Puppet MastersS

Eye 1

For your 'protection': WhatsApp tightens message forwarding restrictions to combat 'coronavirus misinformation'

whatsapp coronavirus
© Rafael Henrique | SOPA Images | LightRocket via Getty ImagesThe WhatsApp logo seen displayed on a smartphone with a computer model of the COVID-19 coronavirus in the background.
WhatsApp is tightening its limits on message forwarding even further, in a bid to stem the spread of misinformation amid the coronavirus pandemic.

The Facebook-owned messaging app is expanding on global measures it put in place last year which restricted the number of times people could pass on frequently forwarded messages to five chats at once.

The company has now reduced the amount of chats to which users can share frequently forwarded content to just one at a time. It announced the new changes in a blog post Tuesday.

Comment: There are better messaging programs out there than a misbegotten child of Facebook and Israel


Attention

5G and the COVID connection?

Covid19 and 5G
© ZME Science
โ€” No blanket assertions here. No claims that 5G technology "activates the virus." No across-the-board answers. Instead, several key questions, and a few possible clues.

I have to set the context. As I've been emphasizing, what is being called COVID-19 is not one disease with one cause. It's not one thing.

Instead, people with VARIOUS traditional diseases are being corralled, clustered, and counted by public health officials under ONE fake umbrella term, "COVID-19."

I've also emphasized that in these fake-cluster situations, some people may be suffering from new conditions. For example, the effects of a vaccination campaign โ€” which, by the way, was apparently carried out in a region of northern Italy prior to "the emergence of COVID."

In this article, I have comments on 5G wireless technology โ€” not as an all-inclusive explanation for "COVID" โ€” but as a possible explanation for what several doctors are observing in some patients in New York and Italy.

What are they observing? Extreme shortness of breath, life threatening, but without the usual indicators of respiratory failure or failure of the lungs to operate. The lungs can operate. The patients are apparently suffering from straight oxygen deprivation. Lack of oxygen. As if they were suddenly thrust into high altitude.

Several doctors are saying these patients must be given oxygen through breathing ventilators โ€” but not at high pressure, because that could damage the lungs and even cause death. Instead, the increase in oxygen must be gently accomplished.

Bad Guys

Judicial Watch: FBI uses COVID-19 panic as barrier for obtaining anti-Trump dossier records

Judicial Watch
Judicial Watch today released a joint status report in its Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit for records about top Justice Department official Bruce Ohr and his wife Nellie Ohr, in which the DOJ states it has suspended electronic FOIA operations. The Ohrs were involved in the anti-Trump dossier authored by former British spy Christopher Steele.

The Justice Department claims it is currently unable to continue searching for documents because the employees who would conduct the search in the FBI Records / Information Dissemination Section (RIDS) are, "non-mission critical" during the COVID-19 pandemic and were ordered to stay at home beginning March 17, 2020.

Chess

Trump could impose 'very substantial' tariffs on oil imports, but doesn't think he'll need to do so

oil rigs
© Reuters
President Donald Trump on Sunday reiterated his threat to target foreign oil as global producer infighting continues to impact the price of crude, saying he could impose 'very substantial tariffs' to protect the American energy industry but doesn't think he will need to do so.

"I would use tariffs, if I had to. I don't think I'm going to have to," Trump said at a White House briefing on the coronavirus. Trump on Saturday also signaled a willingness to implement tariffs on foreign oil.

The president said he thought there would ultimately be an agreement on production levels between Saudi Arabia and Russia.

Bad Guys

Taliban breaks off talks with Afghan government on prisoner exchange - efforts deemed 'fruitless'

taliban prisoners afghanistan
© Rahmat Gul/Associated PressTaliban prisoners are seen inside the Pul-e Charkhi jail in Kabul.
The Taliban has broken off talks with the Afghan government on a prisoner exchange, a main step in peace talks being brokered by the United States.

Suhail Shaheen, a spokesman for the Taliban's political office in Qatar, tweeted on April 7 that a technical team would not participate in "fruitless meetings."

Shaheen blamed the administration of Afghan President Ashraf Ghani for delaying the prisoner release "under one pretext or another."

Comment:


Eye 1

Eyes wide open: The masters of the universe...will they notice no one takes them seriously anymore?

Coronavirus
© The Federalist/KJNA viral universe
The intrusion of some wholly extraneous event - like a pandemic - into any given status quo doesn't necessarily break it, in and of itself. But it exposes cruelly the shortcomings and workings of the existing status quo. It shows them, as not just stark naked, but also with its dark backstage of barely legal, dole-outs to business, and Wall Street friends, suddenly spotlighted.

Fyodor Dostoevsky sets out in The Brothers Karamazov an allegory that can be applied to our times, but was set in Seville, in the most terrible time of the Inquisition, when fires were lighted every day to the glory of God (rather than today's 'glory to Mammon'), and in that splendid auto da fรฉ, when wicked 'heretics' were burnt alive. It was published in 1880.

Into this city an entirely extraneous (shall we say non-human) event occurs, that deeply unsettles society: Citizens are suddenly snatched-up from their humdrum daily slog to see the status quo afresh - but now with eyes wide open.

Comment: Are mortality rates from Covid-19, as suggested, rising all over the world at a faster rate? Given the inequality and inconsistency of attributable cases over time, we could merely be at the bump in the curve. Or, all the ambiguity could feed some urgent dictate to prolong mass sequestration and if so, for what and why?


Arrow Up

Stock markets surge as virus signs are hopeful

Stock watcher
© Unknown
Global stock markets posted strong gains for a second straight session Tuesday as investors seized on signs of a slowdown in the spread of the coronavirus, while some governments began making plans to ease restrictions.

"Investors are betting that the coronavirus outbreak may have peaked and are ignoring the economic slump that we are in," said Fawad Razaqzada, an analyst with Trading Candles. But Razaqzada also said he "wouldn't be surprised if the rally were to end abruptly because the economic impact of COVID-19 is going to be severe".

In the meantime, oil was energised by hopes that key producers will agree to cut output at this week's emergency OPEC+ video meeting, which will address virus-sapped demand and a price war.

Following on from gains in Asian and European equities, Wall Street also posted solid gains in the late New York morning when the Dow was up by more than 600 points.

"Equities are still racing higher, as the news from key countries like Spain and Italy remains positive," said IG analyst Chris Beauchamp. "Stocks continue to rally as investors look for the positives in the current global outlook."

Tokyo, Hong Kong and Shanghai stocks all finished around two percent higher.

Comment: Others are not so excited, warning dire times ahead
The US stock market has rallied for a second day in a row on hopes that the Covid-19 pandemic is slowing and the global economy is getting back to business. Not so fast, CEO of Euro Pacific Capital Peter Schiff tells Boom Bust.

See also:


USA

Trump issues Executive Order supporting space resources utilization

Trump and Space guys
© File ImageUS President Trump signing Executive Order reestablishing the National Space Council
President Donald J. Trump has signed an Executive Order on Encouraging International Support for the Recovery and Use of Space Resources. This order addresses U.S. policy regarding the recovery and use of resources in outer space, including the Moon and other celestial bodies. Dr. Scott Pace, Deputy Assistant to the President and Executive Secretary of the National Space Council, released the following statement on behalf of the Administration:
"As America prepares to return humans to the Moon and journey on to Mars, this Executive Order establishes U.S. policy toward the recovery and use of space resources, such as water and certain minerals, in order to encourage the commercial development of space.

"The order reaffirms U.S. support for the 1967 Outer Space Treaty while continuing to reject the 1979 Moon Agreement, which only 17 of the 95 Member States of the United Nations Committee on the Peaceful Uses of Outer Space have ratified in the past four decades. The order further clarifies that the United States does not view outer space as a 'global commons,' and it reinforces the 2015 decision by Congress that Americans should have the right to engage in the commercial exploration, recovery, and use of resources in outer space."
Additional highlights:

+ The President has directed the Secretary of State to object to any attempt to treat the 1979 Moon Agreement as representing customary international law. This Agreement represents a failed attempt at constraining free enterprise and it does not represent the bright future of a growing space economy.

+ The Secretary of State is further directed to lead the U.S. Government's effort to encourage international support for the recovery and use of outer space resources. To this end, the United States will seek to negotiate joint statements, bilateral and multi-lateral agreements and other instruments regarding safe and sustainable use of space resources with like-minded states.

+ As the United States continues towards its goal of placing the first woman and next man on the Moon by 2024 and landing the first human on Mars, the Administration will seek every opportunity to work with commercial, international, and non-government organizations to ensure that American ideals of transparency, partnership, free and fair trade, and private enterprise are part of humanity's expansion in space.

See below for the text of the Executive Order:

Comment: See also: Russia blasts Trump's space grab as an 'aggressive expropriation attempt'


Galaxy

Russia blasts Trump's space grab as an 'aggressive expropriation attempt'

'Moon' scene
© Screenshot from 'Moon" Sony Pictures (2009)
The US has declared outer space a legal equivalent of the Wild West, and Russia believes it may lead to the grimmest of consequences like many policies of territorial expansion did in the past. Russia's space agency was not impressed by President Donald Trump's executive order, which doesn't see space "as a global commons."

"Attempts to expropriate outer space and aggressive plans to de facto seize the territories of other planets will hardly encourage other nations to participate in fruitful cooperation," said Sergey Savelyev, Roscosmos deputy director responsible for international cooperation.

He was responding to the US attempt to draw private companies and foreign nations into the recovery and use of resources in space by assuring them that they may take whatever they want out there, legally speaking.

"Americans should have the right to engage in commercial exploration, recovery, and use of resources in outer space," Trump's executive order declared.

Comment: See also: Trump issues Executive Order supporting space resources utilization


Dollars

EO of online investment platform says global Ponzi scheme of fiat currency/banking due to collapse

Money pyramid
© Getty Images
As the global economy is struggling with the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic, concerns are growing about the stability of the international monetary system.

RT's Keiser Report is joined by Simon Dixon, the CEO and co-founder of the online investment platform bnktothefuture.com, to talk about the possibility of new digital currencies from central banks and governments around the world, as the debt-based fiat world disintegrates.

"This is really a global reset in the financial system," says Dixon, adding that he does not want to sound dramatic.


Comment: See also: Asian Development Bank: $4T will be wiped from the global economy