Puppet Masters
"Thank you for your Democrat public relations letter and incorrect sound bites, which are wrong in every way," the missive begins, responding to the Senate minority leader's appeal earlier on Thursday for the appointment of a coronavirus "czar" amid what he called a "federal leadership void."
Moscow's permanent mission to the UN issued a statement on Thursday questioning why Ukraine, Georgia, the UK, US, and EU had shot down its proposal, arguing that these nations "refused to cast aside politicized approaches and interests," and that their decision could negatively affect "a great number of people" - especially in developing nations currently under sanctions.
The rejected motion called for broad international cooperation on combating the spread of Covid-19, as well as the "rejection of trade wars and unilateral sanctions adopted without the mandate of the UN Security Council, in order to ensure early access to food and medication." The draft also called on member states to reject "stigmatizations of states, peoples and individuals with regard to the pandemic, and the need to circulate only reliable and science-based information about it."
The declaration was co-sponsored by 28 UN member states, Russia's UN mission said. The General Assembly ultimately passed a different resolution calling for "international cooperation" and "multilateralism" to combat coronavirus.
The Central Election Commission (CEC) decided on April 3 that all votes would be held after June 21. CEC Chairwoman Ella Pamfilova said:
"Taking into consideration the current situation in the country and for securing citizens' health and safety, we conclude that it is necessary to postpone all elections and referendums that have been planned for upcoming months until the improvement of the epidemiological situation in the country,"Earlier, President Vladimir Putin signed legislation allowing the CEC to change dates for planned votes. About 100 votes had been scheduled to take place across Russia by June 21.
A nationwide vote on sweeping constitutional changes that opens the possibility of Putin remaining in power for a further 16 years was initially scheduled for April 22.
"You don't want to protect people, and you don't want another force to come to protect us. You betrayed us. It is immoral!" - said at the end of last year, the Kurdish commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces, Mazlum Abdi, to US Deputy Special Representative in the international coalition against terrorists William Robak.
About six months have passed since then, and the situation in relations between the SDS and the US military command has not fundamentally changed.
Comment: Apparently some form of the offer has already been made, though hashing out the terms may be protracted and difficult. In the meantime, ad hoc alliances have already been formed through Russia's diplomatic efforts.
- Kurdish militias willing to join Syrian military if government restructures army
- Damascus: Syrian army ready to accept Kurdish fighters, urged to join forces
- Syria Sit-Rep: 16 October - SAA and Syrian Kurds Join Forces to Repel Turkish Incursion
- 'Moscow's genius move': Syrian Kurds will join Syrian Army and Russians to cooperate on assault on Idlib
Trump said he spoke with both Russian President Vladimir Putin and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman on April 2, but details of how the cuts would work were unclear.
"I expect & hope that they will be cutting back approximately 10 Million Barrels, and maybe substantially more which, if it happens, will be GREAT for the oil & gas industry!" Trump wrote on Twitter.
Comment:
- All out oil war as Saudi Arabia floods market
- Russia: There is no oil price war with Saudi Arabia
- Trump says oil price war 'devastating' for Russia - but it's Saudis & US shale that stand to suffer most
- Plummeting oil price blowback in US: Industry begins layoffs while oil states suffer budget deficits

A nurse wears a protective face mask and gloves to prevent the spread of Covid-19, takes care of a new-born baby in a maternity room in Najaf, Iraq, April 2, 2020
On Thursday, Reuters published an article, in which it said that the real number of people infected with COVID-19 in Iraq stood at 3,000-9,000, including at least 2,000 in Baghdad, despite the fact that the authorities had confirmed only 772 cases with 54 fatalities.
Those against it argue Planet Lockdown not only is not stopping the spread of Covid-19 but also has landed the global economy into a cryogenic state - with unforeseen, dire consequences. Thus quarantine should apply essentially to the population with the greatest risk of death: the elderly.
With Planet Lockdown transfixed by heart-breaking reports from the Covid-19 frontline, there's no question this is an incendiary assertion.
In parallel, a total corporate media takeover is implying that if the numbers do not substantially go down, Planet Lockdown - an euphemism for house arrest - remains, indefinitely.
Michael Levitt, 2013 Nobel Prize in chemistry and Stanford biophysicist, was spot on when he calculated that China would get through the worst of Covid-19 way before throngs of health experts believed, and that "What we need is to control the panic".
Let's cross this over with some facts and dissident opinion, in the interest of fostering an informed debate.
"Thank you for your Democrat public relations letter and incorrect sound bites, which are wrong in every way," Trump said in the letter.
In a letter earlier in the day, Schumer wrote to Trump saying that the "national response is far behind where it should be." The letter raised the issue of shortages of personal protective equipment (PPE) and medical supplies in New York state and other areas across the United States, and called for the Trump administration to "designate a senior military officer to fix this urgent problem."
Schumer also accused Trump of having dismissed the Defense Production Act (DPA) "as not being needed," and criticized Trump's appointment of White House aide Peter Navarro as the National DPA Policy Coordinator as "woefully unqualified" for solving the PPE and ventilator shortages.

President Donald Trump holds up the results of his CCP virus test in the press briefing room with members of the White House Coronavirus Task Force in Washington on April 2, 2020.
Around 30 million people in the country lack insurance.
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, top administration officials are focused on a plan that would relieve people without insurance from paying for virus testing or treatment. COVID-19 is a disease caused by the CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus, commonly known as the novel coronavirus.
"The president has made it clear: we don't want any American to worry about the cost of getting a test or the cost of getting treatment," Vice President Mike Pence, the White House Coronavirus Task Force head, told reporters on Thursday night.
The task force is working on a proposal that would use some of the $100 billion directed toward hospitals in a recent piece of legislation to compensate hospitals directly for any CCP virus treatment they provide to uninsured Americans.
The exact details are still being worked out.













Comment: Lead feet, closed minds and business as usual are what is important at the crossroads to the future.