Puppet MastersS

Attention

Weaponizing one crisis after another

"If, as it seems, we are in the process of becoming a totalitarian society in which the state apparatus is all-powerful, the ethics most important for the survival of the true, free, human individual would be: cheat, lie, evade, fake it, be elsewhere, forge documents, build improved electronic gadgets in your garage that'll outwit the gadgets used by the authorities." โ€” Philip K. Dick
The Surveillance State
© 21st Century Wire
Emboldened by the citizenry's inattention and willingness to tolerate its abuses, the government has weaponized one national crisis after another in order to expands its powers.

The war on terror, the war on drugs, the war on illegal immigration, asset forfeiture schemes, road safety schemes, school safety schemes, eminent domain: all of these programs started out as legitimate responses to pressing concerns and have since become weapons of compliance and control in the police state's hands.

It doesn't even matter what the nature of the crisis might be โ€” civil unrest, the national emergencies, "unforeseen economic collapse, loss of functioning political and legal order, purposeful domestic resistance or insurgency, pervasive public health emergencies, and catastrophic natural and human disasters" โ€” as long as it allows the government to justify all manner of government tyranny in the so-called name of national security.

Now we find ourselves on the brink of a possible coronavirus contagion.

I'll leave the media and the medical community to speculate about the impact the coronavirus will have on the nation's health, but how will the government's War on the Coronavirus impact our freedoms?

For a hint of what's in store, you can look to China โ€” our role model for all things dystopian โ€” where the contagion started.

In an attempt to fight the epidemic, the government has given its surveillance state apparatus โ€” which boasts the most expansive and sophisticated surveillance system in the world โ€” free rein. Thermal scanners using artificial intelligence (AI) have been installed at train stations in major cities to assess body temperatures and identify anyone with a fever. Facial recognition cameras and cell phone carriers track people's movements constantly, reporting in real time to data centers that can be accessed by government agents and employers alike. And coded color alerts (red, yellow and green) sort people into health categories that correspond to the amount of freedom of movement they're allowed: "Green code, travel freely. Red or yellow, report immediately."

Bad Guys

Donna doth protest too much? Brazile tells GOP chair to 'go to hell' for saying DNC would 'rig' convention against Sanders

Donna Brazille
AFP / Getty Images North America / Kamil Krzaczynski
Democratic strategist Donna Brazile lashed out at GOP chairwoman Ronna McDaniel after the latter said a brokered convention in July would be "rigged against" frontrunner Bernie Sanders. Brazile told her to "go to hell" - twice.

McDaniel told Fox News that it looked like the Democratic process was "leaning towards potentially a brokered convention which will be rigged against Bernie if those superdelegates have their way."

A brokered convention scenario would occur if Sanders secures a plurality of delegates, but not an outright majority. This would allow 'superdelegates' more control over the chosen candidate - and Sanders could lose out to a candidate more palatable to party top dogs, even if he won more primaries and overall votes.

Asked to comment on McDaniel's assessment, Brazile - who joined Fox News as a contributor last year - let loose in a fiery rant, warning Republicans to "stay the hell out of our race."

Comment: See also: Clusterf*ck Nation: Swamp-O-Rama


Arrow Down

EU's payment channel for bypassing Iran sanctions registers zero transactions - Iranian ambassador

Tehran
© Reuters / Nazanin TabatabaeeFILE PHOTO: A woman walks past an anti US mural on the former US embassy's wall in Tehran
Over a year since its launch, the EU's INSTEX financial mechanism - designed to facilitate trade with sanctions-hit Iran - has not carried out any operations, Iran's ambassador to Russia Kazem Jalali has revealed.

"The Europeans have developed the INSTEX mechanism, but to date, as I'm talking to you, no transactions has been made," Jalali said during a meeting with Konstantin Kosachev, chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee in the Russian senate.

The special purpose vehicle INSTEX was established by France, Germany and the United Kingdom in January 2019 in an attempt to rescue the 2015 nuclear agreement with Iran. The move came after the US, which used to be one of the parties of the landmark deal, unilaterally abandoned the accord and restored tough sanctions on the Islamic Republic. After the trade channel became operational, six more EU states - Belgium, Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, Norway and Sweden - decided to join it.

Comment: It's clear which countries are still obedient to the US:


Star of David

Netanyahu claims victory in election, but remains shy of needed majority

Netanyahu
© EFE
By Tuesday morning, more than 90 percent of the ballots had been counted in Israel's unprecedented third consecutive election, and Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was celebrating what he called a "massive victory."

His right-wing Likud party was poised to celebrate the party's strongest ever showing in an election, with 29.35% of the points, representing around 36 seats in Israel's parliament, the Knesset.

"We stood against vast forces. They already eulogized us. Our opponents said the Netanyahu era is over. But together we flipped the script. We turned lemons into lemonade," Netanyahu, Israel's longest serving prime minister, said in a speech Tuesday morning, according to the Times of Israel.

While the final vote tallies are expected to come in by Tuesday night, Netanyahu's rival Benny Gantz and his Blue and White (Kahol Lavan) party were projected to win 26.34% of the votes, which could represent around 32 Knesset seats โ€” a drop from the last election, where they secured 35 seats.

The Arab Joint list managed to remain the third largest party in the Knesset, by securing an estimated 15 Knesset seats, a bump up from their previous 13 seats.

Bullseye

Afghan peace deal puts politics ahead of process as Trump takes credit for ending US' longest conflict

Taliban
© Wali Sabawoon/NurPhoto via Getty ImagesTaliban fighters and villagers celebrate the peace deal signed between US and Taliban.
The Trump administration, anxious to be able to claim that it fulfilled its campaign pledge to end war in Afghanistan, pressed for a signed peace deal, leaving it to the Afghan government and the Taliban to hammer out the details.

The ink was barely dry on the historic US-Taliban Peace Agreement, however, when the Taliban announced the ceasefire that underpinned the agreement was off. At issue are 5,000 prisoners held by the Afghan government whose release is seen as a precondition for intra-Afghan talks on the future of Afghanistan. The Afghan government had not played a part in drafting the peace plan, and its decision not to release the prisoners was seen as a statement of sovereignty. At the end of the day, however, the Afghan government has no real choice but to comply.

Comment: It's a deal not a plan - a 'promise in exchange for' - a compromise by each party in order to create a gain for the whole. Regardless the politics, the tallies, the inferences of power plays, what is important is the change of mindsets and the efforts put forth to end this war. After 14 years, there are no winners.


Jet4

Escalation in Idlib: Turkey confirms it downed Syrian fighter jet

Aero L-39 Albatros
© AFP/Louai BesharaA Czech-made Aero L-39 Albatros Syrian military aircraft
A Syrian warplane has been shot down over Idlib by Turkey while carrying out anti-terrorism operations, according to Syrian state media. The incident comes amid a growing conflict between Syrian and Turkish forces in the region.

Turkey's defense ministry said in a tweet that its forces shot down a Syrian L-39 warplane. According to the Syrian state news agency SANA, the jet was targeted while carrying out anti-terrorism operations in the area.

In an additional social media post, the Turkish military said its operation in Idlib was progressing "successfully," claiming that it had destroyed several tanks, howitzers and other military hardware in the last 24 hours. The defense ministry added that it had "neutralized" 327 Syrian troops.

Comment: See also:


Putin

Putin on Russia's foreign agents law: 'Register and keep working, it discourages meddling, infringes no one'

putin
© Reuters/Kevin LamarqueRussian President Vladimir Putin
Russia's 'foreign agents' law - subjected to constant bashing in Western media - is much milder than its US counterpart, as it only applies to those meddling in local politics while on outside pay, Vladimir Putin explained.

"What's wrong with the foreign agent status? We're not the ones who came up with it," the Russian leader pointed out during the latest episode of the TASS news agency's series '20 Questions to Vladimir Putin'. "Seriously, was it us who invented the foreign agent status? This law has been in effect in the US since 1937 or 1938 and it still is," he said.

The legislation in question, the 1938 Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) requires that organizations advocating interests of foreign powers disclose their relationship with a foreign government. These entities should also register with the Justice Department as 'foreign agents'.

Referring to Maria Butina, who spent months in solitary confinement for failing to register as a foreign agent on US soil, Putin said:
"One such incident occurred just recently. A citizen of ours, a rather well-known young lady, was jailed as a foreign agent. And pardon me, but she was faced with 12 years, right? So? They use it. We have no such thing. We only have an administrative penalty for this."

Pistol

Idlib: US willing to give Turkey ammo in support of Ankara's standoff with Syrian army

Turktank
© Reuters/Stoyan Nanov
Washington is ready to supply NATO ally Turkey with ammunition amid mounting tensions in Idlib, where Ankara is in an open conflict with Syrian government forces.

The promise was made by US Special Representative for Syria James Jeffrey, who visited Turkey's border province of Hatay on Tuesday.
"Turkey is a NATO ally and mostly uses US-made military hardware. We're willing to provide - for example, the President [Donald Trump] mentioned this - ammunition. [The US] will make sure that that equipment is ready. As a NATO partner we share information intelligence... and we are going to ensure that they have what they need there."
According to the representative, Ankara's plea for humanitarian assistance was also heard in Washington.

Separately on Tuesday, the US State Department announced that it will give $108 million of additional humanitarian assistance to the people in northern Syria.

Comment: Turkey has become a master at rotating alliances to serve its agenda, but in the long run, will this fickle flip-trick pay off?


Snakes in Suits

Calls for UK Home Sec Priti Patel to step down over multiple bullying allegations

Priti Patel
© PAHome secretary Priti Patel leaves the Home Office in London on Monday 2 March
Labour's Diane Abbott has called on Priti Patel to step down as home secretary while the Cabinet Office conducts an inquiry into bullying allegations levelled against her.

The shadow home secretary made the comments after Boris Johnson was forced to launch an investigation in the wake of the explosive resignation of the top civil servant at the Home Office.

It also emerged on Monday that a former aide to Ms Patel received a ยฃ25,000 payout after allegedly being bullied in 2015 by the minister. The BBC said it had seen legal correspondence claiming the woman had taken an overdose following the incident, when Ms Patel was a employment minister.

Comment: See also: UK Home Sec Priti Patel accused of "vicious" bullying campaign against top civil servant


Biohazard

The Pentagon's myth of moderate nuclear war

nuclear war
There are many influential supporters of nuclear war, and some of these contend that the use of 'low-yield' and/or short-range weapons is practicable without the possibility of escalation to all-out Armageddon. In a way their argument is comparable to that of the band of starry-eyed optimists who thought, apparently seriously, that there could be such a beast as a 'moderate rebel'.

In October 2013 the Washington Post reported that "The CIA is expanding a clandestine effort to train opposition fighters in Syria amid concern that moderate, US-backed militias are rapidly losing ground in the country's civil war," and the US Congress gave approval to then President Barack Obama's plan for training and arming moderate Syrian rebels to fight against Islamic State extremists. The belief that there could be any grouping of insurgents that could be described as "moderate rebels" is bizarre and it would be fascinating to know how Washington's planners classify such people. It obviously didn't dawn on them that any person who uses weapons illegally in a rebellion could not be defined as being moderate. And how moderate is moderate? Perhaps a moderate rebel could be equipped with US weapons that kill only extremists? Or are they allowed to kill only five children a month? The entire notion was absurd, and predictably the scheme collapsed, after expenditure of vast amounts of US taxpayers' money.

Comment: There exists a legitimately, truly, and incontrovertibly crazy cadre of government personnel who exist in the bowels of the Pentagon and elsewhere - whose skewed and psychopathic rationals threaten the lives and well being of literally half the planet.

See also: