Inter-Monopoly and Inter-Imperialist Competition
and Claims of "Foreign Interference"

The Liberals have drowned their pledge to enact democratic reforms in talk about foreign interference. Besides other things, it has nothing to do with democracy and everything to do with cyber attacks carried out by rival interests in competition with one another. It is part of their striving to dominate and control the products of artificial intelligence such as G5 wireless technology.

CBC reported that on January 24, Innovation Minister Navdeep Bains, while in Davos, Switzerland for the World Economic Forum, finalized a $40 million deal with Finnish high tech company Nokia to conduct research on 5G wireless technology in Canada. This is one of the unfolding events which coincides with the arrest of Meng Wanzhou, the Chief Financial Officer of Huawei, the leading 5G company in the world, which the U.S. is trying to ban from the Canadian market. Meng's arrest on an extradition warrant was carried out at the behest of the U.S., while the Five Eyes network of intelligence agencies is exerting pressure on Canada to not permit Huawei into the Canadian market. All of this would indicate that where national interests end and international interests begin is not clearly demarcated at all. More importantly, it indicates that the inter-monopoly and inter-imperialist rivalries over spheres of interest are very sharp. Attempts by NATO and international espionage agencies, such as the Five Eyes, to embroil the Government of Canada and Canada's own security establishment in controlling this rivalry in favour of one side over another are bound to cause more havoc. However, to intervene in this rivalry in the name of protecting the democracy is inappropriate to say the least.

The security analysis which rails against "foreign interference," in which Russia and China are targeted as the main culprits, is the mantra of a democracy caught up in an inter-imperialist and inter-monopoly competition. For those in power who are beholden to NATO and U.S. imperialist demands to now seek the acquiescence of the public to put police powers in charge of political campaigns and to hand over funds in the public treasury to the "right side," is to foment internal civil wars such as the one we see raging in the United States. Now that Canada's economy has been integrated into the U.S. economy and war machine it is ipso facto dragged into its civil war.

What is it that the security agencies do not think should be revealed publicly when they discover that a foreign "state actor" is interfering in a Canadian election? If it has to do with inter-imperialist competition over technology in the field of artificial intelligence, providing that information only to the "select few" within the context of a political campaign is an unwarranted intervention in the affairs of the polity. Given the inter-monopoly competition within the high tech sector, where is the accountability when one side of the competition is favoured over another? Should the polity be divided in a civil war scenario as a result of such competing interests in the name of protecting the democracy? Today what is national and what is international is inextricably intertwined. Having the polity take sides in this inter-monopoly and inter-imperialist competition does not favour the people in any way.


This article was published in

Volume 49 Number 4 - February 9, 2019

Article Link:
Inter-Monopoly and Inter-Imperialist Competition and Claims of "Foreign Interference" - Nick Lin


    

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