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Lockheed Martin Hardware to Protect NYC Transit
Posted by
ScuttleMonkey
on Tue Aug 23, 2005 09:07 PM
from the 1,984-watchful-eyes dept.
from the 1,984-watchful-eyes dept.
Gerhardius writes "Lockheed Martin has been awarded a $212 million contract to provide cameras and sensors for New York City subways, bridges and tunnels." The entire program is being conducted under the guise of anti-terrorism and includes plans for a possible wireless network which would allow cellular phones to be used in case of emergency.
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Lockheed Martin Hardware to Protect NYC Transit
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Lockheed? (Score:2, Interesting)
(http://godgab.org/)
I'm only half joking by the way, karma be damned.
Re:Lockheed? (Score:5, Informative)
that was a long time ago (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://umich.edu/~jamec | Last Journal: Monday November 12, @06:28PM)
Re:Contrarian views (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://slashdot.org/)
And how exactly would this work with this all-eyes-are-on-you system for 200 million?
Is anyone thinking?
What terrorists? How would you "find and capture" them? Especially if they are dead in the attack? Suppose they don't want to bother the trains, and instead, oh, blow up the water pipelines? Can you place cameras everywhere? If you can, how will you answer the first two questions?
The only people being locked down are us. We are voluntarily entering prison, for no sane reason whatsoever.
Most terrorist plots busted up in the US are hatched by white men. Fact. How would this stop them? Or is this just a war on funny looking brown people, ignoring the crazy white men who are actually arming and plotting?
A giant surveillance system, protecting no one, and 200 million bucks down the drain, and we all enter prison every time we take a train ride, all for nothing and serving no purpose.
Want to prevent "terrorist" attacks, by which I assume you mean brown funny people?
Don't invade their countries, don't steal their money, don't torture their people, and pay attention to what your president has done. Al Queda has gone from a despised group of loonies to the heroes of the oppressed in the muslim underclass, and its all-because-we-validated-their-worst-predictions about what we would do after being attacked by 40 loons -- invade and hold the oil fields. Bush and company are maneuvering to invade Iran now -- another rich oil field. Amazingly enough, the terrorists from the 9-11 attack were mostly Saudi Arabians -- and we haven't even said boo to the Saudis. And everyone has noticed.
We are earning the hatred of those who had no truck with al Queda, and its not because they hate our freedom. They hate us because we're murderous, two-faced hypocrites. A few of those angry young people will be crazy enough, fervent enough, to start killing innocent people here in the US -- and it won't be because they hate us; they hate what we do, and hate us because we simply don't give a damn about what happens to the funny brown people.
Cameras. God. Just stop killing innocent people! Apologize for the invasion of Iraq! Let the people in prison go. It's freaking simple! We're GENERATING the terrorists!
Re:Contrarian views (Score:4, Interesting)
Not all terrorist attacks are suicide attacks. Maybe you havn't been paying attention to the news lately, but not too long ago the London subways were bombed and surveillance cameras helped police determine their identities. No, this won't stop every possible type of terrorist attack, but it will help prevent a specific type of attack. If we had a two hundred million solution to all terrorist attacks, I would be pissed off that it hadn't already been implemented.
"Most terrorist plots busted up in the US are hatched by white men. Fact. How would this stop them? Or is this just a war on funny looking brown people, ignoring the crazy white men who are actually arming and plotting?"
Believe it or not, white people aren't like vampires. We will show up on video just as well as Arabs. And the fact that we are busting terrorist plots hatched by white guys is evidence they are not being ignored.
"Amazingly enough, the terrorists from the 9-11 attack were mostly Saudi Arabians -- and we haven't even said boo to the Saudis."
And amazingly people like you think that just because someone is from Saudi Arabia means they are agents of the Saudi government.
In other news (Score:3, Funny)
Guise? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.cornellsun.com/)
Re:Guise? (Score:5, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Sunday November 06 2005, @10:30PM)
I'm sure its very lucrative to get one of thse government jobs to install technology or research dynamite smelling bacteria. I'm curious how surveillance is going to work. At first thought it doesn't seem like it is somehow going to be able to detect and prevent terrorists? I bet it will cut down on the number of people who jump over the subway tool booths.
Re:Guise? (Score:5, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Thursday October 14 2004, @09:23AM)
You seem unaware that London did not have any IRA bombings after their downtown surveillance camera system went in place. And the recent islamofacist bombers were tracked down and caught impressively quickly after the tapes were perused. As for detecting and preventing ahead of time, nothing can do that outside of an oppressive police state that prevents free movement of people. And no, surveillance cameras used to track down criminals after the fact do not an oppressive police state make. Ask any Londoner how oppressed they feel.
Re:Guise? (Score:5, Informative)
(http://www.lucywood.net/)
And no, surveillance cameras used to track down criminals after the fact do not an oppressive police state make. Ask any Londoner how oppressed they feel.
I work as a CCTV operator here in London, we do traffic enforcement, which is what most of the cameras are for. Everything we do is tightly regulated by the Human Rights Act (1988) and the Data Protection Act (1998) and a comprehensive Code of Practice. We have to respect privacy (or be sacked!). For example, our traffic cameras cannot linger on people, we look only at vehicles, the video tapes have to be stored securely and confidentially and they must be destroyed (degaussed) when no longer useful.
Any CCTV images of people you have seen, from the UK, will have been taken under special exemptions provided for the police under the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (2000) - the same act that governs phone tapping etc. They can only track an individual on CCTV if they suspect them of criminal activity. They don't just track people at random.
As part of our training we have to know all this privacy legislation and are tested on it.
There is no comperable Data Protection law in the US. If you are going to increase the amount of CCTV you use then perhaps you need also to consider legislation that will protect your privacy?
Re:Guise? (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.isights.org/)
Police brutality? No, sorry. That camera was down for maintenance.
I also suspect a police chief, mayor, governor, congressman, senator, or even a strongly connected businessman (just to name a few) can see pretty much whatever feed they wish. But can we as citizens watch the feeds that show use their comings and goings?
welcome to slashdot (Score:5, Funny)
(http://umich.edu/~jamec | Last Journal: Monday November 12, @06:28PM)
Heaven forbid they track people's pictures and locations! Who knew that 9-11 could lead to the security-measures of a 7-11?
I for one... (Score:3, Funny)
Guise? (Score:2, Insightful)
(http://slashdot.org/)
Or, it's possible that it really is about prevention of attacks. NYC is a very likely target and everyone just saw what happened in London. Of course, if it makes you happier to believe that everyone is out to get you, then go on.
Re:Guise? (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://slashdot.org/)
A The cameras in London stopped the first attack
B The cameras in London stopped the second attack.
C The 9/11 attackers used their own ID to board the plane.
D In all the above attacks the perpetrators were caught on film before the attacks, so this is obviously effective somehow.
Massive invasions of privacy and surveillance don't stop terrorist attacks. Adding information to overloaded analysis systems won't stop terrorist attacks. Adding more laws and giving more power to law enforcement won't stop terrorist attacks. Invading other countries won't stop terrorist attacks.
Properly analysing the information that is available might help thwart attacks.
In many of the recent attacks both the technique, target and perpetrators were already KNOWN. Law enforcement was just unable to effectively use that knowledge.
These plans seem to have it backwards, the problem isn't that the information doesn't exist, it's that people don't know what to do with it.
Re:Guise? (Score:5, Insightful)
The cameras in London enabled them to identity who the suicide bombers were. If a suicide bomber jumped on a train on the underground in NYC, and blew himself up, we couldn't even figure out who did it!
The images captured in the London attacks meant the police could find out who they were, where they lived, who they had contact with, where they had travelled, etc etc etc.
The failed July 21st attacks meant the police could track them down, and arrest them!
You can't even comprehend the amount of intelligence that may have now been attained with the arrests of these terrorists.
However, you seem happy enough to let terrorists try and try again, without knowing who is behind attacks, until they're successful.
Re:Guise? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Guise? (Score:5, Insightful)
Or maybe, just maybe, that Anonymous Coward is making things up.
It is true. The police had basically no information about this guy and they went up and shot him after ordering him to turn around. From reports I have heard they may have not even identified themselves. The cameras were all convieniently "not working." So there wasn't any video evidence. The police have since apologized, but the fact of the matter remains that they have murdered a man in cold blood without even trying to make a reasonable arrest.
The whole thing reeks of coverup and foul play. One would think that within days of a terrorist attack, the Underground would have made doubly sure that at least their security cameras were all rolling. Not a single video image. How about that one?
I agree with the great grandparent. Nothing is gonna stop terrorism. The more terrorists you kill, the more martyrs you create. The more innocent people you slaughter in the process, the more you fuel the source of the terrorism. IF you think this war can be won, maybe you need to start listening to the Jews for advice because clearly they are doing a wonderful job of containing just a small neighboring state. Just in case you never went to history class, white men have been killing arabs for thousands of years now in the name of holy war. How the war is on terrorism is any different is completely beyond me, what with its rhetoric about evil nations and liberation and democracy. What is the real evil? Is it the terrorists who hate us with a lot of valid reasons? Or is it the country that sponsored those terrorists in the first place as well as propped up certain dictators, like Saddam Hussein? No doubt the taliban were not the greatest of rulers, but at least they helped us keep the Soviets from taking over some prime pipeline territory. Sadly, Afghanistan is still ruled by the same corrupt warlords, nothing is much better, and the US once again could likely care less with the spotlight going to Iraq these days. If anyone thought we were going to be helping the Afghannis, well then, I must apologize for getting your hopes up. Of course, control of the opium trade is also a nice bonus for the CIA as well, because we all know how they love to smuggle drugs into America.
Now we are in Iraq. I don't know who is more evil. Saddam for killing his people with banned chemical and biological weapons or us supplying such weapons to him, knowing that he was using them on his own people. The same people that wanted us to go to war to find such weapons were the people that sold them to him, like Donald Rumsfield for instance. Maybe they had trouble sleeping at night thinking about how many hundreds of thousands of people those weapons had killed in both Iraq and Iran, then again I really doubt it. Never mind the countless thousands upon thousands of children that died from starvation alone thanks to a failed Food for Oil programme. Let us not forget that we also played Iran and Iraq like twisted Puch and Judy marionettes by supplying both sides with all sorts of weapons of mass destruction. I guess, once again, oil is likely the only motivation, because any other possibility just doesn't have nearly as much money tied to it. Don't get me started on the Rockefeller--Afghanistan connection. The choice of the twin towers makes so much sense when you see it in the right context.
Now we have police attacking protestors with stun guns and K9 dogs for blocking traffic. And we have the national guard invading raves and beating the living piss out of the participants. The police state is already here, the question is how much further will we let it go? Like many people have said. You cannot stop terrorism. If you make it impossible for people to blow up trains, they will start attacking theatres, city squares, office lobbies, etc, etc, etc. You ar
Re:Guise? (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.pornladder.com/)
Besides, if a person is going to blow himself up, how will cameras help at all? It surely isn't going to deter them.
Re:Guise? (Score:5, Insightful)
Good point. Suicide bombers don't leave ANY evidence behind that might clue people into their identity.
Except their body.
No, it only told them what they looked like. They still had to figure out who they were, where they lived, who they had contact with, where they have travelled, etc.
You're being lied to. Wake up.
Re:Guise? (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://www.swishsoftware.com.au/)
I don't know if you have had any experience with bodies that have been blown up but if you had you would know there is pretty much nothing left but residue.
No, it only told them what they looked like. They still had to figure out who they were, where they lived, who they had contact with, where they have travelled, etc.Having the ability to visibly to identified the bombers and then track their last couple hours/minutes of movement would go along way to finding out who they were, where they lived, who they had contact with, where they have travelled, etc. IE you might get a partial/full number plate of the car that drop them off, they may have made one last phone call and you can then track that number etc.... It is a lot like having log files from a server that died, most of the time it won't tell you what crashed the thing but it will be invaluable in helping to find out the source of the problem.
You're being lied to. Wake upone for one
You are being ignorant. Wake up.
Re:Guise? (Score:5, Informative)
(http://www.pornladder.com/)
C. They worked. They identified all the perpetrators in the first attack, and in the second failed attack, led to their arrests.
Photo identification left at the scene of the crime identified the bombers. The photos from the cameras merely acted as auxiliary information. You can read the whole chain of events here [bbc.co.uk].
Re:Guise? (Score:4, Interesting)
And the private transportation argument is bogus, since we also have checkpoints and random stops on the roadways.
It's a shame what they've done to the 4th ammendment.
X10 (Score:5, Funny)
Protect your subway, underground, or sewage pipes with these 180 full degree motion cams! BONUS!!11 Purchase X10 ULTRA MONITORING SOFTWARE and get a FREE Voyeurcam! Great for putting under street drains!
With X10, privacy is obselete! (TM)
Re:X10 (Score:4, Funny)
(Last Journal: Monday April 17 2006, @12:06PM)
Under the GUISE of anti-terrorism (Score:5, Funny)
Hey... (Score:5, Funny)
Pesky Metric System (Score:3, Interesting)
Fortunately transit security cameras are free from such pesky issues as the fatal mixing of metric and English units of measure.
Motion Sensors (Score:2, Interesting)
(Last Journal: Thursday August 18 2005, @03:51PM)
Video surveilance sure worked well in London (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Video surveilance sure worked well in London (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm just waiting... (Score:1)
Yet again idiots win! (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://newlibertarian.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Monday July 18 2005, @02:23PM)
looking at the root causes.Why does noone EVER mention in the media that by playing global corporate cop around the world we PISS people off? I can tell you right now that if the chinese or russians were over here, inevitably some americans would be suicide bombers against them.
Cause and effect.
It's sad to think we went from men like this:
"Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? Forbid it, Almighty God! I know not what course others may take; but as for me, give me liberty or give me death!" Patrick Henry, March 23, 1775.
or this :
"They that can give up essential liberty, to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety." - Benjamin Franklin
or this:
"If ye love wealth greater than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest for freedom, go home and leave us in peace. We seek not your council nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you, and may posterity forget that ye were our countrymen."
--Samuel Adams
To the SHEEPLE we have today.
I guess Franklin was right,
The deliberations of the Constitutional Convention of 1787 were held in strict secrecy. Consequently, anxious citizens gathered outside Independence Hall when the proceedings ended in order to learn what had been produced behind closed doors. The answer was provided immediately. A Mrs. Powel of Philadelphia asked Benjamin Franklin, "Well, Doctor, what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?" With no hesitation whatsoever, Franklin responded, "A republic, if you can keep it."
Re:You live in an ivory tower (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://newlibertarian.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Monday July 18 2005, @02:23PM)
No slippery slope? So holding an american citizen [goldsteinhowe.com]
indefinitely without trial is acceptable. (That's part of the Sixth amendment gone.)
Charged with an offense carrying six or less months in jail PER CHARGE? You have no right to a jury trial. [cnn.com]
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury. (I'd say that's the rest...)
Secret searches without a warrant? (ala Patriot act, administrative subpoenas) Thats the Fourth down.
Finally, I've got two more bits of advice.
First, YOU WILL NEVER be safe. Life is inherently unsafe. Deal with it. If in your preference warrantless searches are reasonable, fine, urge your representatives to CHANGE the Constitution. To pay lip service to the Constitution while shredding it is an injustice to your relatives who died bringing it into existence.
Second, we cannot choose our family, nor the circumstances we are born into. The real choice we do have is the ideals by which we live. You may choose a "safer" world in which you are prodded and probed, and generally treated like cattle.
If defending the principles of dignity, liberty and justice is your version of unrealistic and childish behavior so be it, I'm guilty as charged.
Not for you! (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://www.rogertheshrubber.net/)
Any wireless network underground, while helpful, would probably collapse under the traffic of a few hundred people in a packed train (assuming an incident occured during rush hour). Since you cannot predict an attack, it is likely that these circuits would be dedicated to emergency services from the start or switched over to emergency services should an incident occur, just like many main wireless traffic circuits were in London. The security of calling home to tell people you're ok should something happen from inside a tube just isn't there and never will be.
"Cameras" at JFK airport in NYC (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://www.golden-dumpling.org/)
The thing is the each egg shaped "camera" seemed to point with either a lens on one end the oval or a square shaped opening on the opposite side. The square shaped side I imagine has some other sort of detection ability. They looked big and expensive, and I was kind of curious what sort of tech goes into these.
Is anyone on slashdot working on these sorts of applications? Maybe someone could shed some light on what sort of sensory abilities these things have?
Good for NYC (Score:5, Interesting)
if only London had this... (Score:1)
(http://localhost:5800/)
What problem does this solve? (Score:1, Troll)
And this is needed because a piece of paper with "where each card reader is physically located" isn't sexy enough?
Officials would pinpoint the site, watch the attempted entry on a video monitor and send a security officer to check out the situation.
...because you can't just send a "security officer" in the first place? And do we really think that our intrepit Bad Dude will stick around to have a chat with the "security officer"?
In the second, a briefcase is left on a busy Midtown subway platform. As a camera beams live images, software can differentiate the moving people from the motionless package, sending off an alert about an unattended, suspicious object. Police officers with bomb-sniffing dogs would be sent to the platform.
...and if it actually is a bomb, by the time they've figured out "hey, we should go down there and check it out", it blows up. If it doesn't, it's just some guy's briefcase he absent-mindedly forgot on the platform.
Plus thanks to cell phone coverage, terrorists can now leave IED's with cell phones for activators on a train...
I'd rather they spend it on air conditioning (Score:2)
Talk about toxic.
But you still get mugged. (Score:2)
(http://www.obsolyte.com/ | Last Journal: Sunday January 02 2005, @06:59AM)
How can homeland security ever hope to thwart a terrorist, if they can't thwart a 15-year-old with a glock?
I don't think anybody feels safer in the subway, just try riding the 'F' train at midnight and you'll notice that it still has the same level of crime as pre-9/11.
Paranoia (Score:1)
Let's make everything as safe as possible. Coincidentally, the same technology that will "protect" us will also make us more susceptible to government surveillance. Come on, people: wake up. Our civil liberties are being rapidly chipped away every day under the guise of the government "protecting" us. ID cards, cameras in public places, the Patriot Act - when it all doesn't work, they'll use it as an excuse to have even more of these type of "utilities" to "fight" terror. I'm supposed to trust the same entity that gave us a national color-coded "Homeland Security Advisory System" with "protecting" me from an unnamed, ever-changing enemy? Of what utility is this - what does it measure, how scared I'm supposed to be?
Give me a break.
"None are so hopelessly enslaved as those who falsely believe they are free" - Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832)
The record. (Score:1)
Hmmm, Madrid comes to mind (Score:1)
(http://www.gregfordham.com/)
which would allow cellular phones to be used in case of emergency
...or to use cell phones to detonate those backpacks full of explosives.
Great for New York... (Score:3, Insightful)
(http://antiwar.com/)
Of course next time they might not target transit systems at all...
THIS is why its called ASYMMETRIC warfare.
You folks might want to check out Bruce Schneier's book "Beyond Fear", or back issues of Crypto-Gram (http://www.schneier.com/crypto-gram.html [schneier.com]).
Still, if the customer feels good - does it matter if its just a placebo? And shareholders of Lockheed Martin - woo hoo!
--
My slant on global affairs.
http://newtonsthirdlaw.blogspot.com/ [blogspot.com]
taxpayer money wasted (Score:1)
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/8660152/ [msn.com]
This is costing the city $2 million per week.
If you look at this page (New York MTA):
http://www.mta.nyc.ny.us/mta/ind-perform/per-nyct
You'll see that the subway system sees about 120 million riders per month with 3 customer accidents and injuries per million per month. That's 40 injuries per month from accidents. Sometimes these are things like fatalities caused from someone getting bumped off of an over-crowded subway platform during rush hour onto the tracks...
So the city spends $2 million per week to "fight terrorism on the subway" and $212 million for security cameras on the subway rather than actually making a difference a difference by improving the system. Go to some G-train subway stations in brooklyn. The structural steel girders are rusting out and the stations are in dire need of maintenance.
And how much money has our government spent starting wars in the middle east (first gulf war, troops in Saudi Arabia, current Iraq occupation)... hundreds of billions of dollars
And then people over there get pissed off and want to set off subway bombs, and then we pay for it again by dealing with an army of cops checking our bags on the subway.
If they want to make subway riders safer, spend money on safety and infrastructure -- not cops -- to reduce accidents. If the government wants to eradicate terrorism, stop spending money on killing people in the Middle East. But of course getting rid of terrorism isn't the issue -- the issue is control of the dwindling global reserves of oil and new business opportunities in the middle east for American companies.
And we as taxpayers have to pay for it, and I have to let cops search my bag if I want to ride the subway to work and pay for that too.
Out of proportion (Score:5, Insightful)
Consider how many people have been killed in automobile accidents, and how comparatively little public money gets spent 'preventing' that carnage.
There might not be another terrorist attack on US soil for the next decade, but I'll guarantee that more than 40,000 people will die on US roads next year.
Democracy and wasteful spending comment (Score:2)
Any issue which regards removing our privacy needs to be dealt with by a city/county referendum. That way it's not our representatives telling us what to do, so-to-speak.
Good news for the Surveillance Camera Players (Score:1)
(Last Journal: Sunday December 26 2004, @10:50AM)
Security Job Security (Score:2)
(http://slashdot.org/~Doc%20Ruby/journal | Last Journal: Thursday March 31 2005, @01:48PM)
more mta nonsense (Score:1)
money well spent (Score:1)
(http://www.vanillaafro.com/)
Cell phones (Score:1)
tin foil (Score:2, Funny)
(http://misondau.spaces.live.com/)
"under the guise"? (Score:1)
(http://www.geoffrobinson.net/)
Once again, lacking facts... (Score:1)
Re:The guise of anti-terrorism? (Score:2)
1. Cameras in subways
2.
3. Profit!
It's government contracting, so there is no second step. In fact, if Lockheed does it right, the first step really isn't required, either.
I kid, but I say this as one of those "slimy government contractors" working for a competitor in another sector. In reality, I don't think they're installing the cameras under the guise of anti-terrorism action with some nefarious intention, nor do I think that Lockheed is invading a passenger's privacy (on a subway platform? what privacy?).
Is Lockheed taking advantage of the situation, meaning a plump contract that was created out of equal shares necessity and fear? Sure. Why wouldn't they?
Re:Yet anothe PR bullshitter (Score:1, Insightful)
(http://www.commandlabs.com/)
How about the Soldiers in Afganistan and the Special Ops guys in Pakistan trying to find and kill the Al Qaeda leadership? Oops, we got distracted and forgot about Bin Laden!
Bullshit - Penn & Teller say so... (Score:3, Funny)
(Last Journal: Saturday December 09 2006, @10:46PM)
See Penn & Teller, Season 2, episode 2? Maybe... I forget which it was exactly, but I can say from personal experience that I have never contracted an STD from a NYC subway toilet!
Re:native son (Score:1)
I'd say they're about even. I used to live in the Loisada (at the time a predominantly Puerto Rican neighborhood). I witnessed beatings and murders and I learned to be afraid of the cops (even though I was a honky). Not paranoia, fear of getting shot. NYPD is an occupying army in the barrios, neck deep in the drug trade and a lot of them (like my entire precinct, the 7th) seemed to have no problem with capping someone who got in the way.
I agree that it probably won't accomplish much. But damn, it gives me the creeps.
MOD PARENT UP (Score:1)
Re:Headline is misleading (Score:1)
(http://www.goffee-freelance.co.uk/)
Re:What New York City reminds me of (Score:3, Insightful)
And I think this highlights why you WON'T win, and why the organized opposition of the Left is ineffective.
Materialism is not the motivation of historical change. Karl Marx was wrong. Empires are not created and destroyed to materially benefit the few. Materialism is an ancillary tool of control, both in the bestowing of bounty and the enforcement of famine. The only difference between capitalist and communism regimes is capitalists placate their masses with plenty of useless crap, and communists keep their people perpetually hungry. The great leaders of the past who will be remembered for all time, whether or Caesar Augustus, Henry VIII, Napoleon Bonaparte, or Adolf Hitler, all were motivated by much more than materialism.
I think you need to look a little deeper. What these fanatics gain who control the international system of finance, the multi-headed hydra of evil which has infected our world for the past century, is far different than simple wealth.
That said, the Left fails today because they offer nothing to the masses to fight for. People do not sacrifice their lives so that wealth allocated to the top 1% of the population can be redistributed to the bottom 99%.
Materialism is the enemy. The reduction of human pursuits, hopes, and dreams to the economists fantasy is what is destroying our spirit.
When you start attacking the ruling class of Harvard economics majors, perhaps then we will have a start. Until that time, you and every other rebellious anti-war leftist will fail to do anything but whine, and in the end you will lose.