The remote island
of St Helena has recently been
opened up to globalist culture in a very sudden and extreme way thanks to its new
airport, see background links below. It is not a coincidence that the island's
first internet connection was established around the same time that the airport
was being planned and built because physical and communication connections tend
to go hand in hand. However this connection is very poor by developed Western standards.
It consists of a 20 mbps satellite link via a single 25 foot dish antenna which
is shared by the entire population of over four thousand people. It is also not
cheap, with data packages ranging from 750 Mb at 1 Mbps for £14 a month, to a
maximum 21 Gb at 2 Mbps for £164 a month. The average Saint only earns £5500
a year, so prices are way over most people's budgets. The internet service
provider is a cartel called Sure South Atlantic and it provides satellite links
to all the British Overseas
Territories in the region; St
Helena, Tristan da Cunha, Ascension
Island and the Falkland Islands. There is a
campaign being led by a man called Christian von der Ropp to improve that. He
represents A Human Right, a non-profit pressure group that is trying to advance
communications technology in the Third World. What he
hopes will happen is that St Helena will be hooked up to a new oceanic cable
that is being laid south eastwards across the South Atlantic Ocean bed from
Brazil to South Africa. If this can be done it will make the island's internet
connection far faster, more reliable and more affordable. This will help with
attracting tourists because visitors will be able to call home and upload
photographs etc while on the island. It will aid with education and health.
More electronic money will be possible, and I've covered this before in the
background link. Saints will be able to get involved with the various internet
industries; from games development to finance to media. At the same time there are
concerns over Sure South Atlantic that most people living away from St
Helena will recognize immediately. What happens when the interests
of public welfare and corporate domination collide? Van der Ropp believes Sure
is overcharging the Saints, taking advantage of the fact that there are far
more of them than on the other islands under their licence. Perhaps they are
exploiting St Helena's "limited digital literacy".
Regular HPANWO readers will know that I call for a special place in hell for
anybody who does that, see: https://hpanwo-tv.blogspot.com/2020/02/humiliation-reply-to-stefan-molyneux.html!
It is possible Sure are projecting their future profit estimates and thinking
that with a better connection on St Helena the high prices will have to drop,
or the company may even fall by the wayside entirely because of competition
from bigger telecom firms. Therefore it is worrying that the St
Helena Government are thinking of renewing Sure's contract.
Source: http://connectsthelena.org/news/Response-to-New-Telecoms-Policy-St-Helena-Held-Hostage-by-Foreign-owned-Monopoly-35.
For the Saints, especially the older ones, this
international corporocratic tussle must look strange. It's something that
happens all the time in the outside world, indeed I've been caught up in
something similar myself, see:
https://hpanwo-hpwa.blogspot.com/2018/01/carillion-collapse-update.html.
We're used to it and we understand it perfectly. We are equipped with the
psychological and cultural defences for dealing with it. It's something we've
evolved over generations as the European pastoral economy gave way to the
industrial revolution and the rise of the state pseudo-capitalist alliance. The
residents of
St Helena have had to undergo that same education
process in the space of barely a decade. Considering the steepness of their
learning curve, they have done remarkably well as it is. Sadly, this is a
problem I predicted long before the first flight touched down at the new
airport. The Saints must be protected as much as possible. So well done to Christian
von der Ropp for standing up for the people of
St Helena.
I hope they can all soon join the rest of the world as equal and respected participants
in the internet age.
See here for
background: http://hpanwo.blogspot.com/2020/02/st-helena-airport-portal.html.
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