John J. Stanton (1956–2023) was an independent journalist, author, and a former teacher in the Washington, DC metropolitan area. His work focused largely on national security and cultural topics, including writings on these matters and others over a 35 year time period. He covered a wide range of topics from cyberterrorism to orphan nukes and American education and healthcare. His work has been cited in academia and military studies extensively. He designed and led a graduate level seminar titled National Security in the 21st Century at a private school in Northern Virginia.[1] He was suspended from the Arlington Public School System as a school-based substitute for supporting "Putin's logic", based on Putin's perception of the threat to Russia's security posed by NATO expansion and U.S. military and economic support for the Ukrainian government.[2] He also encouraged students to read as many sources as possible on the ongoing conflict, to include "Russian propaganda," plus the New York Times, Washington Post, and dozens of other news outlets pro and con on the war. A video of his remarks was taken by a student in the class. He did not appeal his termination.[3]
Subjects covered
Inside Sputnik News Agency
In April 2018, Stanton, who had been Sputnik News Agency's Pentagon Correspondent for roughly two years, published a report highly critical of Sputnik News, Sputnik Radio, and RIA Novosti, declaring that the organizations were part of a larger Russian Information Warfare Operation. His public findings were part of an insider research effort while at Sputnik on behalf of the US government.[4]
In May 2018 PBS NewsHour published an article in which Stanton said that Sputnik mixes "real with unreal" and uses "dubious sources." He also said that to pin down what he really found problematic was difficult because proving disinformation can be impossibly slippery.[5]
Cyberwarfare and technology commentary
Stanton wrote on cyberwarfare/information warfare in the 1994–2000 timeframe when the Bill Clinton Administration was pushing cyber defense initiatives.[6] Other articles discussed technical matters such as electromagnetic pulse affects, urban warfare, orphan nukes[7] and intelligence after 9/11.[8] He presented papers on Asynchronous Transfer Mode, Strategic Cultural Analysis and Evolutionary Cognitive Neuroscience.[9] He is the author of "Broadband Communications Networks and Multimedia: Public and Private Sector Initiatives", a paper for the 19th Annual Meeting of the Technology Transfer Society in 1994.
His last work on the US Army Human Terrain System was titled Last Waltz in Saga of US Army Intelligence Program published by the Sri Lanka Guardian, Pravda, Dissident Voice and Scoop-NZ in December 2013.
Stanton's analysis on homeland security issues, following the events of September 11, 2001, was carried by Investors Business Daily,[26] CBS Evening News, ABC and CNN.
Healthcare in The United States
Stanton's experience with the troubled US healthcare system in the state of Virginia was documented in 2022 in an article titled Surviving America's Industrial Manufacturing, Quality Centric Healthcare System,[27]
An earlier experience in 2015 was documented in Home Healthcare Now titled Human Touch Trumps Technology.
[28]
Publications
Books
Tectonic Geopolitical, Social and Cultural Shifts in the USA. 2022. p. 134. ISBN979-8367768558.
Dispatches from the American Madhouse. 2022. p. 151. ISBN979-8415377350.
Stanton, John (2021). How the World Ends. Amazon Digital Services LLC - KDP Print US. p. 98. ISBN979-8528380650.
Stanton, John Jeffrey (2020). America 2020: A Nation in Turmoil. Independently Published. p. 126. ISBN979-8619455953.
Stanton, John (2016). US Military's Progressiveness Leaves Civil Society Behind. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. p. 154. ISBN978-1539142416.
Stanton, John (2015). La máquina de guerra caníbal. Melusina. p. 136. ISBN978-84-15373-27-8.
Stanton, John (2013). US Army's Human Terrain System 2008–2013: The Program from Hell. CreateSpace Independent Publishing Platform. p. 207. ISBN978-1491063927.
Cyber Noodles, Orphan Nukes and the Failure of the US National Security State. 2013. Amazon's Create Space (self publishing). ISBN978-1484899045.
The Raptor's Eye: JIEDDO, MISO, General P and the Prophet Smith. USA: Amazon. 2012. p. 134. ISBN978-1480276413.
General David Petraeus' Favorite Mushroom: Inside the US Army's Human Terrain System. Wiseman Publishing. 2009. p. 189. ISBN978-9089630193. OCLC677926603.
^The articles are available at Dr. Maximilian C. Forte's Zero Anthropology and John Young's Cryptome. Intelligence Daily and Pravda have also carried the works as has the Sri Lanka Guardian.
^Stanton, John (September 1995). "Silence is not golden: U.S. government efforts to establish national information security strategies". The Journal of Technology Transfer. 20 (2): 8–11. doi:10.1007/BF02280400. S2CID154901106.
^ abStanton, J. J. (2002). "Terror in Cyberspace: Terrorists Will Exploit and Widen the Gap Between Governing Structures and the Public". American Behavioral Scientist. 45 (6): 1017–1032. doi:10.1177/0002764202045006006. S2CID144315286.