Puppet Masters
Facts matter less than our ache for an unpolluted globe. We yearn for a lost world of childhood innocence, and so project our hope onto juvenile activists. But there clearly are benefits in the reduced use of fossil fuels as flights are cancelled and car journeys shrink to levels last seen on distant Sundays when the shops were shut. Some are reporting easier breathing during an epidemic which attacks the lungs.
Surely this will strengthen the current insistence to turn thirty, even fifty, percent of the globe into "protected areas" (PAs)? We're told this is the answer to climate chaos and protecting biodiversity - no people, no pollution, problem solved?

European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen holds a news conference detailing EU efforts to limit economic impact of the coronavirus disease.
The president of the European commission said she was confident the 27 member states would back her scheme, describing the EU's budget as the Marshall plan for the crisis, in reference to the post-second world war fund that rebuilt Europe.
The EU's executive branch is proposing to borrow from the international markets and make loans to member state governments to allow them to fund short-time working schemes, under which employees work reduced hours with some of their salary paid by the state.
Matt Hancock announced plans to wipe out historic debts to let hospital trusts channel their resources into battling the outbreak, rather than balancing the books.
In his first public appearance after self-isolating for seven days, Mr Hancock also paid an emotional tribute to NHS staff who have lost their lives, including doctors who had come to work in the British health service and "paid the ultimate price".
The health secretary told the daily Downing Street briefing that he would ease financial pressures on trusts that have built up significant debts after years of austerity.
Comment: Is it a loop? How does government bookkeeping interfere with government hospitals when the trusts are owned and funded by the government via taxation of the people? Does this handy dandy government write-off merely serve itself?
The left saw it as proof that the NHS debt has been a "a pernicious fiction" all along, blaming it on Tory austerity policies, and argued it was time to fully re-nationalize the health service they say was "privatized" by a succession of Conservative cabinets.
Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Faisal bin Farhan al-Saud also commented on the ongoing dispute with Russia, saying that a statement attributed to Russian President Vladimir Putin about the kingdom's withdrawal from the OPEC+ deal was not correct, and that Russia was the one that withdrew, SPA reported.
Russia and Saudi Arabia have been at odds since failing last month to agree on a deal to curb output as the coronavirus pandemic spread around the globe. The pandemic has worsened since, freezing economic activity worldwide and sending oil prices into a steep decline.
The world's oil-producing countries in the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) and allies such as Russia have been discussing a deal to cut production in hopes of reversing the crash.
Merkel, 65, has been in self-isolation at her Berlin flat for just over a week, after learning on March 22 that a doctor who gave her a vaccination two days earlier was infected with the virus.
"The chancellor's third test also turned out negative. The chancellor will continue to carry out her official business from her at-home quarantine in the coming days," spokesman Steffen Seibert said in a statement.
It was not immediately clear if Merkel would undergo further testing.
Comment: Update: Merkel to come out of isolation
German Chancellor Angela Merkel's spokesman, Steffen Seibert, revealed on Friday "Now her work continues from the Chancellery."
Merkel hinted on Wednesday that an app to help slow the spread of the virus was also being considered.
"It would be on a voluntary basis but if the testing of these apps shows them to be good and set to be successful in better tracing cases of where there has been contact, I'd certainly be in favor of recommending that to citizens."
The United States may come to Turkey's aid in Idlib in exchange for dropping plans to deploy Russia's S-400 anti-aircraft missile systems.
United States ambassador to NATO Kay Bailey Hutchison floated the idea of providing an unspecified assistance "package" during a press briefing on Wednesday, without elaborating on what that package might comprise:
"We hope that Turkey will also not put the Russian missile defence system in their country; that is deterring some of the capabilities that we would be able to give them to fight against the Syrian aggression.
"We do want the area in Idlib, where the civilians are really trapped, to be protected, and I think the Turkish soldiers agree with that; they're trying to do it.
"So we hope that the Turks, because they're being the victims of Russian-Syrian aggression, will take out the missile defence system that is in the middle of Ankara and let us have the freedom to help them completely to protect those innocent civilians in Syria."
Inspector General Michael Horowitz released a report in December which found that the FBI included "at least 17 significant errors or omissions in the Carter Page FISA applications and many errors in the Woods Procedures" during its Crossfire Hurricane investigation of the 2016 Trump campaign. After releasing the report, Horowitz said that he would conduct a further investigation to see if the errors identified in the Page application were widespread. Horowitz told lawmakers during a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee hearing:
"The concern is that this is such a high-profile, important case. If it happened here, is this indicative of a wider problem — and we will only know that when we complete our audit — or is it isolated to this event? Obviously, we need to do the work to understand that."

Court artist sketch of Julian Assange trying to address the court from inside the enclosed, glass-fronted dock ay Bellmarsh magistrates court
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange isn't eligible to be temporarily released from jail as part of the UK government's plan to mitigate coronavirus in prisons.
There are now 88 prisoners and 15 staff who have tested positive for COVID-19 in the country and more than a quarter of prison staff are absent or self-isolating due to the pandemic.
Comment: It couldn't be more clear that the Deep State is counting on Assange succumbing in prison, one way or another. One more cruelty heaped on Julian and his family:
EU Commission chief Ursula von der Leyen admitted Thursday that "in the face of the need for a common European response" to the pandemic, too many EU countries "thought only of their own" problems. Brussels will now "mobilize alongside Italy," she said. With nearly 14,000 dead, surely it's about time.
The decision to put up a united European front came only after Russia had sent doctors, personal protective equipment and 600 ventilators, among other supplies to Italy, which has suffered more Covid-19 cases and deaths than any other country in Europe. China and Cuba also sent critical supplies to help Italy battle the outbreak — and to their credit, some European nations including Germany and France did too, but not before trying to block the export of essential supplies to their neighbors in need in anticipation of domestic shortages. The bottom line is, there was certainly no "united" European response of the kind Italians might have been expecting.
The head officer aboard the carrier, Captain Brett Crozier, was removed from his post, the Navy said in a statement, taking him to task for "causing alarm" with a letter sent directly to senior officials as scores of sailors on the aircraft carrier contracted the lethal coronavirus, skipping several rungs on the chain of command.
The captain's letter urgently requested an immediate evacuation of the ship to "prevent tragic outcomes," striking a dire tone after more than 100 sailors became infected and the Roosevelt was forced to dock in Guam.













Comment: EU borders; feedback from Italy EU's inaction followed by 'coronabonding'