Appenzell
Switzerland
A Daily Compendium
of Free-Market Thinking
The Daily Bell Newswire - It's FREE!    


News & Analysis

Smart Grid: Trojan Horse of the New World Order?

Wednesday, March 03, 2010 – by  Staff Report


This paper will demonstrate that the current crisis of capitalism is being used to implement a radical new economic system that will completely supplant it. This is not some new idea created in the bowels of the United Nations: It is a revitalized implementation of Technocracy that was thoroughly repudiated by the American public in 1933, in the middle of the Great Depression. The Technocrats have resurfaced, and they do not intend to fail a second time. Whether they succeed this time will depend upon the intended servants of Technocracy, the citizens of the world. Indeed, the dark horse of the New World Order is not Communism, Socialism or Fascism. It is Technocracy. ... This paper will now address the strategy, tactical requirements and PROGRESS of establishing an energy-based Technate in North America. "Technate" is the term used to describe the geographic region operated according to Technocracy. Thus, a North American Technate would include Canada, Mexico and the U.S. and they would all be under common control. The Technocracy Study Course, written by Howard Scott and M. King Hubbert in 1932, established a detailed framework for Technocracy in terms of energy production, distribution and usage. According to Scott and Hubbert, the distribution of energy resources must be monitored and measured in order for the system to work -- and this is the key: monitoring and measuring. – August Review

Dominant Social Theme: Technocracy is modern progress?

Free-Market Analysis: The August Review is back with another in-depth analysis of Technocracy and its applications entitled "Smart Grid: the Implementation of Technocracy?" As a result, we again depart from our usual format of analyzing mainstream media articles from both an elite promotional and free-market point of view in favor of this latest white paper. Those at The August Review have done readers a service by revealing the depth and breadth of the modern Technocratic movement and elaborations thereof. It seems, today, far advanced in certain European countries. In America, there is still time to stop it. Americans have done so before – back in the 1930s it turns out.

In a previous August Review white paper, (on which the Daily Bell was also pleased to report), the point was made that global warming was not merely going to create tax or trade opportunities but was likely intended to lead to an entirely new CURRENCY. You can read that article here: Incredible Real Reason for Carbon Trading. That article contains a link to the August Review's white paper, which was most well received. This one deserves a similar reception. It is not simply reporting what could be, it is sounding the alarm over what is happening NOW.

Technocratic plans, this latest Review white paper seems to show, have actually penetrated America and the West under other guises and are in some cases far advanced. The evidence is fairly clear and is reported in a clinical but unambiguous way. The paper begins by describing what is necessary to implement the Technocratic system, as follows:

The Technocracy Study Course, written by Howard Scott and M. King Hubbert in 1932, established a detailed framework for Technocracy in terms of energy production, distribution and usage. According to Scott and Hubbert, the distribution of energy resources must be monitored and measured in order for the system to work -- and this is the key: monitoring and measuring.

They wrote that the system must do the following things:

- Register on a continuous 24 hour-per-day basis the total net conversion of energy

- By means of the registration of energy converted and consumed, make possible a balanced load

- Provide a continuous inventory of all production and consumption

- Provide a specific registration of the type, kind, etc., of all goods and services, where produced and where used

- Provide specific registration of the consumption of each individual, plus a record and description of the individual. [Scott, Howard et al., Technocracy Study Source, p. 232]

In 1932, such technology did not exist. Time was on the Technocrat's side, however, because this technology does exist today, and it is being rapidly implemented to do exactly what Scott and Hubbert specified: Namely, to exhaustively monitor, measure and control every ampere of energy delivered to consumers and businesses on a system-wide basis.

Having established the above, the paper turns to defining the Technocrat vision as it exists presently. It turns out that this vision not only remains viable, it is actually EXTANT and has been repackaged into something called Smart Grid, as follows:

Smart Grid is a broad technical term that encompasses the generation, distribution and consumption of electrical power, with an inclusion for gas and water as well. America's aging power grid is increasingly fragile and inefficient. Smart Grid is an initiative that seeks to completely redesign the power grid using advanced digital technology, including the installation of new, digital meters on every home and business in the U.S.

These digital meters provide around-the-clock monitoring of a consumer's energy consumption using continuous 2-way communication between the utility and the consumer's property. Furthermore, meters will be able to communicate with electrical devices within the residence to gather consumption data and to control certain devices directly without consumer intervention.

According to a U.S. Department of Energy publication:

"The Department of Energy has been charged with orchestrating the wholesale modernization of our nation's electrical grid... Heading this effort is the Office of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability. In concert with its cutting edge research and energy policy programs, the office's newly formed, multi-agency Smart Grid Task Force is responsible for coordinating standards of development, guiding research and development projects, and reconciling the agendas of a wide range of stakeholders." (See The Smart Grid: An Introduction)

This is a relatively new initiative, but it is racing forward at breakneck speed. The Office of Electricity Delivery was created in 2003 under President George W. Bush, and elevated in stature in 2007 by creating the position of Assistant Secretary of Electricity Delivery and Energy Reliability to head it.

It is not clearly stated who "charged" the Department of Energy to this task, but since the Secretary of Energy answers directly to the President, it is assumed that it was a directive from the President. There certainly was no Congressional directive or mandate.

And what of the IMPLEMENTATION? The Review comments on that as well:

On October 27, 2009, the Obama administration unveiled its Smart Grid plan by awarding $3.4 billion awarded to 100 Smart Grid projects. According to the Department of Energy's press release, these awards will result in the installation of: more than 850 sensors called 'Phasor Measurement Units" to monitor the overall power grid nationwide:

- 200,000 smart transformers

- 700 automated substations (about 5 percent of the nation's total)

- 1,000,000 in-home displays

- 345,000 load control devices in homes.

This is the "kick-start" of Smart Grid in the U.S. On January 8, 2010, President Obama unveiled an additional $2.3 billion Federal funding program for the "energy manufacturing sector" as part of the $787 billion American Reinvestment and Recovery Act. Funding had already been awarded to 183 projects in 43 states, pending Obama's announcement. One such project in the northwest is headed by Battelle Memorial Institute, covering five states and targeting 60,000 customers. The project was actually developed by the Bonneville Power Administration (BPA), a federal agency underneath the Department of Energy. Since it is pointedly illegal for a federal agency to apply for federal funds, BPA passed the project off to Battelle, a non-profit and non-governmental organization (NGO), which was promptly awarded $178 million.

But Smart Grid is not simply an American phenomenon. The August Review white paper traces the movement abroad:

The UNEP report mentioned above reveals that "15 percent of the fiscal stimulus funds committed for 2009-2010, which exceed $3.1 trillion, can be regarded as green in nature... most green components are oriented towards energy efficiency and renewable energies in a variety of sectors." A BusinessWeek article, "How Italy Beat the World to a Smarter Grid," stated on November 16, 2009 that "After several false starts, 2010 finally could be the year when smart meters go global." Indeed, it is:

- Italy has already implemented Smart Grid technology in 85 percent of its homes nationwide

- earth2tech.com reports that Smart Grid will generate $200 billion of global investment in the next few years

- The International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) has laid out a global roadmap to insure interoperability of Smart Grid systems between nations

- Global companies are rushing to gain their share of the global Smart Grid market: IBM, Siemens, GE, Cisco, Panasonic, Kyocera, Toshiba, Mitsubishi, etc.

- China is spending $7.32 billion to build out Smart Grid in Asia

- Other countries with Smart Grid pilot projects already launched include Germany, France, England, Russia, Japan, India, Australia, South Africa and a host of others. Regional organizations such as SMARTGRIDS Africa have been set up to promote Smart Grid in smaller countries.

Thus, the global rush is on. In every case, Smart Grid is being accelerated by government stimulus spending. As is the case in the U.S., there was little, if any, preexisting or latent demand for Smart Grid technology. Demand has been artificially created by the respective governments of each country.

Having established the history, existence and implementation of Smart Grid, the August Review places it in chilling context in a lengthy and provocative conclusion:

Smart Grid meets 100 percent of the Technocracy's original requirements as described above. In other words, it will monitor and control both delivery and consumption of energy and other green resources such as water and gas. The Smart Grid initiative was developed and funded by government agencies and NGO's. It was the Energy Department's Bonneville Power Authority that invented the concept in the 1990's. It was the Department of Energy's Pacific Northwest National Laboratory that invented the Grid Friendly Appliance Controller. It was the Federal Administration that showered billions of dollars over the private sector to jump-start the nationwide initiative to implement Smart Grid in every community.

If the Federal government had not been the initial and persistent driver, would Smart Grid exist at all? It is highly doubtful. Following the same pattern as the U.S., many other industrialized nations are implementing Smart Grid at the same time, using their own stimulus money. This synchronized implementation is certainly by design, and as such, it implies that there must be a designer. Who might be providing such top-down coordination on a global basis must be saved for another paper. One thing is certain: The technology being purchased world-wide all originated in the United States and is being marketed by the same global corporations as mentioned above.

Lastly, there is an assumption throughout Smart Grid literature that the Federal Administration will have full visibility of all data within the Smart Grid, even down to the individual household. They will also be in a position to set national, regional and local distribution and consumption policies, such as your "fair share" of available energy, gas and water. International standards created for Smart Grid will also enable the U.S. Smart Grid to be connected seamlessly with Canada and Mexico, thus providing a comprehensive North American energy management and distribution system.

There are differences between the August Review's perception of the elite and our own. But there is without a doubt a group of individuals (Anglo-American-based) implementing a broad gamut of strategies intended to control as fully as possible the lives and fortunes of Western citizens – certainly to begin with. But this "elite" likely does not intend to stop at energy, or so The August Review shows us. The idea, apparently, is to monitor (and control) the consumption of all items necessary to survival.

The dominant social themes that have been flogged throughout the 20th century – overpopulation, peak oil, the scarcity of potable water – all are intended to justify an upcoming technology-driven regulatory scarcity. Naturally, there will likely be taxes involved but there may also be (or so it is intended) a level of criminalization when it comes to even basic necessities. It is most unfortunate that this vision now dovetails apparently with that of the leaders of China whom, it would seem, enthusiastically endorse the technocratic vision, which means the movement (and its implementation) is truly global.

We can't resist pointing out as we have before that M. King Hubbert, the initial author of the "peak oil" meme, turns out to be a driving Technocratic force. We would hope this would be enough to discredit the fear-based peak oil meme once and for all. He very obviously had an ulterior motive for advertising potential energy scarcity. His speculations were intended to provide a rationale for metering and measuring energy consumption and to otherwise advance his strange economic theories – including "non-market economics." ("This includes unilateral giving such as gifts and bilateral giving, meaning a person gives a gift expecting to be repaid at some unspecified time." – Wikipedia)

While such plans as that of the Technocrats are real and, in some cases, fairly well advanced, we will end our summary of this latest August Review white paper by pointing out that you, dear reader, would not be aware of it, or us, or them, without the Internet. The Internet, in our opinion, is a great equalizer for citizens of the West when it comes to those who would impose such plans as those presented above. It is a wonderful knowledge-spreading device. It likely is not so controllable as some fear. It is making a difference. It is derailing or at least making more difficult much of what seems to have been intended.

Conclusion: We would hope that those concerned by the re-emergence and implementation of Technocracy would help spread the word. Smart Grid would seem to be one more initiative by the current American administration that needs to be confronted. In fact, the Obama administration's involvement in the implementation of the major strategic goals of an obscure 70-year-old movement is apparently one more indication of powerful and devious currents swirling deeply beneath American politics in the 21st century. Things are not necessarily as they seem.

The entire August Review white paper may be read here: Smart Grid: The Implementation of Technocracy?

Post Feedback

We look forward to reading your feedback. All comments are automatically posted. However, please note that any posts containing harassment, vulgarity, personal attacks or those which are deemed to be of a violent nature are not welcomed and will either not appear or be removed.






View Feedback

Posted by Iddy on 3/3/2010 3:16:55 AM

Yes this is true. One company National Grid whic bought out the Power company here is based in London that is interesting. Smart grid is a big seller. Problem... greed there is money to be made. SO the public is lured in.

Remote control, people are thrilled with the idea of leaving the office at 5 pm but before they leave the can get on the internet and set their hot hub temp. so it is bubbly and warm when they get home. Turn on the lights at home while on vacation in the bahamas. Yep this ones gonna be a hard one for sure. They will turn of power to whole areas for national security reasons.

It may be true that because man will not govern himslef he has to make a robot to do it for him. Look around I see robot traders, robot girlfreinds, robot pets. it is a growing field and the people love robots.Can you imagine the whole earth run by one giant roboting grid, all interconnected.

Posted by Juanito on 3/3/2010 4:13:59 AM

In order for our civilizations to thrive, we must have sufficient, if not abundant energy. And the more energy we have, the wealthier we are and the more freedoms we possess. Thus a policy to limit our energy consumptions, which is what monitoring implies, also implies curtailing our freedoms.

There are several other ways we can solve our energy problem. First, we can provide more energy. This can be achieved through a variety of new and proven technologies: geothermal, ocean currents, wind (on a much more individual and broader scale), new forms of nuclear reactors, solar, gas, coal, with a dash of the singular genius Tesla.

Second, we can employ new ideas. Buckminster Fuller comments in "Critical Path" by using maximum technology and minimal energy. He thought Iceland's geothermal energy could power the world via a world-wide grid. He envisioned very economical spherical houses and new social orders.

And as a surprise bonus, since we would live like millionaires in this system, populations would naturally decline as a result of this new prosperity.

Posted by Jores on 3/3/2010 6:50:51 AM

Thank you DB for the "heads up!". What is the citizenry supposed to do with that knowledge now? Contact our local political representative? You think they are answerable to us?

Posted by Beverlee on 3/3/2010 11:09:37 AM

In 1971 sci-fi writer Theordore Sturgeon published a short story called Brownshoes. The protagonist - "Mensch" - discovers an inexpensive energy generator that every individual could have in his home and car (no grid necessary). The plot-line involves how Mensch decides to release the invention to the public in a manner that circumvents the technocrats. He joins a church, becomes involved in the social network of his town, etc. He buys a small existing company and improves a mundane appliance, meanwhile patenting the essential methodology for the generator. Quietly, he secures the invention and then publishes it for anyone to copy. The underlying theme: by taking the understated non-threatening approach, he lives.

Posted by Patrick Wood on 3/3/2010 11:12:06 AM

This is from a reader who lives in Switzerland...

"In Aargau (Canton of Switzerland) where we live the power supplied to our apartment is restricted for several hours (late morning to early afternoon). We can use all electronic devices except the washing machine. How they do it, I don't know. But the washing machine cuts off if it was started just prior to a certain time and resumes working when the restricted time period is over.

This was totally freaky to us at first when we moved from Germany to Switzerland. Now Joy had to adjust her washing habits accordingly. Interestingly enough, there is an atomic power plant just up the road from us."We were not told of this when we moved here and a Swiss friend of ours who help us to move in didn't know about it either. But he lives in a different Canton."


Reply from the Daily Bell:

Thanks. We'll look into it.

Posted by Lance E. Schultz on 3/3/2010 11:36:33 AM

I had the disfortune of attending a major US energy summit with Mr. Gingrich as its venerable keynote speaker who waxed endlessly about the absolute necessity for which to implement such draconian control measures.

The true origins for this archaic and despotic mindset reaches far beyond the 1930s back to the Age of Atlantis and the demonic principle that all men are created equal and an equal share are all men due. Both nihillistic concepts should be duly and wholly rejected for the very continued survival of man.

Posted by Gary J. Mallast on 3/3/2010 12:11:21 PM

"Smart Grid" and Technocracy would quickly break down for the same reasons, as enunciated in Austrian School theory, that all other forms of socialistic central planning break down. I don't care how elaborate the technology.

The fundamental "things" in economics are human choices and human valuations which are ordinal and qualitative psychological entities and relationships which cannot be measured. They can only quantified by free, peaceful exchanges against a monetary unit.Like all socialist schemes they suppose an ideal state of the market independent of the actual state of supply and demand. A self-contradictory notion.

Certainly there is a need for constant improvement in energy production as in all forms of production. If improved computerization helps make distribution more efficient fine and dandy. But that is by no means certain as was shown by the great Lake Erie black out a few years ago when a single overload in Ohio triggered a computerized shutdown of power systems all the way around Lake Erie.

At any rate, such upgrades are best left up to power company officials who have some idea what they are doing and not arrogant politicians and policy analysts.

There is no grass roots demand for or understanding of these proposals. If word gets out, through such publications as The Daily Bell, they will soon hit heavy seas.

Posted by Freaked Out on 3/3/2010 1:31:39 PM

Please read this article. This is very relevant to this power elite meme. This news needs to be spread. The funny thing is that I was going to submit this article to the Bell to see their insight into this.

marketoracle.co.uk/Article17568.html


Reply from the Daily Bell:

Thanks. Great article. We've been writing pieces of it.

Posted by Antonio on 3/3/2010 11:53:24 PM

Gentlemen,Is the M. King Hubbert mentioned in the report the same man that came up with the Peak Oil theory? My hasty research indicates that he is, and this makes for a very interesting coincidence. Or, maybe not.


Reply from the Daily Bell:

We have noted that he is.

Posted by Antonio on 3/3/2010 11:57:43 PM

Gentlemen,If I had read a little further before commenting, I would have seen that my question was already answered. Very interesting article.


Reply from the Daily Bell:

You're welcome.

Posted by MetaCynic on 3/4/2010 12:52:37 AM

This remote control technology will most certainly morph into something wicked in the spirit of the notorious No Fly list. All sorts of enemies of the State will suddenly find some or even all of their power turned off. To have it restored, they will be charged an exorbitant fee and required to pay to attend State approved re-education classes designed to improve their attitudes. Something like a national ID can be used to implement NO lists of all kinds.

For example, every imaginable transaction can require permission from the government involving the scanning of one's ID card. People are already comfortable with such a procedure when scanning credit cards for authorization for purchases. There will be NO Shopping, NO Banking, NO Working, NO Renting, NO Gasoline - in short NO Living lists. With a few keystrokes, an anonymous bureaucrat can slowly starve the most unrepentant of enemies of the State. The Power Elite will then be in a position to enslave and rule us remotely without the need for messy, old fashioned arrests, beatings and jailings. This will be a police state with a friendly smile and no visible blood on its hands.

Posted by Adrian W on 3/4/2010 4:04:20 PM

Interesting. Start it off as a comedic soft sell....

The tune will change once they force their foot in the door no doubt.

Click to View Link


Reply from the Daily Bell:

That's how it seems to work. Thanks for the link.

Posted by Vicky on 3/4/2010 6:03:37 PM

The Smart Grid is just one of the neo-Technocratic control systems for the 21st Century. There are more revelations of the technocracy to come hopefully. August Review deserves more than kudos for this reporting. They deserve high honors.


Reply from the Daily Bell:

Yes, do you think they will be nominated for a Pulitzer?

Posted by HighTechRedReck on 3/7/2010 12:25:57 PM

Another eye opening article....I am personally tired of these "Top Down" solutions to non-problems. I think "Top Down" is the sine qua non of a meme. After all are we not just idiots waiting for solutions from the brilliant elites?"

We the people" is a bottom up approach to life. Our founders had it right......I am going to be a delegate to the county republican convention in Midland Texas. I am not a cool-aid drinking republican. One has to start some where. I plan on bring up the "smart grid" initiative as some thing that must be opposed in the party platform. I am open to ideas of this....Thanks..


Reply from the Daily Bell:

Thank you. You might ask Gov. Perry why he supported the transcontinental highway to Canada and Mexico while you're at it.

Posted by Avenist on 3/9/2010 7:56:09 AM

Of course when you exceed your allotment of resources you will have to buy credits from third world countries and pay the proto-NWG a transaction fee. Welcome to Egalatopia.

Posted by Rickeagle on 6/4/2010 2:36:44 AM

Watch out for the evil "telephone system" that is being foisted upon the American people who may not know that their phone calls may be tapped and information about their bowel and bladder habits may be found out!

Post Feedback

We look forward to reading your feedback. All comments are automatically posted. However, please note that any posts containing harassment, vulgarity, personal attacks or those which are deemed to be of a violent nature are not welcomed and will either not appear or be removed.








[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

News & Analysis
07/29/10 UK Stagflation - Now It Begins
07/29/10 Inflation - India's Turn
07/28/10 Is It a Deflationary Depression?
07/28/10 Comes a Blond Stranger ...
07/27/10 The Spreading Chinese Inflation
07/27/10 The War Falls Apart?
Guest Editorials
07/29/10 Protecting Your IRA - Part 2: Getting Your IRA Out of Town, by Terry Coxon
07/29/10 Gold Basis Screwed, by Dr. Antal Fekete
07/28/10 A Lopsided Warning, by Dr. Tibor Machan

Subscribe to the
Daily Bell Newswire

It's FREE!
Timely email notification of...
  • Breaking News
  • Feature Interviews
  • Guest Editorials
  • White Papers
  • eBooks & Shorts
  • Special FREE offers
...and much much more!
Exclusive Interviews
07/25/10 Grant Havers on Libertarianism, Religion and the Role of the Church in a Free Society
07/18/10 Paul Craig Roberts on Glass-Steagall, Free Trade and the Dangers of an Evolving 'Oligarchy of Private Interests'
07/11/10 Harry Schultz on the Power Elite, Free Markets, the Internet and Why Gold Is Going Much Higher
© Copyright 2008 - 2010 Appenzeller Business Press AG (ARBP). All Rights Reserved. The Daily Bell is an informative compendium of independent economic views and analysis, which is published by ARBP. The information contained in the Daily Bell is for informational purposes only, is impersonal and not tailored to the investment needs of any particular person and should not be construed as financial or investment advice. ARBP does not accept any liability or responsibility for, nor does it verify the accurateness of the information being provided in the Daily Bell. Daily Bell articles and interviews may include the contributions of several Daily Bell editors and may require factual editing after their initial post. Readers of the Daily Bell or any affiliated or linked sources or sites must accept the responsibility for performing their own due diligence before acting on any of the information provided within the report regardless of the source. In addition to proprietary, internally generated content, the Daily Bell publishes guest editorials from a selection of free-market thinkers, which may have been reprinted elsewhere and are not necessarily representative of ARBP's editorial views. Copyright is attributed to the author of any guest editorials featured at the Daily Bell, unless noted otherwise. ARBP often uses images licensed from Getty Images on the Swiss Confidential website. To unsubscribe from the Daily Bell, click here.