Puppet Masters
Not that 2017 wasn't already paranoid. It was. It was completely paranoid, and otherwise clinically batshit crazy. But 2018 has been batshit crazier. It started out with the Internet companies that control the flow of information that most of us now perceive as "reality" launching an all-out War on Dissent, purportedly to protect the public from "divisive" and "confusing" content, and other forms of Russian "influencing."
Twitter started sending out scary emails warning customers that there was "reason to believe" that they had "followed," "retweeted," or "liked the content of" accounts "connected to a propaganda effort by a Russian government-linked organization." Facebook launched its own Ministry of Truth, manned by "a dedicated counter-terrorism team" of "former intelligence and law-enforcement officials" (also known as The Atlantic Council, NATO's unofficial propaganda wing). Google stepped up its covert deranking of insufficiently Russia-hating and other "non-authoritative" websites.
The emptiest, dumbest platitude of our time, uttered both by establishment stiffs like the Archbishop of Canterbury and by self-styled radical leftists, is that the 1930s have made a comeback. Treating that dark decade as if it were a sentient force, a still-extant thing, observers from both the worried bourgeoisie and the edgy left insist the Thirties have staggered back to life and have much of the West in their reanimated deathly grip. Looking at Brexit, the European turn against social democracy, the rise of populist parties, and the spread of 'yellow vest' revolts, the opinion-forming set sees fascism everywhere, rising zombie-like from its grave, laying to waste the progressive gains of recent decades.
This analysis is about as wrong as an analysis can be. Comparing contemporary political life to events of the past is always an imperfect way of understanding where politics is at. But if we really must search for echoes of today in the past, then it isn't the 1930s that our era looks and feels like - it's the 1840s. In particular 1848. That is the year when peoples across Europe revolted for radical political change, starting in France and spreading to Sweden, Denmark, the German states, the Italian states, the Habsburg Empire, and elsewhere. They were democratic revolutions, demanding the establishment or improvement of parliamentary democracy, freedom of the press, the removal of old monarchical structures and their replacement by independent nation states or republics. 1848 is often referred to as the Spring of Nations.
Comment: Revolutions take time to form. But it appears this one has arrived. But as the author has asked, who will shape and direct the pent-up energy, and to what end. Revolutions, at least in the last two centuries, have tended to go badly off the rails.
From 2013: Protests against rising food prices begin in UK, how long until the European Spring?

US embassies abroad have been buying spying tools - documents revealed that one embassy has ordered almost 100 spy cams masked as ties, caps, pens, buttons and watches.
The US Embassy Shopping List, a collection of over 16,000 procurement requests filed by US embassies around the globe, was published by WikiLeaks on Friday, a day after a targeted DDoS attack briefly disabled all of its Twitter accounts.
Although the trove of quotation requests are more of an open secret, since they are considered public information, WikiLeaks created a searchable database listing even those procurement documents that are no longer linked on the embassies' websites.
While the bulk of the documents appear to be routine requests for janitor or carpenter services, or, in the case with the US embassy in Moscow, to plant summer flowers at the ambassador's residence, some hint at the existence of secretive surveillance operations.
Of course, the Guardian produces the argument that continued US military presence is necessary to ensure that ISIS does not spring back to life in Syria. The fallacy of that argument can be easily demonstrated. In Afghanistan, the USA has managed to drag out the long process of humiliating defeat in war even further than it did in Vietnam. It is plain as a pikestaff that the presence of US occupation troops is itself the best recruiting sergeant for resistance. In Sikunder Burnes I trace how the battle lines of tribal alliances there today are precisely the same ones the British faced in 1841. We just attach labels like Taliban to hide the fact that invaders face national resistance.
The secret to ending the strength of ISIS in Syria is not the continued presence of American troops. It is for America's ever closer allies in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf to cut off the major artery of money and arms, which we should never forget in origin and for a long time had a strong US component. The US/Saudi/Israeli alliance against Iran is the most important geo-political factor in the region today. It is high time this alliance stopped both funding ISIS and pretending to fight it; schizophrenia is not a foreign policy stance.

Russian Navy intercepts Ukraine ships attempting to enter the Kerch Strait without permission.
Russia was ordered to "immediately return to Ukraine the seized vessels and detained Ukrainian crews" involved in last month's naval provocation and to allow Ukrainian ships to freely navigate the Kerch Strait and the Sea of Azov in Friday's statement from deputy State Department spokesperson Robert Palladino. The financial decision was made "in solidarity with" Lithuania and the UK, which also plan to step up their funding of the Ukrainian military, he added.
Comment: Yeah, Russia's gonna get right on that. John Bolton's been grandstanding over the issue too, declaring there will be no Trump-Putin meeting until the sailors are released.
The State Department's announcement follows hints from Ukraine's National Security and Defense Council head Alexander Turchinov that the country might send more ships through the Kerch Strait soon, despite the tension. If Ukraine doesn't flex its muscles in the Azov, Turchinov told the BBC, Russia might "legitimize the occupation of Crimea."
Comment:
- Russia blocks Kerch Strait passage after Ukrainian Navy ships violate border, calls UNSC meeting - Kiev declares martial law - UPDATES
- 'Fake News' CNN in hysterics at Trump 'failing to condemn Russian aggression' over Ukraine's Kerch Strait provocation
- Fmr Ukrainian general: Kiev hoped its sailors would be killed in the Kerch Strait
- Pre-election antics? Poroshenko declares martial law in Ukraine after Kerch standoff
- Why is Ukraine's Kerch crisis any of America's business?

President Donald Trump, Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) in the Oval Office.
Parts of the government will close if Congress cannot pass seven spending bills by midnight Friday. Lawmakers scrambled through the afternoon and into the early evening to break an impasse over whether to fund the barrier on the U.S.-Mexico border.
But the House adjourned at about 7 p.m. ET Friday without passing legislation that the Senate supports, and the chamber is not due back until noon Saturday. Then the Senate adjourned at about 8 p.m. ET without approving a spending bill that the House backs. Senators are expected back at noon Saturday, as well.
The deadlock leaves Washington almost certain to let funding lapse for the third time this year. A closure could last through Christmas and into the new year, past when Democrats take control of the House on Jan. 3. It would send the unified Republican government out in a swirl of chaos that marked Trump's first two years in the White House.
Still, lawmakers could move quickly to pass spending legislation this weekend if leaders reach an agreement. House Republicans told members they would get 24 hours of notice before a vote.
Comment: Walls and Wallets. One is open and the other closed.
One day after visiting the Franz Josef Land archipelago in the Arctic, Putin claimed that icebergs had been melting for decades and suggested that global warming was not mankind's fault.
"The warming, it had already started by the 1930s," Putin said in comments broadcast from an Arctic forum held in the northern Russian city of Arkhangelsk. "That's when there were no such anthropological factors, such emissions, and the warming had already started."
The Kremlin strongman added: "The issue is not stopping it... because that's impossible, since it could be tied to some global cycles on Earth or even of planetary significance. The issue is to somehow adapt to it."
The declaration came as the White House said Trump would make his pronouncement on the Paris Agreement before a meeting of G7 leaders in Sicily that is scheduled to begin May 26.
Comment: There is research, by geophysicist Maurice Ewing and geologist-meteorologist William Donn, on how the cycle of Arctic Ocean warming oscillates with Arctic cooling and the effects of both circumstances on lower latitudes - neither of which are manmade. Go here.
Meanwhile, Russia is taking advantage of the open Arctic Sea. See also:
- Russia will invest $4B to build Arctic port servicing Northern Sea Route
- Russia's Arctic sea now major shipping route for European & Asian trade, cargo quadruples in five years

Envoy Brett McGurk • Secretary of Defense Jim Mattis • Commander Stephen Townsend
The resignation, which is reportedly effective as of December 31, comes in wake of the high-profile quitting of Defense Secretary Jim Mattis, also highly critical of the Syria pullout. While the idea is not laid out in the open, the general's resignation letter contains hints that he wasn't satisfied with the supposed lack of respect to US' allies, of which he notably mentions NATO and the anti-Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) coalition. 'Mad Dog' Mattis was also left unhappy with the not-tough-enough stance the Trump administration has on China and Russia.
McGurk has been the special presidential envoy to the anti-ISIS coalition since 2015, becoming one of the few Obama appointees to stay in office under Trump. He has openly supported a prolonged and indefinite stay of the US military in Syria. Last week, he stated that "it would be reckless if we were just to say, 'Well, the physical caliphate is defeated, so we can just leave now.'" "I think anyone who's looked at a conflict like this would agree with that," he added.
WADA's five-person team headed home empty-handed after being told by Russian authorities that the team's data extraction was not certified under Russian law and they would not be allowed to proceed with their data collection mission.
A statement from WADA explained: "This issue had not been raised during an initial meeting on 28 November in Moscow, after which WADA sent its expert team back to Moscow to retrieve the data."
The US-based fundraising platform DonorBox received a complaint from Shurat HaDin, an "Israeli advocacy group that files lawsuits around the world against Israel's foes," Al Jazeera reports.
The complaint included information provided by Israel's anti-BDS team in the Ministry of Strategic Affairs. In response, DonorBox temporarily banned a string of accounts associated with the international campaign.
"This decision does not mean that we consider BDS to be a nefarious organization. We are merely reviewing evidence following this complaint. Their donation forms were closed as a precautionary measure," DonorBox said in a statement.
The subject of the complaint was the BDS activists' link to terrorist organizations, noting that the BDS coalition includes the Council of National and Islamic Forces in Palestine - a group comprising all major Palestinian factions. Three of its members, Hamas, Islamic Jihad and the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP), are designated as terrorist groups by the United States.
Comment: Demonizing BDS: Message control is the cornerstone of Israeli propaganda.
See also:
- Israel implies BDS movement are terrorists while cracking down on German banks and violating international law
- The BDS movement: A 'strategic threat of the first order' to Israel
- Israeli official calls for new strategy to fight the BDS movement
- ISIS attack imminent? Israeli minister threatens Brits who support BDS movement
- Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) movement for Palestinian rights nominated for Nobel Peace Prize











Comment: A more apt or appropriate description for what we're witnessing - as 'bat-shit crazy' - can probably not be made. But this all begs the question: how does one talk down tens of millions Americans from the heights of hysteria they're a part of when so much of the "information" they are receiving not only maintains the big Putin-Nazi lie - but is intended to intensify it?