Greg Newby wrote:
In case it's not already obvious, Steele has a clue. I heard him speak at H2K last year. He's either the world's greatest liar, or has a tremendous background and authority on how the goverment handles secret and subversive activities.
Steele isn't afraid to go out on a limb to fire up a conversation. Whatever your opinion of his ideas, he's called attention to blindspots and destructive mythical mindsets. The big credit infobrokers started out with humble beginnings and shoebox files. Look at them now. Private intelligence, in all its forms, seems like the credit information industry in the early days. My "Intellagora" (I made up a word) and Steele's... literary references... isn't an infobroker, it would munch AND crunch, and be very human. Is a 3-5-7-year end state scenario with a transcontinental private thing-of-some-sort -- resulting in establishment-displacement in ways we might not contemplate -- so far-fetched? Steele strikes me as a serious sentinel (i.e., "move, or move aside"). ~Aimee
On Wed, Jun 20, 2001 at 03:00:51PM -0500, Aimee Farr wrote:
http://www.oss.net/Papers/white/TheNewCraftofIntelligence.doc The New Craft of Intelligence Robert David Steele REVIEW Draft
o "The center of gravity for both national security and national prosperity lie now in the private sector and its intellectual property as well as its accumulated knowledge. The concepts of noosphere (Pierre Tielhard de Chardin) and "world brain" (H.G. Wells) are now an imminent reality, and the World Intelligence Center envisioned by Quincy Wright is achievable."