing concern, reflected both in Omidyar’s philanthropic donations — to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, among other organizations — and his personal writings. During the Bush administration, his thoughts frequently returned to concerns about the War on Terror’s effect on civil liberties. He was also early to recognize the way technology was creating a virtual state of full disclosure, enticing people to consensually expose their inner lives to the narcotic curiosity of others.

One evening in February 2004, on his personal blog, Omidyar narrated an account of how he had been drawn into some idle snooping: “So, I’m in a hotel room in Boston, listening to some Moby in my iTunes, and I happen to notice a little blue icon in my list of playlists that I haven’t seen before.”

The icon linked to someone else’s computer, shared through the hotel’s Wi-Fi network. Omidyar clicked and browsed his neighbor’s library, noticing a file called “conjugal visit” that looked suspiciously like a home recording.

“There’s something creepy about this experience. Hotel rooms when you’re by yourself are already a little creepy, since you don’t really know what’s going on behind that wall … Now, I wonder, is he next door? Or above? Or below?

“I check the lock on my door. But I also feel a little bit like a peeping Tom. Is there a word for this phenomenon yet?”

Two days before, not far from Omidyar’s hotel, Mark Zuckerberg had launched Facebook; the creeping uneasiness he described is now a defining characteristic of our times. But the rise of self-revelation has been accompanied by disquiet about the privacy we may be ceding, willingly or not. Omidyar thinks the public is too complacent about intrusion and quotes Google’s Eric Schmidt, who says that government monitoring could “end up breaking the internet.” By this, Omidyar means that a spirit of online community and free exchange was the precondition for the digital age, and eBay’s success, and his unfathomable wealth. He worries that spying could turn trust to paranoia, a threat he takes very personally. “If you think ‘I’ve got nothing to hide’ is good basis for security policy,” Omidyar tweeted last year, “you’ve never been racially profiled or walked into [the] wrong church.”

Omidyar’s parents are Iranian. He was born in Paris, and he is a naturalized citizen: a member of the American community by choice. His parents moved to Washington, D.C., when he was young and soon separated. He was raised by his mother, Elahé Mir-Djalali, a linguist. Much of her published work was done in collaboration with a federally contracted think tank run by a psychologist who developed a word-association technique to help the military understand foreign mentalities. Academically, she was interested in the ways that “the hidden aspects of cultural meanings” make it difficult for speakers from different backgrounds to understand each other, and her studies identified the discontent among students in Iran just prior to the 1979 revolution. When Omidyar was in eighth grade, his mother moved to Honolulu to seek a position at a government-policy institute affiliated with the University of Hawaii. Pierre enrolled in the elite Punahou School, from which Barack Obama had graduated the year before.

Years later, Omidyar would listen to Obama’s rhetoric of “one America” and hear echoes of his own life. “I’ve always loved this country and its ideals with the fervor of a convert,” Omidyar blogged during the 2008 primaries. “He puts words to what I feel.”

Omidyar used to beg his mother to let him spend his Saturdays playing with an Apple II at a Honolulu computer store. He went on to study computer science at Tufts University, where he met his future wife, Pam. They moved out to Silicon Valley in the late ’80s. As a programmer, he “wasn’t a ninja,” says a colleague from that time, but he had the intellectual acuity to comprehend the potential of the internet. He was intuitive and, once convinced of his personal logic, difficult to budge. “I think I had a bad combination of personality traits: lots of self-confidence, and a perfectionist attitude towards my work,” Omidyar wrote in a public online chat years later. “I probably came across as an arrogant know-it-all, though of course that was never my intention.”

Omidyar co-founded a start-up, Ink Development, but when he disagreed with his partners over its direction, he left to take a job with a company called General Magic, an Apple spinoff that was developing a rudimentary form of tablet computing. General Magic was a ’90s hotbed: It called its young employees “magicians” and had an inspirational rabbit that hopped freely around the office. But in Omidyar’s view, both his start-up (which eventually sold to Microsoft, making him a millionaire) and General Magic had a fatal flaw: Their systems were not built to take advantage of the web. “Basically the latest, coolest shiny toy at the time was the web, was interactivity,” Omidyar later recalled.

Originally, the domain eBay.com had nothing to do with auctions — it was a workshop where Omidyar would tinker. Its earliest incarnation hosted a web page about Ebola, inspired by the national scare that coincided with the movie Outbreak. (Later, eBay would offer a variety of origin stories for its odd name, none having to do with Ebola in the Bay Area.) In August 1995, as General Magic began to show signs of financial distress, Omidyar took advantage of the Labor Day weekend to program a simple auction service and posted a link to it on eBay.com. He soon recruited a company president, Skoll, whose first management decision was to remove the alarming Ebola content, over Omidyar’s objection that it was still drawing lots of traffic.

The online-auction idea wasn’t original — a founder of a preexisting site, OnSale, recalls talking to Omidyar about a job before he started his competitor — but eBay was unusually frictionless. The company never touched the inventory, and it left market regulation to buyers and sellers. Instead of policing cheats, Omidyar wrote a manifesto declaring “most people are honest” and set up a forum where users could assign each other positive and negative ratings. “It turned out to be this magic thing,” he later said. By 1997, eBay was hosting 200,000 monthly auctions; the next year, the company went public. “We literally went from Pierre having maybe a couple million, and me just scraping by, to us being billionaires,” Skoll told me.

Omidyar’s insight, then contrarian, is now commonplace: Websites are communities, and people in them care about their reputations. “When everyone else at the time was saying, ‘Wow, what’s great about the internet is that you can be completely anonymous,’ Pierre was saying, ‘No, no, no, I want complete transparency,’” says Steve Westly, an early eBay executive.

While Omidyar built his online market­place on a foundation of public disclosure, he has closely guarded the dimensions of his own life that he deems unfit for inspection. His crusade against government spying grows out of a conviction that people should be able to protect the secret parts of themselves. When eBay became a dot-com phenomenon, a spokeswoman asked him what she should tell reporters about the company founder. He replied: “That I like my privacy.” After eBay went public, he retreated from the public exposure and administrative hassle that went with running the company, ceding responsibilities to a strong CEO, Meg Whitman. He drifted for a while: first to Paris, then Las Vegas. He built himself a 48,000-square-foot mansion overlooking the desert, which he told Esquire he liked because it gave him “the sense of what the planet was like before humans showed up.”

Eventually, he and Pam decided to relocate back to Hawaii — about as far as you can get from mainland America without being an exile. Omidyar was still fretful about his security and cognizant of the state’s isolation. He had heard that Hawaii had food supplies for only about a week in case of a catastrophe. In 2009, the Honolulu Advertiser reported he kept emergency stockpiles near his home and had purchased a solar-powered ranch in Montana to serve as a “safe house.” But the Omidyars took to the island lifestyle. Pam surfed, and their three kids were brought up relatively free of ostentation. Pierre and Pam donated generously to Hawaiian causes, including sustainable agriculture. He drove a Prius with a LIVE ALOHA bumper sticker.

Though he continued to be eBay’s board chairman and largest shareholder, Omidyar receded from view in Silicon Valley. “Pierre has been such a reclusive guy for the past few years,” says Philip Rosedale, who founded the technology firm Linden Lab, developer of the animated interactive world Second Life. During the mid-2000s, Omidyar immersed himself in the Second Life community, adopting a secret identity: a tattooed black man named Kitto Mandala. Even after Omidyar became a Linden Lab investor, Rosedale primarily interacted with his animated avatar. Mandala rode a Segway and wore a T-shirt that said KISS ME I’M LAWFUL EVIL. He could fly, and hardly anyone knew he was really a billionaire.


Pierre Omidyar in 1999. Photo: Yann Gamblin/Getty Images
In 2003, Omidyar took a trip with some of his real-life peers to NASA’s Space Camp in Alabama. Larry Page and Sergey Brin were there, as was Elon Musk, who had just sold PayPal to eBay. They played astronaut for a week, simulating a space-shuttle launch and weightlessness. They had dinner with Buzz Aldrin and a NASA official, during which the campers pressed to know why America hadn’t sent a man to Mars.

Musk is now building a private company, SpaceX, with the aim of personally landing on Mars. Brin wants to defeat Parkinson’s disease, while Page has invested in promoting longevity, even immortality. Jeff Bezos, Amazon’s founder, has his own rocket company and plans to restore the Washington Post to financial health — no small challenge given the struggles of the news business, in part owing to the disruption of classified advertising by companies like eBay.

Omidyar, by contrast, had trouble settling on a moon-shot project. He didn’t aspire to live forever or touch the stars. He wanted to do unglamorous work at the grass roots, applying the optimistic lesson he drew from eBay: that “people are basically good” and capable of overcoming forces like disease, ignorance, poverty, and repression. But how could this humanistic philosophy bring actual humans together? Through a foundation, Omidyar tried sprinkling angel investments on “social entrepreneurs” and created a patented technology platform meant to allow them to trade ideas the way people bought and sold goods on eBay. (Some users grew frustrated when they learned the conversation wasn’t meant to be a route to Omidyar’s own money, and it ultimately shut down.) Meanwhile, Pam, who previously worked in biotechnology, funded projects like a video game called Re-Mission, designed to help kids fight cancer, and founded an organization called Humanity United, which campaigns against human trafficking and genocide. Pierre realized that information gave rise to action, and that led him to think about newspapers, too.

“He was genuinely interested and concerned about a dissipating news industry,” says Brian Greenspun, publisher of the Las Vegas Sun, who had lengthy discussions with Omidyar almost a decade ago. “And what impact it will have on our democracy.”

Omidyar believed that powerful institutions needed to be kept in check, so he funded organizations like the Sunlight Foundation, a watchdog for money in politics, and the Center for Public Integrity, an investigative-journalism nonprofit. At the same time, his own philanthropic organization, Omidyar Network, conducted itself with unusual secrecy. Founded in 2004, it was at the vanguard of a movement called “venture philanthropy.” It is modeled on a VC firm, making both grants to nonprofits and equity investments in for-profit companies. The organization is partly a private entity, partly a foundation that functions as “just a checkbook,” as Omidyar wrote in the Harvard Business Review. At the cost of millions in tax breaks, this hybrid structure allows the Network to get around many nonprofit regulations. Though Omidyar has been one of the most generous donors to Guidestar, which tracks federal financial disclosures by nonprofits, you won’t find much useful information about Omidyar Network there.

Many in the philanthropy world were aghast when Omidyar began mingling altruism and capitalism, but he dismissed the objections as “old thinking.” He found an area that promised to unite both instincts: microfinance. Omidyar loved the idea that giving out tiny loans in developing countries could unleash entrepreneurialism. He endowed a $100 million fund, administered by Tufts, that invests in microfinance institutions, and donated to numerous nonprofits in the sector. In 2008, Omidyar took a trip to India, where he visited a village near Hyderabad with the founder of a lender called SKS, in which Omidyar Network was an indirect shareholder, via a 22 percent investment in a Cayman ­Islands–based private-equity fund. He watched as cross-legged women in saris borrowed cash. But when SKS mounted an IPO, the microfinance venture turned into a philanthropic debacle. Unitus, Inc., the Omidyar-supported nonprofit that ran the private-equity vehicle, had a convoluted structure rife with potential boardroom conflicts of interest. (“We have managed to stay out of jail, so we must not be violating any ethics,” one Unitus board member assured a consultant paid by Omidyar.) As it prepared to reap millions from the stock sale, Unitus disbanded its charitable microfinance operations, declaring the concept “validated.” But SKS’s stock later crashed in the midst of political uproar in India over harsh collection tactics, which were tied by opponents to a number of suicides.

Omidyar seems to take such setbacks in stride; he sees traditional philanthropy as overly risk-averse. “In Silicon Valley,” he said at a 2011 nonprofit conference, “we say if you haven’t tried something and failed, and actually learned something from that failure, then why would I want to work with you?” But Omidyar’s habit of investing heavily in big ideas, and sometimes dropping them abruptly, made him appear fickle and inscrutable to many in the philanthropy world. “He got this reputation of being an arrogant know-it-all,” says one nonprofit-sector consultant, echoing Omidyar’s earlier self-assessment. “But they all kissed the ring because they wanted his money.”

When Omidyar moved away from microfinance, he returned his attention to another desperate population: journalists. Fixing the problem of news appealed both to his apocalyptic side — in 2007, he proposed creating a peer-to-peer text-messaging service that would help people to “survive a flu pandemic or other widespread disaster” — and to his belief in the responsibilities of citizenship. In 2008, he started a company called Peer News, working with a small team of programmers in an office in Honolulu. At first it developed a system called Ginx, which was supposed to track the information coursing through Twitter. But it wasn’t able to break into the crowded market, so Peer News pivoted: It would create an ad-free subscription website covering Hawaiian government.

Omidyar conceived of the Honolulu Civil Beat, launched in 2010, as what he called “a new civic square,” and he hoped to reproduce the model around the country. He recruited a staff of six “reporter-hosts” led by a newspaper refugee, John Temple, whose last editing job had terminated with the closure of the Rocky Mountain News. After a difficult start — half the initial reporting staff left within months — the Civil Beat found its niche in weighty investigations. Omidyar was a constant presence in the newsroom. When Pam learned of a remote beach that was despoiled by washed-up plastic, they flew there on his private jet with a reporter. Omidyar took the website’s photos himself.

As a business, however, the Civil Beat never thrived. Omidyar was tight-lipped about audience numbers, even requiring his reporters to sign confidentiality agreements, but the subscription model clearly didn’t work. On Twitter, he pleaded to know how much a reader was willing to pay for his journalism: “No amount, no matter how small? Or a fair price?” Ultimately, he formed a partnership with Arianna Huffington to collaborate on an advertising-supported sister site. While the Civil Beat still covers politics and pension funds, HuffPost Hawaii promotes clickable content like yoga articles and photo galleries of cute seals.

The compromise solution assured the Civil Beat’s survival, but it was far from Omidyar’s original vision. For all his good intentions, he was still searching for that galvanizing cause. Little did he know it had been hidden there all along, in an underground bunker 25 miles outside Honolulu that served as an NSA signals operation center. On June 1, 2013 — three days after the HuffPost Hawaii partnership was announced — a technician who worked at the facility, Edward Snowden, made his rendezvous with reporters at a hotel in Hong Kong.

The radicalization of Pierre Omidyar happened with jarring swiftness. In 2012, he advertised his proximity to Obama — he served on a presidential commission — by tweeting out a photo of Marine One hovering above the White House lawn. That same year, he responded to ­campaign-season viciousness by tweeting out a list hashtagged #Republicans­IRespect, citing figures like Robert Gates (a former CIA director) and Condoleezza Rice. He started the Democracy Fund, a foundation intended to promote moderation. “I’ve heard him use the term anti-partisan to describe himself,” says Joe Goldman, the fund’s president. “He believes it’s dangerous to get caught up on one side or the other.”

But on June 5, 2013, Omidyar’s Twitter account posted a link to a Greenwald story in the Guardian: “Revealed: NSA collecting phone records of millions of Americans daily.” The issue touched a nerve in him — if ever there were a power that needed watching, it was the NSA. As further stories described the extent of the surveillance and Snowden identified himself, Omidyar vented his outrage. “Mr. President, look in the mirror,” he tweeted on June 23, “when did America become a country to seek asylum from? Whistleblowers are not spies.” On July 4, Omidyar tweeted the text of the Fourth Amendment. At this juncture, there were many ways Omidyar could have gone about influencing policy. He could have sought a meeting at the White House — Pam’s human-rights organization collaborates closely with the national-­security staff — or he could have funded a super-PAC. He could have rallied his fellow Silicon Valley billionaires to flex their lobbying might. Instead he decided to build a machine for confrontation and, as he puts it, “to convert mainstream readers into engaged citizens.”

Omidyar kicked the tires on the Washington Post and raised the possibility of working with — or even somehow acquiring — the nonprofit outfit ProPublica. But the Post sold to his old competitor Bezos. ProPublica, like other nonprofits Omidyar talked to, wasn’t for sale. Amid a flurry of furious interaction with privacy activists, Omidyar encountered Trevor Timm of the Freedom of the Press Foundation. While discussing the Snowden leaks via an encrypted video chat, Omidyar mentioned that he was thinking of starting his own media organization. Timm suggested that he contact Greenwald. “I think within a week, I ­talked to Glenn on the phone,” Timm says. “And he said, ‘Yeah, we’ve already hired ten people.’ ”

Greenwald had a tempestuous relationship with his Guardian editors and had already been planning to launch a website with Poitras and Scahill. “It was really kind of amazing, because we were actually in the process of doing almost exactly the same things,” Greenwald told me. “The obvious difference between what we were doing and what he was doing is that he has $8 billion.”

During last year’s Clinton Global Initiative, Omidyar summoned NYU journalism professor Jay Rosen to his suite at the Hilton to discuss surveillance, whistleblower prosecutions, and the future of journalism. Rosen later became a formal adviser to what would be called First Look Media, espousing what he calls the “personal franchise model” of building a new-media brand: buying up stars with portable readerships. But while acquiring the Greenwald franchise made business sense, it came with complications. Practically, it was dispersed — Omidyar in Honolulu, Greenwald in Rio, Poitras in Berlin — and the journalists were afraid of what might happen if they returned to the U.S. Director of National Intelligence James Clapper labeled them “accomplices” to Snowden’s alleged espionage, and Mike Rogers, the Republican chairman of the House Intelligence Committee, likened them to a “thief selling stolen material.” Now that material was First Look’s chief journalistic asset.

Before any firm plans were in place, much to Omidyar’s chagrin, word leaked to BuzzFeed that Greenwald was leaving the Guardian to pursue what he called a “once-in-a-career dream journalistic opportunity.” The founders’ initial statements were full of revolutionary swagger. “To quote that old CIA torturer,” Scahill told a German interviewer, “we gotta put on the big-boy pants.” He described “a journalist’s paradise,” where reporters would write what they pleased without interference from editors, the government, or Omidyar himself.

To the world, First Look looked like Greenwald’s personal project, but Omidyar never expected to be a passive investor. He engaged in extensive discussions with Arianna Huffington, including a brainstorming session aboard a private jet when they went to India last October for a conference organized by the Dalai Lama. “He wants to do it in a way that can reach a mass audience, not just a niche audience,” Huffington told me. Omidyar thought he would create an omnibus site covering news, sports, and entertainment, generating readers and revenue for a galaxy of star-centered publications. He hired Taibbi, the Rolling Stone writer most famous for likening Goldman Sachs to a “vampire squid,” to start Racket, lampooning the financial industry in the tradition of Spy.

First Look released an animated video in which Omidyar pledged to “bring back to journalism what’s been lost,” as a cartoon reporter sweated over a computer. “How does a company support itself given such ambition?” he narrated. “We’re figuring that out.” In fact, there were still lots of things to figure out, such as who was in charge, whether First Look’s journalism would be expected to make money, and if so, how.

As First Look raced to launch the Intercept, its vehicle for advancing the Snowden disclosures, an Omidyar Network headhunter was dispatched to harvest talent, promising journalists the creative freedom that comes with a $250 million budget. Omidyar probably expected that the potential beneficiaries would be grateful. Instead, there was much gossip and trepidation. Within the ecosystem of journalism and transparency nonprofits, there is hardly an organization that doesn’t take Omidyar’s money, or hope for it, but many are wary of his influence. “If you’re answering to Omidyar,” says the director of one, “then you’re really not independent.” And Greenwald himself, who had declared war on U.S. intelligence and rejects journalistic pieties about objectivity, is a polarizing force. “I think the concept of adversarial journalism is a limited and flawed one,” says Steven Aftergood, the author of Secrecy News, a respected blog that has received past Omidyar Network funding. “It is not an impartial search for truth as much as it is a combative attempt to defeat a perceived adversary.”

To take on the intelligence agencies, First Look has adopted some elements of spycraft. It is seeking out moles, and one of its first hires was a cryptography expert, who fortified its systems against penetration. To protect journalists from government retaliation, Omidyar established the Press Freedom Litigation Fund. But despite his aggressive approach, Omidyar ran into immediate criticism from the conspiratorial extremes of the left. Julian Assange attacked the “big power” of First Look, calling Omidyar an “extreme liberal centrist” and questioning his suspicious visits to the White House. The tech-news site PandoDaily published a series of scathing articles. “Never before has such a vast trove of public secrets,” journalist Mark Ames wrote last November, “been sold wholesale to a single billionaire as the foundation of a for-profit company.”

Earlier this year, Omidyar convened a staff retreat at his Las Vegas mansion, which produced a declaration of editorial independence, promising that First Look would be incorporated as a nonprofit and that he would have “no involvement in the newsroom’s day-to-day operations.” In reality, though, he was deeply involved, demanding personal approval of even trivial expenses, and intent on finding a way to make the venture financially self-sustaining. But his staff was determined to hold him to his promise of “independence.” Many are vociferous personalities, not known for playing well with others. When one prominent editor was approached about a management role, he told Omidyar’s headhunter, “You don’t need an HR department, you need a psychotherapist.”

The confusion inherent to any start-up has been exacerbated by Omidyar’s ruminative style. This spring, he went through a period of deep thinking, highlighted by a summit with news-­industry veterans at a hotel he part-owns in Laguna Beach, California. Under “Chatham House Rules,” no one was to talk directly about what was said. “He’s a true believer, I believe,” says Ken Doctor, a media analyst who attended. Many of those who have heard Omidyar and his aides, at that summit and other meetings, have come away thinking his plans sounded naïve and not fully baked. Sandy Rowe, a former editor of the Oregonian who was brought on as a consultant, says the fuzzy vision gives Omidyar flexibility. “This is a man who, since he said he would put down this $250 million, has never said, ‘Here is my plan.’ ”

The absence of a plan, however, contributed to dissension within First Look, and chatter began to emanate from behind its wall of operational secrecy. There was an East Coast–West Coast feud, a divide between the journalists and the technologists. Omidyar’s loyalists out in California and Hawaii grumbled as Greenwald traveled the world, promoting a book, picking up awards, and speaking out of turn. Poitras, meanwhile, was immersed in finishing a documentary on Snowden. There was an internal battle over budgets, which stalled hiring and hindered journalistic output. The Intercept initially published at a piddling rate. In June, the three co-founders of the Intercept and Taibbi wrote a joint letter to Omidyar demanding freedom to proceed with their expansion.

Omidyar then published a blog post saying he had “definitely rethought some of our original ideas and plans.” Instead of quick expansion, he announced that First Look would be in “planning, start-up, and experimental mode for at least the next few years,” focusing its immediate efforts on the Intercept and Racket while working to develop new journalistic technology and design with a team in San Francisco. He also appointed a confidant as First Look’s editorial boss: the former Civil Beat editor John Temple. “I think that the message,” Temple told me in August, “is that we’re not trying hard enough if we’re not failing a little bit, if we’re not saying things that don’t bear fruit.”

The shift proved beneficial to the Intercept, which is no longer under the day-to-day management of its founders. Omidyar lured editor John Cook away from Gawker to run the site, and after a publication pause and a redesign, it has been gaining momentum, breaking big stories about the NSA’s surveillance of American Muslim leaders and the seemingly arbitrary standards of the government’s terrorist-screening system. The latter disclosure reportedly came from a leaker other than Snowden; the FBI recently searched the home of a government contractor suspected of being the source.

The factional conflicts within Omidyar’s enterprise, however, seem far from settled. In August, Temple spoke enthusiastically about Racket, which he said had broadened its focus to include political topics. But as its launch date neared, Taibbi disappeared from the company amid disputes with First Look ­higher-ups. Omidyar announced Taibbi was leaving and that First Look would now “turn our focus to exploring next steps” for Racket, a project that a spokeswoman said had cost him $2 million over its eight months of development. In the wake of the tumultuous departure, the Intercept published a remarkable inside account describing “months of contentious disputes” between Taibbi and his superiors over his management, including a complaint from an employee that he was “verbally abusive.” But the journalists did not spare Omidyar from blame, describing what they called “a collision between the First Look executives, who by and large come from a highly structured Silicon Valley corporate environment, and the fiercely independent journalists who view corporate cultures and management-speak with disdain.” The iconoclasts even questioned Omidyar’s “avowed strategy” of hiring “anti-authoritarian iconoclasts.”

Even before the turmoil, Temple hinted that a strategic reconsideration was under way. “It will be more complex,” he told me, “than an organization of iconoclasts.” He says that Omidyar sees journalism as “the third phase of his professional life,” bringing together his technology experience and philanthropy, and is prepared to be patient, even if it perplexes outsiders. Temple says there is no incongruity between Omidyar’s communitarian ideals and his financing of an insurgency. “It’s not all about civility,” Temple says. “It’s about having a healthy and open society.” There’s a tangible insight buried in that amorphous sentiment: Omidyar’s interest in journalism is mechanistic. He wants to aggregate to himself the power to declassify and to bring about the “greater good,” as he defines it.

In October, the founding Intercept gang — minus Omidyar — got together for a party at Mayday Space, a loft in a graffitied section of Bushwick. The Snowden saga had entered its Redford-and-Hoffman phase with the premiere of Poitras’s documentary Citizenfour, which was partly financed by Skoll’s Participant Media and looks destined for Oscar consideration. A DJ spun songs next to a huge ­propaganda-style poster reading ­WHISTLE-BLOWER! KNOW YOUR PLACE … SHUT YOUR FACE. Smokers congregated on the balcony, which had a distant view of the Empire State Building, lit red. Greenwald hinted of further scoops. “Stay tuned, is all I can say,” he told me.

Greenwald says that he and Omidyar plan to finally meet later this month, when they will appear at a very different sort of gathering: an invite-only event called Newsgeist, co-sponsored by Google and the Knight Foundation. Billed as an “unconference,” it has no agenda other than “reimagining the future of the news.” Greenwald told me “top editors, executives, moguls, and founders” are expected to attend, including Dean Baquet of the New York Times. I asked the organizer from Google about other attendees and speakers, but he said he could disclose no further details, to “protect the privacy and security of our invited guests.” It seems that the Newsgeist is very hush-hush.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
User avatar
seemslikeadream
 
Posts: 32090
Joined: Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:28 pm
Location: into the black
Blog: View Blog (83)

Re: Sibel Edmonds destroys Glenn Greenwald

Postby Sounder » Tue Nov 04, 2014 6:40 am

Thanks SLAD for this article. One can sympathize with Omidyar in his attempts to combine money with his principles. But it is a messy business (social development) and not easy to be a deep thinker when one has so damn much money.


The radicalization of Pierre Omidyar happened with jarring swiftness. In 2012, he advertised his proximity to Obama — he served on a presidential commission — by tweeting out a photo of Marine One hovering above the White House lawn. That same year, he responded to ­campaign-season viciousness by tweeting out a list hashtagged #Republicans­IRespect, citing figures like Robert Gates (a former CIA director) and Condoleezza Rice. He started the Democracy Fund, a foundation intended to promote moderation. “I’ve heard him use the term anti-partisan to describe himself,” says Joe Goldman, the fund’s president. “He believes it’s dangerous to get caught up on one side or the other.”

But on June 5, 2013, Omidyar’s Twitter account posted a link to a Greenwald story in the Guardian: “Revealed: NSA collecting phone records of millions of Americans daily.” The issue touched a nerve in him — if ever there were a power that needed watching, it was the NSA. As further stories described the extent of the surveillance and Snowden identified himself, Omidyar vented his outrage. “Mr. President, look in the mirror,” he tweeted on June 23, “when did America become a country to seek asylum from? Whistleblowers are not spies.” On July 4, Omidyar tweeted the text of the Fourth Amendment. At this juncture, there were many ways Omidyar could have gone about influencing policy. He could have sought a meeting at the White House — Pam’s human-rights organization collaborates closely with the national-­security staff — or he could have funded a super-PAC. He could have rallied his fellow Silicon Valley billionaires to flex their lobbying might. Instead he decided to build a machine for confrontation and, as he puts it, “to convert mainstream readers into engaged citizens.”
All these things will continue as long as coercion remains a central element of our mentality.
Sounder
 
Posts: 4054
Joined: Thu Nov 09, 2006 8:49 am
Blog: View Blog (0)

PreviousNext

Return to General Discussion

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 165 guests