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1AC
The United States federal government should substantially increase the provision of
information and communication technology to Syrians.
First, Social media in Syria is the battlefield of the uprisings: The regime uses the internet
to censor, monitor, and release propaganda, and activists need assistance to bypass the
noise and peacefully convince the middle class.
Vila 11 Susannah,Amid protest, is the Syrian online space redefining internet freedom? April 18,
http://www.movements.org/blog/entry/Syria-Damascus-internet-freedom-protest-online-activism-
facebook-twitter/
"'Rami Nakhle' as he is known to the few people he meets in his safe house in Beirut - the pizza guy, a French photographer passing through and a steady
stream of Syrian dissidents who fled before they could be arrested is a hub of a growing and impressively organised network of
activists using social media to break the bonds of one of the world's most tightly controlled police states and
publish news and images of the unprecedented protest movement which has broken out against the regime in
Syria." And this weekend the Washington Post also mentioned him within a larger story about Syrian protests. The Post piece highlights how uprisings in
Tunisia and Egypt have chipped away at the fear which kept Syrians (and still keeps most Syrians - protesters are a minority, after
all) from demonstrating, as well as how to the increased ability to be in direct contact with people throughout the country and
the diaspora is bolstering protesters' bravado. Information is the key factor here, as Syria Comment's Joshua Landis is
quoted as saying: "...the middle class, the silent majority, are still sitting on the fence. But the more they see these
videos [of crackdowns,] the more it repulses them. Activism in Syria right now is largely about getting these videos
out to as many people as possible . A subset of Syrians have decided to focus their energies entirely on
covering the protests - smugging thumb drives out of offline towns, verifying video and uploading it - rather than protesting them selves. The Vancouver
Sun writes: "Deraa, cradle of the uprising in Syria, is largely offline. A poor, tribal town, not many of its people were Internet-savvy anyway. Yet despite an intensecrackdown most of the deaths happened there footage of enraged people smashing statues of Assads family members made it online." Media
dissemination is at the heart of the protests. Syrian authorities seem to get this, and are cracking down on it.
State security have been grabbing young people on the street and try to get their Facebook logins with force.
They're now attempting to drown out the signal in noise by flooding the #Syria hashtag on Twitter with spam
bots that are Tweeting everything from photography, old Syrian sport scores, links to Syrian comedy shows, pro-regime news, and threats against a long list of
tweeps who expressed their support of the protests. Unlike in other countries where government response may be about
censoring controversial content, Syria has allowed for greater access to the global web. The Washington Post writes:
"Assad helped make the uprisings possible by legalizing the internet and satellite television," and quotes Landis: Hewas trying to modernize his country, and to modernize the country meant engaging the world, and that ultimately undermined this isolation." In February, Assad
removed the block on Facebook. Assad welcomed freer access to information under the assumption that he could control
it enough to benefit from it while mitigating the threats it posed. Internet freedom became about more than just the ability to access content on the
web, also encapsulating the ability to access content without running into government thugs attempting to spy, hackand dissemble. What we're watching right now is activists in Syria finding more innovative ways to maintain
protests, online and offline, under these new constraints. The result is that the online space, in the context of
Syria n protests, is a live battleground wherein the push and pull between tech savvy dictators and tech savvy,
activated citizens unfolds in real time.
US internet policy strategically chokes the organic narrative of Syrian protestors
themselves; the government ignores the arrests and abuse of critical bloggers, silencing
http://www.movements.org/blog/entry/Syria-Damascus-internet-freedom-protest-online-activism-facebook-twitter/http://www.movements.org/blog/entry/Syria-Damascus-internet-freedom-protest-online-activism-facebook-twitter/http://www.movements.org/blog/entry/Syria-Damascus-internet-freedom-protest-online-activism-facebook-twitter/http://www.movements.org/blog/entry/Syria-Damascus-internet-freedom-protest-online-activism-facebook-twitter/ -
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independent voices and preventing the international community from bearing witness to
atrocities.
York 11 director for International Freedom of Expression at the Electronic Frontier Foundation in San
Francisco. She writes a regular column for Al Jazeera focusing on free expression and Internet freedom.
She also writes for and is on the Board of Directors of Global Voices Online. Jillian C, Al Jazeera, 11-3http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/opinion/2011/10/20111030102051411130.html
While the United States and the European Union have repeatedly condemned the actions of the
Syrian government - where they have virtually no influence - both haveremained largely silent on
the threats facing bloggers in allied countries across the region, at a time when arrests are at an all-
time high.Since the fall of Mubarak, Egypt's Supreme Council of Armed Forces (SCAF) has kept a tight leash on free expression, enacting emergency law and using it to crack down on speech. In August, Twitter userAsmaa Mahfouz was interrogated for tweeting, If the judiciary doesn't give us our r ights, nobody should be surprised if militant groups appear and conduct a series of assassinations because there is no law and there is no judiciary.
Blogger Maikel Nabil Sanad, who spent more than 50 days on hunger strike before being t ransferred to a mental institution, was arrested in March and sentenced to three years in prison for accusing the military of conducting virginity
tests on female protesters, an accusation later found to be t rue. Most recently, prominent blogger Alaa Abd El Fattah was summoned by a military prosecutor after another blogger accused him of inciting violence and throwing stones
during the October 9 protests that resulted in a massacre - largely incited by the military - that left 27 dead and more than 300 wounded. Abd El Fattah has also been the target of a smear campaign over the past few months on Twitter,
purportedly for his leftist views. Forced into silence While a few brave Syrians continue to blog and upload videos, Syria's ongoing
campaign against online activism - which includes government support of the Syrian Electronic
Army - has some bloggers scared into silence. In recent weeks, the list of arrested bloggers and journalists has grown. In the past monthalone, more than 12 bloggers and online journalists have been arrested. I think this huge crackdown against bloggers means that
blogs have proved to be a very effective tool for exposing human rights abuses in contexts where
media attention wasn't focusing before, says Spanish-Syrian activist Leila Nachawati. Arab bloggers in particular have
done an excellent job at exposing repressive regimes that not only wish to retain power but also want worldwide legitimacy. Their
legitimacy is now lost, and bloggers have contributed a lot to this. As protests rage on in Syria and journalists are
prevented from reporting freely, it becomes all the more important to listen for independent voices.
But if those voices are forced into silence, then the continuing atrocities in the country will go
unwitnessed . The US government has enacted sanctions on Syria in an attempt to force the government's hand, a tactic that could, eventually, work. But at the
same time, seven-year-old export controls enacted by the Department of Commerce choke Syrian citizens
off from online communication technologies and other opportunities, such as Google's Summer of
Code, preventing them from entrepreneurial opportunities.Gulf bloggers persecuted The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia both rank low on pressfreedom, with the latter coming in 157 out of 178 countries in Reporters Without Borders' 2010 report. Both countries have also managed to avoid the large-scale protests seen by neighbouring Bahrain, which some analysts say is a
result of fear on behalf of dissidents. Their fear is certainly justified: In the UAE, five activists - including one prominent blogger, Ahmed Mansoor - were arrested for signing a petition calling for democratic reforms. All five men
face charges of threatening state security, undermining public order and insulting the president, the vice-president and the crown prince of Abu Dhabi. The men have r efused to appear in court, protesting what they see as a political
crackdown. Meanwhile, Reporters Without Borders claims that t he trial is deliberately being dragged out over a period of several months for the purpose of keeping the activists in prison. I n next-door Saudi Arabia, a similar theme as
three men detained on October 18 remain in prison more t han a week later. Their alleged crime? Creating a video showing poverty in Riyadh. The three men - Feras Bugnah, Hosam al-Deraiwish and Khaled al-Rasheed - produce a
regular web programme called We Are Being Cheated. The programme, launched this past summer, tackles problems in Saudi society that aren't often discussed. Previous episodes of the programme focussed on traffic police,
inflation of food prices and Saudi youth. A Saudi journalist, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said there's speculation that the local Riyadh government - rather t han the interior ministry, which usually conducts such arrests -
was responsible for the three men's continued detention. The journalist said that the three men were called for questioning and went to the office voluntarily, only to be detained. These people did nothing wrong, nothing that crossed
the line, said the journalist. Even the king himself visited these poor neighbourhoods with state TV. This is an example of someone in the Riyadh administration, afraid of looking bad, trying to act more royal than the king. More
than lip service In some ways, the world is waking up. Long focussed on leading censors Iran and China, the US and the EU have this year
begun to address the threats posed to netizens in the region. The EU recently took steps to regulate the sale of surveillance technology
to repressive regimes, while the United States is reportedly investigating Blue Coat over an admission that its technology is
being used in Syria. But bloggers continue to be persecuted. The US and EU have little sway with the Syrian
government, but Egypt, Saudi Arabia, the UAE and Bahrain - where bloggers Abduljalil Alsingace and Ali Abdulemam
were sentenced to 15 years in prison - are all allies with the US and EU . In her groundbreaking 2010 speech on internet freedom,
US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton called on the US to champion internet freedom around the world. And while in some
ways the State Department has stayed true to its word, condemning the blocking of websites and internet shutdowns in
Egypt and Libya, its silence on bloggers in allied countries has been deafening. The US has been entirely silent on t he bloggersnamed in this piece. Europe's reaction has been somewhat better. Individual EU parliamentarians such as Marietje Schaake - a champion for internet freedom - have spoken out against blogger repression in Bahrain, mentioning
Alsingace and Abdulemam, while the parliament recently called for the unconditional release of peaceful political prisoners, including bloggers, in Bahrain. But like the US, Europe seems only capable of words, not action. The
hypocrisy is not lost on bloggers. In June, Bahraini journalist Lamees Dhaif, while on a State Department-sponsored tour of the US, spoke outagainst the government's support of her country, stating that the State Department was aware of Bahrain's repression of journalists and bloggers, but remained silent.
Ali Abdulemam - the Bahraini blogger sentenced to 15 years in absentia this year - had criticised the State
Department for hypocrisy toward Bahrain before his 2010 arrest as well, calling out the US government for allowing American companies to
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sell censorship technology to Bahrain. And after his initial imprisonment in 2010 (he was released briefly in February then went into hiding),Abdulemam testified that he had been tortured in prison. As the US halts a planned $53m arms sale to Bahrain at the behest of lawmakers and human rights groups, it
becomes clearerthat any movement towards condemning repression of free speech in those countries will have to
come from outside the State Department. Internet freedom is a worthy goal, and Hillary Clinton's words offer something to aspire to. But as
long as Clinton's words are not coupled with action and remain contradicted by other foreign policy goals,
the State Department's internet freedom initiative is just lip service.
Scenario 1 is web militarization
The Syrian protest narrative is vulnerable to both national and foreign media
manipulation The US media paints a selective picture of Syria to justify military
intervention in the form of funding the Free Syrian Army, falsely depicting Assad as on the
brink of collapse, and depicting the opposition as begging for US involvement. This
strategy empirically results in massive imperial violence it justifies military intervention
to manage the Syrian uprising.
Cooke 12 (Shamus Cooke is a social worker, trade unionist, and writer for Workers Action, The Truth
Behind the Coming "Regime Change" in Syria, January 26, 2012, http://zcommunications.org/the-truth-
behind-the-coming-regime-change-in-syria-by-shamus-cooke)
After meeting again to decide Syria's fate, the Arab League again decided to extend its "monitoring mission" in Syria. However, some Arab League nations under U.S.
diplomatic control are clamoring for blood. These countries virtual sockpuppets of U.S. foreign policy want to declare the
Arab League monitoring mission "a failure, so that military intervention in the form of a no fly zone can be
used for regime change. The U nited S tates appears to be using a strategy in Syria that it has perfected over the years,
having succeeded most recently in Libya: arming small paramilitary groups loyal to U.S. interests that claim to
speak for the native population; these militants then attack the targeted government the U.S. would like to see
overthrown including terrorist bombings and when the attacked government defends itself, the U.S. cries
"genocide" or "mass murder, while calling for foreign military intervention . This is the strategy that the U.S. is
using to channel the Arab Spring into the bloody dead end of foreign military intervention. For example,
the U.S. media
and government are fanatically giving the impression that, in Syria, the native population would like foreign
militarily intervention to overthrow their authoritarian president, BasharAssad. But facts are stubborn things. After spinning
these lies, The New York Times was forced to admit, in several articles, that there have been massive rallies in Syria in
support of the Syrian government. These rallies are larger than any pro-government demonstration that the U.S. government
could hope to organize for itself. The New York Times reports: "The turnout [at least tens of thousands see picture in link] in Sabaa
Bahrat Square in Damascus, the [Syrian] capital, once again underlined the degree of backing that Mr. Assad and his leadership
still enjoy among many Syrians, nearly seven months into the popular uprising. That support is especially pronounced in cities likeDamascus and Aleppo, the countrys two largest." (January 13, 2012). The New York Times i s forced to admit that the two largest cities in a small count ry support the government (or at
least oppose foreign military intervention). This was further confirmed by a poll funded by the anti-Syrian Qatar Foundation, preformed by the Doha Debates: "According to the latest opinion
poll commissioned by The Doha Debates, Syrians are more supportive of their president with 55% not wanting him to resign." (January 2, 2012). If people in Syria do not want foreign
intervention a likely reason that so many attended pro-Assad demonstrations what about the so-called Free Syrian Army, which the United States has given immense credibility to and
which claims to speak for the Syrian people? The Free Syrian Army like its Libyan counterpart appears to be yet another Made-in-the-USA
militant group, by route of its ally Turkey, a fact alluded to by the pro U.S.-establishment magazine, Foreign Affairs: "Why does the Syrian[government] military not rocket their [Free Syrian Army] position or launch a large-scale assault? The FSA fighters are positioned about a mile from the Turkish
border, near enough to escape across if the situation turned dire." The article also quotes a Free Syrian Army member who states: "Every [Free Syrian Army] group in
Turkey has its own job," Sayeed said. "[The Turks] gave us our freedom to move." (December 8, 2011). The article also mentions that the Free Syrian Army
is calling for a "no fly zone" over certain regions of Syria , which would destroy the Syrian government military; the possible starting locations
of this no fly zone are on the Syrian borders of either Turkey, Jordan, or Iraq all three are either strong U.S. allies or
client states. A no fly zone is t he new euphemism that means the U.S. and its European military junior partners in NATO will intervene to use t heir advanced fighter jets to destroy the Syrian military, as happened inLibya. In Libya the no fly zone evolved into a no drive zone and eventually a no survival zone for anything resembling the Syrian military or anybody who armed himself in defense of the Libyan government. As in Syria,
Libya's largest city, Tripoli, never had large anti-government demonstrations. The anti-Libyan government/pro-U.S. paramilitary group that attacked Libyan forces was so tiny that it took months to take power after 10,000 NATO
bombing sorties (bombing missions) that destroyed large portions of Libya's infrastructure, as documented by the independent Human Rights Investigations. It's totally unimaginable that any
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large section of Syrian society would invite a NATO-backed no fly zone, i.e. war, into Syria. The examples of
Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya are too glaring for any Middle Eastern nation not to notice. For the Free Syrian Army
to demand a NATO invasion of Syria is enough to label the FSA a U.S. puppet group striving for political power,
deserving to be condemned.This strategy of using a proxy army to undermine an anti-U.S. government has a
grisly past. This strategy is celebrated in the bookCharlie Wilson's War, which tells the true story of the U.S. government sending
weapons and cash to Islamic extremists to wage a terrorist campaign against the Afghan government, which
was an ally of the Soviet Union at the time. The attacks eventually led to the Afghan government asking for Soviet military
re-enforcements, whose presence in Afghanistan created a degree of popular support for the extremists who eventually
became known as the Taliban. The same scenario also played itself out in Kosovo, where the tiny, U.S.-backed Kosovo Liberation Army
(KLA)began a terrorist campaign against the government ofYugoslavia, intending to separate Kosovo into an independent nation. When the
Yugoslav government attempted to defend itself from the KLA while imitating its violent tactics the U.S. and other western governments
labeled it genocide, and invaded Yugoslavia, calling it a "humanitarian invasion. To this day the U.S. is one of few nations that recognizes Kosovo asan independent nation while Kosovo faithfully serves the interests of the United States. The same proxy war strategy by the U.S. and other European powers
played a crucial role in numerous wars throughout Africa, which culminated in the massive Congo War that killed over five million people, as French journalist
Gerard Prunier describes in his book, Africa's World War. In Syria history is repeating itself, and some non-U.S. allies are
very aware of it. The New York Times reports: "[Russia's Foreign Minister] said that foreign governments [the U.S., Turkey, etc.] were arming militantsand extremists in Syria." The Foreign minister also gave an accurate description of U.S. foreign policy towards Iran: "Mr. Lavrov offered a similarly grave message
about the possibility of a military strike against Iran, which he said would be a catastrophe. He said sanctions now being proposed against Tehran were intended to
have a smothering effect on the Iranian economy and the Iranian population, probably in the hopes of provoking discontent. (January 19, 2012). Most ominously,
the Russian Foreign Minister said that U.S. foreign policy in Syria and Iran could lead to a "very big war,
i.e., a war that becomes regional or even international in scope, as other powers intervene to uphold their interests in
the region. Russia has offered a way to avoid war in Syria and is pursuing it through the UN Security Council; it is the same path being pursued by the pro-U.S.government in Yemen: maintaining the current government in power until elections are called. Unfortunately, Yemen is an ally of the U.S. and Syria is not the U.S.
and its allies are blocking the same approach in Syria in order to pursue war. The Syrian government opposition bloc inside of Syria, the
National Coordination Committee, opposes foreign military intervention. A leader of the NCC is Hassan Abdul Azim, who wisely states;
We refuse on principle any type ofmilitary foreign intervention because it threatens the freedom of our country,
(January 19, 2012). This is very likely the prevailing opinion inside of Syria , since the threat of no fly zones will result in
the same mass bombings experienced by the citizens of Tripoli in Libya. The fake Syrian opposition outside of the country, The
Syrian National Council, is yet another U.S. puppet now allied with the Free Syrian Army begging for a
military invasion of Syria in order to "liberate" it. Of course the western media tells only the perspective of the pro-U.S. Syrian National Council.
The U.S. has proven on multiple occasions that military solutions solve nothing, having torn asunder the socialfabric of Afghanistan, Iraq, and now Libya. The working people of Syria and Iran do not desire "help" from the U.S.
government and its allies to prevent bloodshed. The working people of these countries could liberate themselves from their authoritarian
governments, as did the Tunisians and Egyptians, which is precisely the point: the U.S. is intervening militarily to re-gain control over a
region that slipped out of its hands during the Arab Spring. This military approach serves to push the working
people of the targeted country into the hands of their government while creating a humanitarian catastrophe for the
invaded nation. The working people of the United States have no interest in aggressive war and have a responsibility to
learn about U.S. government propaganda so that they can demand its end in the streets.
This rhetoric paves the way for further US militarization of Syria: Mass media dupes the
public into letting Syria become the next Libya or Iraq. Internet freedom means the public
can explore the issues for themselves and isnt being to be won over or tricked by the
government.
Corbett 12 (James, Faking It: How the Media Manipulates the World into War, January 2, 2012,
http://theintelhub.com/2012/01/02/faking-it-how-the-media-manipulates-the-world-into-war/)
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In the lead-up to the war on Iraq, the American media infamously took the lead in framing the debate about the Iraqi
governments weapons of mass destruction NOT as a question of whether or not they even existed, but as a question
of where they had been hidden and what should be done to disarm them. The New York Times led the way with Judith Millers
now infamous reporting on the Iraqi WMD story, now known to have beenbased on false information from untrustworthy sources ,
but the rest of the media fell into line with the NBC Nightly News asking what precise threat Iraq and its weapons of mass destruction pose to
America, and Time debating whether Hussein was making a good-faith effort to disarm Iraqs weapons of mass destruction. Reports about chemical
weapons stashes were reported on before they were confirmed, although headlines boldly asserted their existence as
indisputable fact. We now know that in fact the stockpiles did not exist, and the administration premeditatedly lied the country into yet another war, but themost intense opposition the Bush administration ever received over this documented war crime was some polite correction on the Sunday political talk show circuit.
Remarkably, the public at large has seemingly learned nothing from all of these documented historical manipulations. If anything, the media has become
even bolder in its attempts to manipulate the publics perceptions, perhaps emboldened by the fact that so few in
the audience seem willing to question the picture that is being painted for them on the evening news. Later that year, CNN airedfootage of a bombed out Tskhinvali in South Ossetia, falsely labeling it as footage of Gori, which they said had been attacked by the Russians. In 2009, the BBC
showed a cropped image of a rally in Iran which they claimed was a crowd of protesters who assembled to show their opposition to the Iranian government. An
uncropped version of the same photograph displayed on the LA Times website, however, revealed that the photo in fact came from a rally in support of Ahmedinejad.
In August of 2011, the BBC ran footage of what they claimed was a celebration in Tripolis Green Square. When sharp-eyed viewers noticed that the flags in the
footage were in fact Indian flags, the BBC was forced to admit that they had accidentally broadcast footage from India instead of Tripoli. Also that month, CNN
reported on a story from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights claiming that eight infants in incubators had died in a
hospital in Hama when Syrian authorities cut off powerin the area. Some news sites even carried pictures of the infants. The images
were later admitted to have been taken in Egypt and no evidence has ever emerged to back up the accusations. As
breathtaking as all ofthese lies, manipulations and so-called mistakes are, they in and of themselves dont represent the only functions of the
media for the war machine . Now, the US government is taking the lead in becoming more and more directly involved with
the shaping of the media message on war propaganda, and the generalpublic is becoming even more ensnared in a
false picture of the world through the Pentagons own lens. In 2005, the Bush White House admitted to producing videos that were designedto look like news reports from legitimate independent journalists, and then feeding those reports to media outlets as prepackaged material ready to air on the evening
news. When the Government Accountability Office ruled that these fake news reports in fact constituted illegal covert propaganda, the White House simply issued a
memo declaring the practice to be legal. In April 2008, the New York Times revealed a secret US Department of Defense program that was launched in 2002 and
involved using retired military officers to implant Pentagon talking points in the media. The officers were presented as independent analysts on talk shows and news
programs, although they had been specially briefed beforehand by the Pentagon. In December of 2011, the DoDs own Inspector General released a report concluding
that the program was in perfect compliance with government policies and regulations. Earlier this year, it was revealed the the US government had contracted with
HBGary Federal to develop software that create fake social media accounts in order to steer public opinion and promote propaganda on popular websites. The federal
contract for the software sourced back to the MacDill Air Force Base in Florida. As the vehicle through which information from the outside
world is captured, sorted, edited and transmitted into our homes, the mass media has the huge responsibility ofshaping and informing our understanding of events to which we dont have first-hand access . This is an awesomeresponsibility in even the most ideal conditions, with diligent reporters guided by trustworthy editors doing their level best to report the most important news in the
most straightforward way. But in a media landscape where a handful of companies own virtually all of the print, radio and
television media in each nation, the only recourse the public has is to turn away from the mainstream media
altogether. And that is precisely what is happening. As study after study and report after report has shown, the death of the old media has
accelerated in recent years, with more and more people abandoning newspapers and now even television as their main source of news. Instead, the
public is increasingly turning toward online sources for their news and information, something that is
necessarily worrying for the war machine itself, a system that can only truly flourish when the propaganda arm is
held under monopolistic control. But as citizens turn away from the New York Times and toward independent websites, many run and maintained by
citizen journalists and amateur editors, the system that has consolidated its control over the minds of the public for generations
seems to finally be showing signs that it may not be invincible. Surely this is not to say that online media is impervious to the defects that
have made the traditional media so unreliable. Quite the contrary. But the difference is that online, there is still for the time being relative freedom ofchoice at the individual level . While internet freedom exists, individual readers and viewers dont have to take the
word of any website or pundit or commentator on any issue. They can check the source documentation themselves ,except, perhaps not coincidentally, on the websites of the traditional media bastions, which tend not to link source material and documentation in their articles.
Hence the SOPA Act, Protect IP, the US governments attempts to seize websites at the domain name level, and all of the otherconcerted
attacks we have seen on internet freedoms in recent years. Because ultimately, an informed and engaged public is far less
likely to go along with wars waged for power and profit.And as the public becomes better informed about the
very issues that the media has tried to lie to them about for so long, they realize that the answer to all of the
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mainstream medias war cheerleading and blatant manipulation is perhaps simpler than we ever suspected: All we
have to do is turn them off.
Securititzing Syria will backfire The US and the media are using the protests as a pretext
for oil-motivated military intervention, which inflames all of Central Asia integration of
multiple war theaters means conflict escalates.
Chossudovsky 11 (Michel Chossudovsky, Towards a Broader Middle East-Central Asian War? Global
Research, August 9, 2011)
An extended Middle East Central Asian war has been on the Pentagon's drawing board since the mid-1990s. As part
of this extended war scenario, the US -NATO allianceplans to wage a military campaign against Syria under a UN
sponsored "humanitarian mandate". Escalation is an integral part of the military agenda. Destabilization of sovereign
states through "regime change" is closely coordinated with military planning. There is a military roadmap characterised by a
sequence of US-NATO war theaters. War preparations to attack Syria and Iran have been in "an advanced state of readiness" for
several years. The Syria Accountability and Lebanese Sovereignty Restoration Act of 2003 categorizes Syria as a "rogue state", as a country which supportsterrorism. A war on Syria is viewed by the Pentagon as part of the broader war directed against Iran. President George W. Bush confirmed in his Memoirs that he
had "ordered the Pentagon to plan an attack on Iran's nuclear facilities and [had] considered a covert attack
on Syria" (George Bush's memoirs reveal how he considered attacks on Iran and Syria, The Guardian, November 8, 2010) This broader military
agenda is intimately related to strategic oil reserves and pipeline routes . It is supported by the Anglo-American oil
giants. The July 2006 bombing of Lebanon was part of a carefully planned "military road map". The extension of "The July War" on Lebanon into Syria had beencontemplated by US and Israeli military planners. It was abandoned upon the defeat of Israeli ground forces by Hizbollah. Israel's July 2006 war on Lebanon also
sought to establish Israeli control over the North Eastern Mediterranean coastline including offshore oil and gas reserves in Lebanese and Palestinian territorial waters.
The plans to invade both Lebanon and Syria have remained on the Pentagon's drawing board despite Israel's setback in the 2006 July War: "In November 2008, barely
a month before Tel Aviv started its massacre in the Gaza Strip, the Israeli military held drills for a two-front war against Lebanon and Syria called Shiluv Zroot III
(Crossing Arms III). The military exercise included a massive simulated invasion of both Syria and Lebanon" (See Mahdi Darius Nazemoraya, Israel's Next War:
Today the Gaza Strip, Tomorrow Lebanon?, Global Research, January 17, 2009) The road to Tehran goes through Damascus. A US-NATO
sponsored war on Iran would involve, as a first step, a destabilization campaign ("regime change") including covert
intelligence operations in support of rebel forces directed against the Syrian government. A "humanitarian war" under the logoof "Responsibility to Protect" (R2P) directed against Syria would also contribute to the ongoing destabilization of Lebanon. Were a military campaign to be waged
against Syria, Israel would be directly or indirectly involved in military and intelligence operations. A war on Syria would lead to military
escalation. There are at present four distinct war theaters: Afghanistan-Pakistan, Iraq, Palestine and Libya. An
attack on Syria would lead to the integration of these separate war theaters, eventually leading towards a broader
Middle East-Central Asian war, engulfing an entire region from North Africa and the Mediterranean to Afghanistan and Pakistan. The ongoing
protest movement is intended to serve as a pretext and a justification to intervene militarily against Syria . The existence
of an armed insurrection is denied. The Western media in chorus have described recent events in Syria as a "peaceful protest
movement" directed against the government of Bashar Al Assad, when the evidence confirms the existence of an armed insurgencyintegrated by Islamic paramilitary groups. From the outset of the protest movement in Daraa in mid-March, there has been an exchange of fire between the police and
armed forces on the one hand and armed gunmen on the other. Acts of arson directed against government buildings have also been committed. In late July in Hama,
public buildings including the Court House and the Agricultural Bank were set on fire. Israeli news sources, while dismissing the existence of an armed conflict,
nonetheless, acknowledge that "protesters [were] armed with heavy machine guns."
Scenario two: Nonviolent protest
We must return control of the online Syrian protest narrative to activists on the ground
its key to their survival through community building, creating, active population, and
linking directly to international audiences.
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Shaery-Eisenlohr 11 (Roschanack, Max Planck Institute for the Study of Religious and Ethnic
Diversity, Gottingen, Germany. From Subjects to Citizens? Civil Society and the Internet in Syria
Middle East Critique Vol. 20, No. 2, 127138, Summer 2011)
Despite the limited success of activists in the Middle East to create a more pluralistic form ofpublic sphere through the use
of the new media, civil society activists and political dissidents continue to view the Internet as an importanttool in their resistance against oppressive regimes and argue that it isoften their only available medium
to connect to ordinary citizens. In this article I discuss why and how self-proclaimed secular Syrian civil society activists
mobilize the Internet as part of their political project to resist the Asad regime. Based on the examples discussed in the paper
I make three broad arguments: First, the Internet can be seen as a new forum where power relations between the regime
and its opponents are negotiated, and this new medium adds to what Lisa Wedeen calls the ambiguities of domination.5Dissidents are never sure whether the goals achieved can be linked directly to their own efforts and activism or whether they are part of the regimes calculation to
create a democratic faade. Second, both regimes and dissidents believe in the power of media as an educational tool, similarto the early classic Frankfurt School perspectivewhich believed that consumers understand the content of the media as intended by the producers and therefore
argued that media can manipulate greatly the minds of people. Likewise, civil society activists privilege the production rather than the
consumption aspect of media. In other words, because civil society activists believe that the spreading of alternative information
among activists themselves and for the general public on the Internet eventually will create the necessary
awareness among ordinary people to resist the oppressive regime, they put too much importance on the fact that information in a variety of formsis put on the Internet. However, they do not take into account that knowledge can be interpreted in a variety of ways and used in diverse forms, sometimes in ways theactivists had least intended. Often, consumers of these civil society websites engage in non-virtual patron-client relations, and, as one of the examples below will
show, producers of information serve as quasi-patrons of those seeking help. Third, activists view the Internet as providing them with
opportunities to counter the culture of fear, the core of which is the atomization of society, the creation
of distrust among citizens, and international isolation. Activists argue that they use the media in a way that
facilitates networking and community-building, trust among citizens and contact with a variety of
international organizations. Thus, through the power many activists imagine to inhabit the new media, they propose new state-society
relations in which Syrians are aware citizens rather than mute subjects and would hold the state accountable
for its actions, having gained knowledge of their rights.
ICT Communication, collaboration, and access assistance also maintains protestors
nonviolence.
Serwer 11 (Daniel, professorial lecturer at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies and
a Scholar at the Middle East Institute. 5 Ways the U.S. Can Help in Syria The Atlantic DEC 22 2011,
8:19 AM ET. http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2011/12/5-ways-the-us-can-help-in-
syria/250390/)
If the White House is planning something, let's hope it doesn't simply go back to some shopworn ideas that
wouldn't have any real relevance to the situation in Syria. A no-fly zone? The Syrians aren't using aircraft to attack demonstrators. Safeareas? They will quickly become targets for shelling by the regime, as they did in Bosnia and will have to be protected with force. This may be what those who call for
them hope, but we should not be tricked into it. Corridors for deliver of humanitarian assistance? There seems to be no lack of food, water and shelter. But we
do have options. Here are a few less talked about notions that might have an impact: 1. Make sure the Arab League
observers have real access. This means guiding them to places where we see concentrations of military force. It means making sure that they
can communicate instantaneously with their home governments without being eavesdropped on by Syrian
security forces, including by uploading text and photos. It means using diplomatic pressure to counter any intimidation or restrictions they
encounter. 2. Ensure that the Syrian National Council and protesters inside Syria continue to
communicate and collaborate. There are already efforts in this direction, but they will need to be redoubled. The regime
will offer "dialogue," hoping to split the opposition and find a way to remain in place for a promised
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transition period. There can be no serious transition with Bashar al- Assad inside Syria. This was Yemen's
mistake, and we should avoid it. 3. Help maintain the opposition's nonviolence. The regime has ratcheted up its
killing to hundreds per day , including many army deserters or others who have refused orders to fire on demonstrators. This makes it exceedingly
difficult for the opposition to maintain nonviolent discipline, but in force-on-force clashes the demonstrators are bound to lose more than they win. Violence also
disincentivizes people from joining the demonstrations, limiting their numbers and making them easier prey
for violence by the security forces (see, for example, Egypt). More Syrians should be trained in nonviolence outside the country; they canthen return and train others.
Nonviolent strategies that break with the trend towards military intervention and the Free
Syrian Army are the best chance that protestors have to survive the regime.
Serwer 12 (Why the Syrian Rebels Should Put Down Their Guns The Atlantic, FEB 8 2012, 7:05 AM
ET. http://www.theatlantic.com/international/archive/2012/02/why-the-syrian-rebels-should-put-down-
their-guns/252731/)
Violence also reduces the likelihood of future defections from the security forces. For current Syrian soldiersweighing defection, it is one thing to refuse to fire on unarmed demonstrators. It is another to desert to join the people who are shooting at you. Defections are
important -- eventually, they may thin the regime's support. But they aren't going to happen as quickly or easily if rebels are shooting at
the soldiers they want to see defect. But if you can't march around singing kumbaya, what are you going to do? There are a number of
options, few of which have been tried. Banging pans at a fixed hour of the night is a tried and true protest technique that demonstrates and encourages opposition,but makes it hard for the authorities to figure out just who is opposing them. The Arab variation is Allahu akbar called out for 15 minutes every evening. A Libyan
who helped organize the revolutionary takeover of Tripoli explained to me that their effort began with hundreds of empty mosques playing the call to prayer, recorded
on CDs, at an odd hour over their loudspeakers. A general strike gives clear political signals and makes it hard for the
authorities to punish all those involved. Coordinated graffiti, marking sidewalks with identical
symbols, wearing of the national flag -- consult Gene Sharp's 198 methods for more. The point is to demonstrate wide
participation, mock the authorities, and deprive them of their capacity to generate fear.When I studiedArabic in Damascus a few years ago, I asked an experienced agitator friend about the efficacy of the security forces. She said they were lousy. "What keeps everyone
in line?" I asked. "Fear," she replied. If the oppositions resorts to violence , it helps the authorities : by respondingwith sometimes random violence, they hope to re-instill fear. Could the Syrians return to
nonviolence after everything that's happened? As long as they are hoping for foreign intervention
or foreign arms, it's not likely. Steve Heydemann, my former colleague at the United States Institute of Peace, recently suggested on PBS
Newshour that we needa "framework" for arming the opposition that would establish civilian control over
Free Syria Army. This is a bad idea if you have any hope of getting back to nonviolence, as it taints the civilians, making
even the nonviolent complicit in the violence. It's also unlikely to work: forming an army during a
battle is not much easier than building your airplane as you head down the runway. What is needed now is aneffort to calm the situation in Homs, Hama, Deraa, and other conflict spots. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who is visiting Damascus, could help. The
continuing assault on Homs and other population centers is a major diplomatic embarrassment to Moscow. The opposition should ask for a ceasefire and the return of
the Arab League observers, who clearly had a moderating influence on the activities of the regime. And, this time around, they should be beefed up with UN human
rights observers. If the violence continues to spiral, the regime is going to win. They are better armed and better
organized. The Syrian revolt could come to look like the Iranian street demonstrations of 2009, or more likely the bloody Shiarevolt in Iraq in 1991, or the Muslim Brotherhood uprising in Hama in 1982, which ended with the regime
killing thousands . There is nothing inevitable about the fall of this or any other regime -- that is
little more than a White House talking point. What will make it inevitable is strategic thinking, careful planning,
and nonviolent discipline. Yes, even now.
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And we have a human rights imperative to unconditionally support peaceful Syrian
protestorss safety Assads repression has reached a genocidal level.
SUPPORT SYRIAN FREEDOM 11 (We Demand an End to Assads Regime. We Demand
Protection for Syrian People. We Demand Accountability
http://supportsyrianfreedom.wordpress.com/we-demand/)
The inhumanity of dictator Bashar al Assad is appalling and apocalyptic. People in Syria have been under a
prolonged and bloody assault by Assads forces, the violent repression is increasing on a daily basis, whilegovernments around the world have kept their silence. The ongoing genocidal slaughter in Syria by Assads troops, and the concomitant refusal to act by responsible
governments worldwide, is not unique in the history of Syria. It is a bloodcurdling echo of Hafez Al-assads 1982 massacre of Hama, and the criminal complicit
silence of governments worldwide at that time. Then, an estimated 50,000 civilians were slaughtered by Assads forces in full view of the international community,
which kept its silence. Now, BasharAl-assads forces have again declared war on Syrian people; thousands have been
killed in full view of the world, and once again, governments that have a responsibility in the face of
crimes against humanity under the Geneva Convention remain criminally silent . The Importance of the Syrian
Revolution The ongoing crimes against people in Syria must be opposed in their own right. The forces of
Bashar al Assad have perpetrated massive slaughter against Syrian people for the past 6 months,including the Ramadan Massacre in which hundreds were killed over a single weekend. The attacks on the people of Syria, implemented using weaponry from tanks
to snipers, have culminated in the loss of an estimated 5,000 lives; real numbers are likely higher. On this basis alone, these crimes amount to
genocide and crime against humanity.The necessity of ending the slaughter of the people in Syria is obvious, and the UN Security Council
has a legal duty and mandate to stop these crimes by all means legally available. It is in the context of these crimes against the people of
Syria and, by extension, all humanity that we call humane society to urgently recognize the
importance and necessity of unconditionally supporting the people struggling in Syria ; and our role
and responsibility in demanding an end to the slaughter of people in Syria. There are practical ways to enforce animmediate end to these atrocities, none of which have been seriously negotiated.
Prefer our violence impacts US policy should privilege the lived suffering of the
protestors. The myopic realism of instrumental approaches to democracy assistanceproduces Arab pessimism and justifies cruelty in the name of self interest.
Hoover 11 Joe, Fellow in the International Relations Department at the LSE, Journal of Critical
Globalisation Studies , Egypt and the Failure of Realism, Issue 4
Clearly regional stability is the key rhetorical trope, which justified turning a blind eye to the brutality
of Mubaraks regime and the lack of democracy in Egypt. Perhaps no issue is more important in defining what regional stability means for the US thanthe issue of Israeli security. Binyamin Netanyahu clearly exerted pressure on the US, trying to limit the support they gave to democratic reforms in Egypt. The prime
minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, reportedly ordered his cabinet to refrain from commenting publicly on the unfolding drama, saying only that the treaty must be
maintained. But as Haaretz reported today, the government is seeking to convince the US and EU to curb their criticism of Hosni Mubarak to preserve stability in the
region, even as Washington and its allies signal their wish for an orderly transition which the incumbent almost certainly cannot ignore. (Black, 2011) Despite
the homilies on human rights and democratic freedom delivered by Mr Obama to the Egyptians (Wilson andWarrick, 2011), it was a predictable set of concerns that set the agenda for the US response to the revolution taking
place in Cairo and throughout Egyptthe imperative was to maintain order, control those changes that proved
inevitable and ensure that the political and economic interests of dominant states were preserved.The representative for the US State Department, PJ Crowley, who was interviewed by Al Jazeera (US urges reform in Egypt, 2011), performed a practiced dance to
the theme of restraint, gradual reform and false equivalencies as if protesters and the agents of Mubaraks coercive apparatus could be compared2 as he made
clear that the suffering of the Egyptian people and their desire for democracy would not undermine US support for the Mubarak regime. We respect what Egypt
contributes to the region. It is a stabilising force; it has made its own peace with Israel and is pursuing normal relations with Israel. We think thats important; we think
thats a model that the region should adopt broadly speaking. At the same time, we recognise that Egypt, Tunisia, other countries, do need to reform, they do need to
respond to the needs of their people and we encourage that reform and we are contributing across the region to that reform. (US urges reform in Egypt , 2011) This
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routine, we can assume, was an exercise in managing expectations and making US interests clear democratic
revolution should not be allowed to upset regional stability, nor should the suffering of the protestors be
allowed to cloud our judgment on what really matters or, more bluntly, if democratic dreams threatened the
interests of the US, then so much the worse for those beautiful revolutionary dreams. As Tony Blair joined the discussionhe not only underlined Bidens scepticism regarding whether Mubarak was a dictator, claiming he was immensely courageous and a force for good (McGreal, 2011),
but he also clearly articulated the managerial worldview of a man who has learned to think of himself as a member of a privileged group of cleareyed realists whose
responsibility it is to control all the things of world politics. Blair argued that the region has unique problems that make politicalchange different from the democratic revolutions in Eastern Europe. He said the principal issue was the
presence of Islamist parties that he fears will use democracy to gain power and then undermine the freedoms
people seek... Blair said he did not doubt that change was coming to Egypt. People want a different system of government. Theyre going to get it. The questionis what emerges from that. In particular I think the key challenge for us is how do we help partner this process of change and help manage it in such a way that what
comes out of it is open minded, fair, democratic government. (McGreal, 2011) Not only does this response implicitly trade in the notion
that Arab countries will not be able to handle democracy without Western tutelage, it also trades in a
degraded notion of realism, in which serious men act as if their apologia for imperial arrogance is
sagacious wisdom gleaned from long experience. The Egyptian protestors will be allowed their
democracy, but their democracy will be managed and defined by the powerful, so as not to disturb
the order of things or run afoul of the realities of world politics. Yet this statist and status quo line
isactually divorced from reality, or at least the reality of the protesters battling their corrupt leaders in the streets of
Cairo, Alexandria and cities throughout Egypt it reflects the reality of dominance. Realism, as Western leaders express it, is little more
than an attempt to limit the happenings of world politics to their own constrained vision, a myopic self-interest that fails to take the
measure of the cruelty it justifies or realise its own analytical failings.
Contention 3: Solvency
The Obama administration must clearly encourage internet and communication
technology to the Syrian people. Urgent need to increase Syrian access to technology.
York 11 (JillianYork, Director of International Freedom of Expression at the Electronic FrontierFoundation, September 26, 2011, Stop the Piecemeal: Obama Administration Should Fully Free
Communications Tech Exports to Syria (& Companies Should Help)
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2011/09/stop-the-piecemeal-export-approach
But the story doesnt end there. Restrictions from the Department of Commerces Bureau of Industry
and Security (BIS) still appear to prevent communications tools and services from being exported
to Syrians without a license. We think that because of these restrictions, Syrians still cannot access
Google products Chrome and Earth, cannot download Java, among various other tools,and cannot
use hosting services like Rackspace, SuperGreenHosting and others. So the Treasury Departments
OFAC is out of the way, but the Commerce Departments BIS restrictions remain, meaning that
companies are still blocking certain communications tools from getting to Syrians.And until the government
makes the bigger step of stopping the piecemeal nature of their relaxation of restrictions, well have the same problems weve long complained about. These
sorts ofexport restrictions are overbroad and contain elements which have no effect on the Syrian
regime, while preventing Syrian citizens from accessing a wealth of tools that are available to their
activist counterparts in neighboring countries and around the world. Furthermore, the penalties
that result in violations of the regulations can be severe, so amidst confusing regulations, companies
appear to be implement ing broad restrictions on their services rather than run any risk. This
happened recently when the open-source platform SourceForge blocked the IP addresses of users in
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five sanctioned countries. What Needs to Happen Two things ought to be done here, as soon as possible. First, and
most importantly, the government -- the whole government -- should remove the license
requirements and restrictions for communications technologies used by democracy activists . In the
short term this should happen for Syria, in light of the ongoing struggle there. In the longer term, its time for theU.S. to stop this piecemeal approach and affirmatively allow unlicensed distribution of communications tools and services to people in all countries of the world.Second, companies hesitant about allowing Syrians to use communications tools and services should take the simple steps necessary to seek a BIS license. While we
don't think that such licenses should be required, the process is in fact quite simple, and frankly, the Syrians cannot wait. A company that wishes to export to Syria canfile an online application with the Commerce Departments Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) for a license, which then should be resolved within 90 days. While
registration is required before applying, any company that has ever gotten an export license before is likely already registered. Alternatively, companies may also
request interpretative guidance as to whether or not they require a license from BIS, which takes only 30 days. EFF Wants to Help Given the situation
on the ground in Syria, we need to focus there first . We reiterate our call for the Obama
administration to affirmatively make clear throughout its various agencies that providing digital
communications and information tools to citizens around the world, especially those under
repressive governments, is not only legal, but encouraged .And in the meantime, we challenge those companies who areconcerned about the BIS restrictions to take the simple steps necessary to apply for a license. In fact, we think this is so important that EFF would be willing to help a
company that wants to take these steps but doesnt have the resources to do it.
The Arab Revolutions has proven the transformative power of social media to radically
reconfigure politics: citizen empowerment can governments from going to war, but
we must be on the right side of this historical moment in ICT to shift societal values.
Camatsos 12 (Stratis G. Camatsos, Legal Affairs Analyst, Internet finds voice as citizens cry freedom,
January 5, 2012,
http://www.stopcartel.net/2012/01/05/POLITICS/Internet_finds_voice_as_citizens_cry_freedom/1004.ht
ml)
December 2010: Mohamed Bouazizi proclaimed that there was police corruption and ill treatment in Tunisia. This sparked revolutions well into
2011 inTunisia and Egypt, a civil war in Libya resulting in the fall of its government; civil uprisings in Bahrain, Syria, and Yemen, major protests
in Algeria, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Morocco, and Oman, and less in Lebanon, Saudi Arabia, and Sudan. The parallels between allthree of these iconic uprisings are that the protests have shared techniques of civil response in sustained campaigns involving strikes, demonstrations, marches and
rallies. All of them were based on a common ideal or symbol that led the way for organisation. All were themselves the epitome of the principle of freedom of
expression. The differences between the three rest with the tools used to mobilise and organise. As the former two were based on word of mouth and media such as
newspapers and TV, the latter one saw the largest uprising to have used the social media to communicate and raise
awareness in the face of state attempts at repression and Internet censorship. It was truly a behemothic
moment for the internet, as its potential was finally reached. The internet has become a wave of untamed
power that still has not revealed its full force. And, as people have increasingly turned to the internet to
conduct important aspects of their lives, the fundamental principle of freedom of expression with Internet censorship
have become ever so delicately intertwined. The line of respecting one's right to express oneself online and government censorship has become
blurred on the cyberworld battleground. However, as Jusice John Paul Stevens once said: The interest in encouraging freedom of
expression in a democratic society outweighs any theoretical but unproven benefit of censorship. Activists are
no longer only fighting for human rights on the ground, but now also online. Internet freedom goes beyond fighting for only aplatform to freely express, practice one's faith, or peacefully assemble,but the benefits of the network itself grow as the number of
users online grow. More and more now, governments are increasing their efforts to help and promote internet freedom
throughout the world, but especially in regions where cyber dissidents and bloggers are being suppressed and persecuted.Take a look at Russia, where prominent anti-corruption blogger Alexei Navalny was jailed for 15 days after taking part in anti-government protests over ballot-
stuffing and other irregularities in the parliamentary elections. The United States' stance on this issue was echoed by Secretary of State Hilary Clinton at a Conference
on Internet Freedom when she said: It is a most urgent [task] for those...who are blocked from accessing entire categories of internet content, or who are being
tracked by governments seeking to keep them from connecting with one another...in ways that distance and cost made impossible just a generation ago. Deputy
Assistant Secretary of the Department for the Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labour Daniel Baer told New Europe: The US has been committed to
supporting people who are having their rights limited in difficult places around the world. By the end of this year, we will have invested more than $70 million worth
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12of grants funding, to help support these people in order to be able to exercise their fundamental rights online. This includes technologies and cyber-defense training
which is training online activists to know the risks when using the internet, and cutting-edge research. Repressive regimes, like Syria and Iran, are coming up with
new ways to clamp down and target people. So we are coming up with new tools to be ready to support people on the ground. The EU is also investing heavily in this
area focusing on helping people organise, mobilise, and exercise their rights online. It has pushed for the 'No Disconnect' strategy, which outlines what is needed to
help cyber-activists bypass restrictions on their freedom to communicate, including the tools and technology needed to shield them from indiscriminate surveillance.
Both the US and the EU have also shift the onus of responsibility on the technology companies to be transparent about equipment they were selling to governments
who might use it to repress their citizens. Digital Agenda Commissioner Neelie Kroes said: If technology is used by certain repressive governments to identify
innocent citizens and put their life or freedom in danger, we ought to know. The citizen Thus, with such a possibility tingling the senses, governments see
that to encourage a movement of magnitudes that could even minimise declaring wars in the sake of
democracy is the empowerment of the citizen, which will eventually lead to social justice and democratic
rule. The ability of people to manage their lives, to recognize and meet their needs, and to fulfil their potential as
creative, responsible and productive members of society to the extent compatible with the empowerment of others is
the ultimate goal, and citizens have seen the power of the Internet to help them achieve this state. This is the very reason whythe EU and US have been spending money in trying to make the Internet free in repressive locations, which will use the citizens to instil democratic ideals and
empower the people to demand for change. As Aristotle emphatically wrote, the underlying principle of democracy is freedom, since only in a
democracy the citizens can have a share in freedom. In essence, that this is what every democracy should make its aim, and since everyone is
equal according to number, not merit,people should be able to live as they please, under the very notion that one factor of
liberty is to govern and be governed in turn. As he made clear, ...in democracies the poor are more powerful than the
rich, because there are more of them and whatever is decided by the majority is sovereign. It is through
the Internet that citizens have grasped Aristotles words so effectively. Thus, the Internet is currently on a trajectory of salvation. Althoughthere are still paths for the Internet that lead to emptiness, the users have found a way to band together, through new technologies and
models that are used to connect to one another in a meaningful way. Even governments have seen that the users have become ubiquitous
and they themselves are the tools to take the Internet into a different path than it was originally projected. Ideas and ideals are now being
formulated, discussed and defended online; there are no social barriers. The users have created online social
structures that are being formed to provide solutions with creativity and through true collaboration. This
trajectory will continue in the years but with greater force. The scope of it will widen, bringing
unprecedented change to our way of lives . With upcoming presidential/prime ministerial elections, the Internet will provide a
platform to influence our political outlook in the years to comethrough a steady stream of information;
this may mean an increase in online organised and mobilised revolts. Due to the potential that both sides see in the Internet, it will
become the new crude oil. A war will wage against the technology companies and repressive governments
against online activists and supportive governments. The fight will be for control versus freedom , as citizens ofthe majority and the poor will fight to hold the line between protection fundamental rights online and violating them.A friend told me that I was extremely fortunate to be able to share my thoughts and speak out without being restricted from any outside forces. Man's creative instinct
yearns to break the chains of restriction on his very core of being. Many of us have been given a key to unlock and free thyself from
these chains, and that is why my voice have joined millions of others online speaking for those who
have not yet been given a key so that our voice together will become sovereign.
This is the most important structural impact - collapse of the communicative sphere causes
extinction
Habermas 84 (Jurgen, Doctorate in Philosophy, at University of Gttingen, University of Zrich, University of Bonn; Graduate studies inphilosophy at Johann Wolfgang Goethe University Frankfurt am Main Institute for Social Research and habilitation in political science at the
University of Marburg; earned "extraordinary professor" of philosophy at the University of Heidelberg; chair in philosophy and sociology at
Frankfurt University; Director of the Max Planck Institute in Starnberg; directorship of the Institute for Social Research; Gottfried Wilhelm
Leibniz Prize of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, which is the highest honour awarded in German research; Permanent Visiting" Professor
at Northwestern University and "Theodor Heuss Professor" at The New School, New York; The Prince of Asturias Award in Social Sciences of
2003; 2004 Kyoto Laureate in the Arts and Philosophy section; 2005 Holberg International Memorial Prize; in 2007 the 7th most-cited author in
the humanities including the social sciences by The Times Higher Education Guide; Theory of Communicative Action, p. 397)
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If we assume that the human species maintains itself through the socially coordinated activities of its members and that this
coordination has to be established through communicationand in certain central spheres through
communication aimed at reaching agreementthen the reproduction of the species also requires satisfying the conditions of arationality that is inherent in communicative action. These conditions have become per ceptible in the modern period with the
decentration of our understanding of the world and the differentiation of various universal validity claims.To the extent that religious-metaphysical world-views lose their credibility, the concept of self-preservation changes, but not only in the respect emphasized by Blumenberg. It does, as he argues,lose its teleological alignment with objective ends, so that a self-preservation that has become absolute can move up to the rank of an ultimate end for cognition and success-oriented action. At
the same time, to the degree that the normative integration of everyday life is loosened up, the concept of self-preservation takes a direction that is at once
universalistic and individualistic . Aprocess ofself-preservation that has to satisfy the rationality
conditions of communicative action becomes dependent on the integrative accomplishments of
subjects who coordinate their action via criticizable validity claims . Thus, what is characteristic of the position of modernconsciousness is less the unity of self-preservation and self-con-sciousness than the relation expressed in bourgeois philosophy of history and society: The social-life context reproduces itself
both through the media-controlled purposive-rational actions of its members andthrough the common will anchored in t he communicative practice of all individuals. 91A subjectivity
that is characterized by communicative reason resists the denaturing of the self for the sake of self-preservation. Unlikeinstrumental reason, communicative reason cannot be subsumed without resistance under a blind self-preservation. It refers neither to a subject that preserves itself in relating
to objects via representation and action, nor to a self-maintaining system that demarcates itself from an environment, but to a symbolically structured lifeworld that
is constituted in the interpretive accomplishments of its members and only reproduced throughcom munication . Thus communicative reason does not simply encounter ready-made subjects and systems; rather, it takes part in structuring what is to be
preserved. The Utopian perspective ofreconciliation and freedom is ingrained in the conditions for the
communicative sociation of individuals; it isbuilt into the linguistic mechanism of the reproduction of thespecies.
Policymakers should challenge established political mechanisms and tactically respond to
callings for justice this role of the ballot creates more agonistic democratic planning.
Metzger 11 (Metzger J, 2011, "Neither revolution, nor resignation: (re)democratizing contemporaryplanning praxis: a commentary on Allmendinger and Haughton's "Spatial planning, devolution, and new
planning spaces"" Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy 29(2))
The above injunctions must not be shrugged off as philosophical musings, for, if we reject the defeatist position and see the policy
practitioner as vested with both a capacity and perhaps a duty to make a difference to how policy
formulation and implementation play out in practice, we will often be able to identify a certain margin of
manoeuver' for policy practitioners (cf Callon, 1986), within which they actually have a real possibility to
challenge established mechanisms and to tactically act in ways that facilitate the development of
alternative types of planning methods and ways of going about. Thus, ifwe take our cue from Healey (2010, page 19) and choose to
see the ``twenty-first century `planning project''' as not only a set of expert skills, a techne, but also
as a calling for justice, an ethos, it becomes a crucial task for planning scholars to proceed to attempt to define some of the potential content ofthis callingfor how this calling is articulated will decide how it is responded to: how it engenders respons(e)i bility among planners and
policy practitioners. (1) As Allmendinger and Haughton's paper shows us, a reinvigorated discussion on the transparency
and accountability of planning decisions should form a pivotal point for such emergent discussions, and perhaps will also contribute
to a widening of interest in the democratic merits of strife and conflict, not only in spatial planning and otherpolicy
theory, but also in practice . This might play out as a renewed interest in the facilitation of court' institutions within planning processesthat is, theprovision of spaces where policy decisions might be challenged, but will hopefully also entail experimentation with new methods to accommodate fruitfully dissensus
already at an early stage within the planning process where the `opening out' of issues through the articulation of
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opposing value systems might take place (cf Brand and Gaffikin, 2007; Metzger, 2011; Oosterlynck and Swyngedouw, 2010). Possibly, it
could also entail a renewed interest in a rediscovery and reworking of advocacy planning theory to put it more in tune
with the demands of contemporary society and the present challenge of confronting neocorporatist
governance structures in which spatial planning is reduced to little else than pseudodemocratic
window dressing of dominant corporatist interests.