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USA

56% of Americans want Biden to be tougher on Russia, most don't think he can 'handle a crisis' - poll

Biden
© AP Photo/Alex Brandon, FileFILE - President Joe Biden speaks about the Russian invasion of Ukraine in the East Room of the White House, on Feb. 24, 2022, in Washington. Biden is in Brussels to meet with key allies and coordinate a stronger response to Russia's assault on Ukraine. But a new poll shows Americans have yet to rally around Biden's leadership. Concern about Russia has swelled and support for a major U.S. role in the conflict strengthened in the last month.
As President Joe Biden meets with key allies in Brussels to coordinate a stronger response to Russia's monthlong assault on Ukraine, a new poll shows Americans have yet to rally around his leadership.


Comment: It's misleading to claim that Russia has waged a 'monthlong assault on Ukraine', because, as Putin has said, it's a special operation with precision strikes and calculated incursions with the aim to prevent as little infrastructural damage and civilian death as possible whilst at the same time rounding up, routing out, and neutralising the neo-Nazi terrorist elements in the country. Even the legacy-media are beginning to admit this much: First Fact-Based MSM Report About War in Ukraine! Newsweek: 'Putin Minimizing Civilian Casualties'


Concern about Russia has swelled and support for a major U.S. role in the conflict strengthened in the last month, but Biden's negative approval rating has not budged, according to the poll Thursday from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research. Few are very confident that he can handle a crisis, and a majority thinks he lacks toughness in dealing with Russia.

Only 43% of Americans approve of Biden and a similar percentage approve of his handling of the relationship with Russia. Both measures are little different from an AP-NORC poll conducted days before the Feb. 24 invasion.

Comment: Meanwhile another poll reveals how these opinions on the Ukraine situation are spread between the Covid vaccinated and the Covid-jab-free. Unsurprisingly, a great many of those who fell for the contrived coronavirus crisis have also fallen for the anti-Russia propaganda.

However, what the results below don't show is that there are also many who called out the Covid psy-op but are now bleating the establishment line on the Ukraine situation:
canada vaccinated ukraine poll
See also: Why the UAE is shrugging off Washington's diktats

And check out SOTT radio's: NewsReal: Russia, China and the New World Order




X

Israel lobby demands music artist Lowkey be deleted by Spotify

lowkey rapper
© SH5 SakuraLowkey performing on stage. The UK rapper is a strong supporter of Palestinian liberation.
A British pro-Israel lobby group is demanding that Spotify delete the music of rapper and Palestine solidarity campaigner Lowkey.

"The presence of Lowkey's music is particularly offensive," anti-Palestinian newspaper The Jewish News reported in an interview with lobbyist Luke Akehurst this week.

Akehurst is the director of a group called We Believe in Israel.

Comment: See also:


Attention

Leaders warn of 'unprecedented' global food crisis risks

food grain
© Getty Images / Bartosz Hadyniak
G7 leaders have called for an extraordinary session of the Council of the Food and Agriculture Organization in a bid to prevent the Ukrainian conflict from turning into a global food crisis, while French President Emmanuel Macron presented his own "initiative for food security."

According to a communique adopted on Thursday at the summit of the world's biggest economies, the Russian offensive on its neighboring country "places global food security under increased pressure." Therefore, the G7 leaders agreed to use "all instruments and funding mechanisms" and involve the "relevant international institutions" to address food security, including support for the "continued Ukrainian production efforts."

"We call for an extraordinary session of the Council of the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) to address the consequences on world food security and agriculture arising from the Russian aggression against Ukraine," reads the communique.

The countries agreed to avoid export bans and other "trade-restrictive measures" and to maintain open and transparent markets, in accordance with World Trade Organization rules.

French President Emmanuel Macron has used the summit in Brussels to present his own "initiative for food security." The world is facing an "unprecedented" food crisis, Macron said, adding that it is "a direct consequence of Russia's choices and the war." In the president's opinion, the situation is already difficult and might further deteriorate "in 12-18 months."

Comment: See also:


Attention

Ukrainian civilians stripped, tied up and beaten by vigilantes in shocking videos

ukraine pole tying
Some are left badly beaten and bloodied.
WARNING: Distressing content

A series of horrifying videos published on social media show Ukrainian civilians - including women and children - being tied up, stripped and beaten in apparent vigilante attacks.

Since Russia's invasion last month, reports have emerged of humiliating public punishments dished out by Ukrainians to alleged looters and saboteurs, with several photos showing people tied to poles with their pants pulled down going viral online.

Comment: See also:


Arrow Up

New Zealand overhauls its COVID-19 restrictions: Jacinda Ardern announces vaccine passes and mandates will end

Jacinda Ardern
© Hagen Hopkins/Getty ImagesNew Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has announced changes to the country's COVID-19 restrictions.
Jacinda Ardern has announced sweeping changes to New Zealand's COVID-19 restrictions, axing the My Vaccine Pass and removing vaccine mandates in almost all industries.

Vaccine passes are being axed in New Zealand, with mandates being removed in almost all industries.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern announced the changes on Wednesday as she unveiled the country's post-Omicron peak plan.

Comment: The Covid-zero approach was always doomed to failure, but it provided a framework for authoritarian clamp-down on the populace (which was the true goal). New Zealand now joins the rest of the world in the grand narrative shift, giving the plebs their rights back for now. We're all waiting for the other shoe to drop.

See also:


Toys

EU leaders call Putin's rubles-for-gas plan breach of contract

gas pipelines, natural gas
© ReutersThe trade bloc was planning to slap sanctions on imports of oil and natural gas
Several leaders from European Union members have scoffed at Russia's demand that some "unfriendly" countries will be forced to pay for its natural gas and oil in rubles, saying the move is a breach of contract.

In a move seen aimed at bolstering Russia's beleaguered currency in the face of crippling economic and financial penalties over its invasion of Ukraine, President Vladimir Putin has said Moscow will no longer accept payments in dollars or euros, what he called "compromised currencies" from countries that have imposed the sanctions.

While Putin did not name any countries, it is understood the policy would target Britain, Canada, Japan, Switzerland, Ukraine, the United States, and members of the European Union.

Comment: EU leaders can cry like children all they want about how they think Putin's counter-measures are unfair. But at the end of the week they're still going to have to pay in rubles.


Bad Guys

US prepares for failure of anti-Russian strategy - media

White House/flag
© Getty Images/E4C
Senior US officials tasked with improving the country's geopolitical position in the wake of Russia's attack against Ukraine have doubts about their government's current strategy, the New York Times reported on Wednesday, citing sources familiar with the discussions.

The admission was buried in an article detailing the work of the Tiger Team, a group created in late February by the White House for planning around the situation in Ukraine.

The report itself largely focused on how the US was preparing contingency plans for the unlikely scenario that Moscow would use weapons of mass destruction.

In addition to establishing the unit, National Security Advisor Jake Sullivan formed a second body for long-term planning, the newspaper said, explaining its skepticism of the established Western narrative regarding the Ukraine conflict.

"Inside the White House, it has become an article of faith that [Russian President Vladimir Putin] made a huge strategic error - one that will diminish Russia's standing, cripple its economy, and alienate potential allies for years. But it is early in the conflict, other officials caution, and that conclusion may prove premature," the newspaper detailed.

Comment: The US shouldn't be preparing for nuclear war but for the ramifications of its short-sighted policies.


Handcuffs

The Biden administration is cooking the books on illegal immigrant arrests

immigration officers
© UnknownImmigration officers at the US border.
The Biden administration is attempting to put a positive spin on its dangerous enforcement guidelines through unreliable data.

The Biden administration has delayed for months an annual illegal immigration report that contains crucial statistics about this key national security issue, as the U.S. border crisis keeps breaking records since Joe Biden took the presidential office.

Oil Well

Indian Oil Corporation buys Russian crude at deep discount

gas sign
© File PhotoIndian Oil Corporation
Indian Oil Corporation (IOC), the nation's top oil firm, has bought as much as 3 million barrels of crude oil that Russia had offered at steep discount to prevailing international rates, sources said.

The purchase, made through a trader, is the first since Russia's February 24 invasion of Ukraine that brought international pressure for isolating Putin administration.

Sources aware of the matter said IOC bought Urals crude for May delivery at a discount of USD 20-25 a barrel to dated Brent.

As the US and other western nations slapped sanctions on Moscow, Russia has begun offering oil and other commodities at discounted prices to India and other large importers.

IOC made the purchase on modified terms that require the seller to deliver it to the Indian coast so as to avoid any complications that sanctions may lead to in arranging shipping and insurance.

Unlike the sanctions the US imposed on Iran over its controversial nuclear programme, oil and energy trade with Russia has not been banned. This means international payment systems are available to settle any purchase made from Russia, they said.

Network

Lawsuit accuses NYPD of secretly building 'rogue' DNA database

DNA Jail
© New York Post
A lawsuit filed Monday accuses the New York Police Department (NYPD) of collecting genetic materials from thousands of citizens in a secret attempt to create a "rogue" DNA database.

Legal Aid Society, in a post on social media announcing the federal lawsuit, said:
"For decades, the NYPD has used dishonest tactics to obtain New Yorkers' DNA, including those as young as 11-years-old, by offering bottles of water or cigarettes to our clients detained at local precincts."
The organization accused the NYPD:
"of keeping citizens' DNA permanently stored in a rogue local database," saying it "continuously compares past and future crime scene DNA evidence against this database, which has led to wrongful arrests and prosecutions."
The NYPD has previously said it would review its DNA database after discreetly collecting thousands of the samples, according to CBS News. But the Legal Aid Society said in its post that the database "only continues to grow."

Comment: Is it a crime deterrent, invasion of privacy or gross overreach?
This increase in police authority was part of a broader and ongoing trend in the U.S., where DNA databases have expanded to include incrementally less severe crimes at different rates across state jurisdictions. Studies show larger databases do not correlate to a more efficient crime fighting tool, and can even lead to increased margins of error.

In 2013, President Obama signed into law a bill to provide federal funding for states to implement DNA collection programs for people arrested for serious crimes.

Beyond the question of effectiveness, as forensic DNA databases have expanded across the U.S., there has been an ongoing legal debate about whether such surveillance techniques violate a constitutional right to privacy.

Taking DNA samples was "like fingerprinting and photographing, a legitimate police booking procedure that is reasonable under the Fourth Amendment." However, Antonin Scalia, argued that using DNA in "cold hit" searches was an unconstitutional invasion of privacy that eroded the presumption of innocence.

Local governments, like NYC, maintain unregulated DNA indexes that include people who have never been convicted, and might not have even been arrested, for a crime."