Related Articles

2 Comments

  1. 1

    Kristin Kerr

    “but it was during the Bush administration when the decision was made to begin building national-international computer systems as a product of government for the benefit of private business” Oh my God Vicky you can not be MORE wrong. This idea, this plan for the project was actually started LONG before this. I know this, because my father worked on it, as did many other men and women like yourself, system analysts. My father after what to me appeared to have not slept in a week tried explaining this new “systems” to me, I was sixteen so this had to be around 1983 or 4. “Everything will be systems” Although knowing my father was a systems analyst many of the terms and verbiage was lost on me a sixteen year old, but anyway this had to be 1983 or 4. From what I gathered, and how he tried to explain, EVERY thing will be systems, everything, from work to home to managing systems to city to everything. OK Dad I think was with IBM. I wish he were here to explain further but sadly passed on few years ago. This was very clearly described to me as my father was very excited to be part of this whole new way of doing things, he used different words. If someone were to research this further, maybe IBM in Southern Calif 1980s and what was being worked on, maybe a clearer picture could be brought out.

    Reply
    1. 1.1

      Vicky Davis

      As much as I would like to, I can’t include an entire history of anything to do with systems in a single article. I actually don’t think that most people can handle the amount of information I present in a single article on anything so for each article, I have to choose a starting point for the documentation I’m presenting. Also, there is a difference between corporate plans – IBM for example, and government action to change the way the government does business. With “counting – computing machines”, you would have to go back to the 1890 census.

      https://www.ibm.com/history/punched-card-tabulator

      This article is about the use of computer systems incentivizing statistical fraud as a matter of intentional governmental policy and its not the first article I’ve written on the subject. I wrote this one in 2007 –

      http://www.channelingreality.com/NAU/Census_Naics/what_does_it_mean_to_be_a_jelly.htm

      Sometime after writing that article, I found the reason for “shortage shouting” for computer programmers and analysts was because they reclassified mainframe computer people was being white collar professionals in the same category as CEOs and keymen of corporations. They defined new categories (new names) for PC jockeys and networked systems. Same concept as the jelly bean story.

      1990 was the beginning of the development of global systems. In 1990 President George H.W. Bush announced that they were bundling all transportation systems under a single agency – Transportation Department. When the announcement was made, Sam Skinner (former IBM Rep) was by his side as the announcement was made. Skinner was the first Transportation Secretary under the new structure. Bush also kicked off the project to build a national medical records system and he kicked off “education reform”. He kicked off the negotiations for the NAFTA agreement – breaching our borders.

      So, I hope you understand now, I wasn’t missing anything. I was making a point about statistical fraud as a matter of government policy.

      Reply

Leave a Reply to Vicky Davis Cancel Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *