The People's Record

An ongoing chronicle of communities of resistance around the world: anti-racism, anti-zionism, anti-imperialism, the Arab Spring, anti-austerity protests in Greece and across Europe, student movements all around the world, the Occupy Movement, anti-capitalist movements, anarchist movements, socialist movements, leftist communities and other relevant international news.

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occupyallstreets:

The U.S. Military Will Spy On Afghanistan Decades After The War Is Over
America is supposed to wind down its war in Afghanistan by 2014. But U.S. forces may continue to track Afghans for years after the conflict is officially done. Palm-sized sensors, developed for the American military, will remain littered across the Afghan countryside — detecting anyone who moves nearby and reporting their locations back to a remote headquarters.
Some of these surveillance tools could be buried in the ground, all-but-unnoticeable by passersby. Others might be disguised as rocks, with wafer-sized, solar-rechargeable batteries that could enable the sensors’ operation for perhaps as long as two decades, if their makers are to be believed.
“Were going to leave behind a lot of special operators in Afghanistan. And they need the kind of capability that’s easy to put out so they can monitor a village without a lot of overt U.S.-made material on pathways and roadways,” says Matt Plyburn, an executive at Lockheed Martin, the world’s largest defense contractor.
And they won’t just be used overseas. U.S. Customs and Border Patrol today employs more than 7,500 UGSs on the Mexican border to spot illegal migrants. Defense contractors believe one of the biggest markets for the next generation of the sensors will be here at home.
Read More

occupyallstreets:

The U.S. Military Will Spy On Afghanistan Decades After The War Is Over

America is supposed to wind down its war in Afghanistan by 2014. But U.S. forces may continue to track Afghans for years after the conflict is officially done. Palm-sized sensors, developed for the American military, will remain littered across the Afghan countryside — detecting anyone who moves nearby and reporting their locations back to a remote headquarters.

Some of these surveillance tools could be buried in the ground, all-but-unnoticeable by passersby. Others might be disguised as rocks, with wafer-sized, solar-rechargeable batteries that could enable the sensors’ operation for perhaps as long as two decades, if their makers are to be believed.

Were going to leave behind a lot of special operators in Afghanistan. And they need the kind of capability that’s easy to put out so they can monitor a village without a lot of overt U.S.-made material on pathways and roadways,” says Matt Plyburn, an executive at Lockheed Martin, the world’s largest defense contractor.

And they won’t just be used overseas. U.S. Customs and Border Patrol today employs more than 7,500 UGSs on the Mexican border to spot illegal migrants. Defense contractors believe one of the biggest markets for the next generation of the sensors will be here at home.

Read More

(via anarcho-queer)

  1. theboredomkillingbusiness reblogged this from kirklandfruits
  2. psycho-rainbow-kittens reblogged this from bibliofumes and added:
    Seriously?…. What the actual fuck
  3. bibliofumes reblogged this from cheappoet
  4. paradoxicalparadigms reblogged this from mademoisellealiyah and added:
    No shit.
  5. mademoisellealiyah reblogged this from cheappoet
  6. cheappoet reblogged this from fucknobigbrother
  7. kirklandfruits reblogged this from anarcho-queer and added:
    Defense contractors believe one of the biggest markets for the next generation of the sensors will be here at home.
  8. can-enginerd reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  9. inarumabo reblogged this from anarcho-queer
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  13. marginalpass reblogged this from anarcho-queer and added:
    This is pretty cool I guess…
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  15. other-stuff reblogged this from silas216
  16. silas216 reblogged this from anarcho-queer
  17. thedeathofjohnsmith reblogged this from politicsd00d
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  20. renokowest reblogged this from thepeoplesrecord
  21. theboredboi reblogged this from vinegarwilliams and added:
    is anyone… really surprised by this?
  22. vinegarwilliams reblogged this from seymourbuhts
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  26. kaiamar reblogged this from anarcho-queer and added:
    “…the best of all possible worlds”

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