Flick Harrison on Wed, 24 Jun 2009 22:46:22 +0200 (CEST) |
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Re: <nettime> FW: When technology is utilized against us. |
I agree with Morlock. I recall a WWII story from "A Man Called Intrepid." (by William Stevenson) A female agent had a disassembled radio packed into her bicycle basket. She had to go into a washroom, assemble the gear, hook up to the toilet pipes as an antenna, and transmit encrypted morse-code messages which were written inside her stocking. After a few minutes, she had to move because Nazi direction-finder technology would zero in on her immediately. For a certain period, she was the only resistance contact in Paris. (She was captured and killed anyway). But Morlock, I'm not sure the Iranians live in the same casual boredom society that "we" do. It's a dictatorship. Communications have always been restricted there, so I bet people have been careful about their texts prior to this sequence of events. During my time in Pakistan - a much milder regime - there was often veiled warning and tense silence when I ventured into troubling conversational territory. And that was in private verbal communications. Moreover, the apparatus of oppression isn't limitless, even in places like Iran. Crowd power can overwhelm that, and mass communication can overwhelm it. Any attempt to short-cut their time-tested oppression style (the midnight knock, the personal beating) and replace it with more efficient / convenient crowd control (machine-gunning protesters) is extremely risky because it creates new enemies faster than they can be catalogued and because it enters new territory of confrontation with civil society, rather than behind-the-scenes manipulation of it. Unlike Prague 68 or Hungary 56, there are no Russian tanks waiting out there to come to the rescue like a deus ex machina. If the resistance fails, then perhaps the authorities can take their time and sift through endless text messages to slowly collect the troublemakers. It still might tax their administrative, prison and oppression system, especially in light of brand-new veins of enemies within that system and the risks of expanding the secret services after such upheaval. But in the meantime, openness is an advantage for the resistance, even if it's the only one. I wonder if anyone knows the answer to this: was it possible to make international phone calls between the Axis and Allies during World War II? I recently read (in The Fall of Berlin 1945, Anthony Beever) that the Russians made crank phone calls around Berlin as they advanced through the city, just to terrify anyone who answered the phone. * FLICK's WEBSITE & BLOG: http://www.flickharrison.com * FACEBOOK http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=860700553 * MYSPACE: http://myspace.com/flickharrison
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