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MinM

(2,650 posts)
Mon Dec 2, 2013, 09:39 AM Dec 2013

emptywheel: Information Monopoly Defines the Deep State

Posting this to ensure that another excellent piece @emptywheel does not slip through the cracks of the holiday weekend...

Information Monopoly Defines the Deep State

The last decade witnessed the rise of deep state — an entity not clearly delineated that ultimately controls the military-industrial complex, establishing its own operational policy and practice outside the view of the public in order to maintain its control.

Citizens believe that the state is what they see, the evidence of their government at work. It’s the physical presence of their elected representatives, the functions of the executive office, the infrastructure that supports both the electoral process and the resulting machinery serving the public at the other end of the sausage factory of democracy. We the people put fodder in, we get altered fodder out — it looks like a democracy.

But deep state is not readily visible; it’s not elected, it persists beyond any elected official’s term of office. While a case could be made for other origins, it appears to be born of intelligence and security efforts organized under the Eisenhower administration in response to new global conditions after World War II. Its function may originally have been to sustain the United States of America through any threat or catastrophe, to insure the country’s continued existence.

Yet the deep state and its aims may no longer be in sync with the United States as the people believe their country to be — a democratic society. The democratically elected government does not appear to have control over its security apparatus. This machinery answers instead to the unseen deep state and serves its goals...

http://www.emptywheel.net/2013/11/28/information-monopoly-defines-the-deep-state/
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emptywheel: Information Monopoly Defines the Deep State (Original Post) MinM Dec 2013 OP
Peter Dale Scott defines the term "Deep State" MinM Dec 2013 #1
Back to where the "Deep State" was born. MinM Dec 2013 #4
Globally Renowned Activist Collaborated with Stratfor MinM Dec 2013 #2
Recommend! KoKo Dec 2013 #3

MinM

(2,650 posts)
1. Peter Dale Scott defines the term "Deep State"
Mon Dec 2, 2013, 09:55 AM
Dec 2013

For some background here's the definition of the term "Deep State" from the Cal Berkeley professor who popularized the term (Peter Dale Scott):

The term “Deep state” comes from Turkey. They invented it after the wreck of a speeding Mercedes in 1996 in which the passengers were a Member of Parliament, a beauty queen, a local senior police captain, and an important drug trafficker in Turkey who was also the head of a criminal paramilitary organization – the Grey Wolves – that went around killing people. And it became very obvious in Turkey that there were a covert relationship between the police who officially were looking for this man – even though a policeman was there with him in the car – and these people who committed crimes on behalf of the state. The state that you commit crimes for is not a state that can show its hand to the people, it’s a hidden state, a covert structure. In Turkey, they called it the Deep state...

http://www.rigorousintuition.ca/board2/viewtopic.php?f=8&t=31782

MinM

(2,650 posts)
4. Back to where the "Deep State" was born.
Fri Dec 20, 2013, 10:54 AM
Dec 2013
@mike_giglio: [Spoiler: at least one is likely true] 9 Conspiracy Theories Used To Explain A Massive Corruption Scandal In Turkey http://www.buzzfeed.com/mikegiglio/the-top-9-conspiracy-theories-used-to-explain-a-massive-corr


Kerem Oktem, a scholar at Oxford University who writes on modern Turkey, said the various conspiracy threads weave together in one over-arching narrative advanced by the government ever since this summer’s protests. In short, Turkey is being undercut by jealous rivals of the AKP’s dominance both at home and abroad. Gulen helps tie these threads together — thanks to his networks inside Turkey and his perceived connections to Israel and America, suspicions bolstered by his long-term residency in the Poconos.

“There is a master narrative that has been put forward after [the protests]. And that is that the AKP has the highest support ever in Turkey’s political history. It is turning Turkey into a powerful country. And there are power centers internationally and nationally that don’t want Turkey to become a powerful country,” Oktem said. “So now Turkey is cornered by these forces and has to defend itself against this onslaught in order to keep democracy alive.”

It might be easier for the government to address this narrative than the one suggested by the investigations, Oktem said. “The real issue is that the country is deeply corrupt.” ...

http://www.buzzfeed.com/mikegiglio/the-top-9-conspiracy-theories-used-to-explain-a-massive-corr
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