Puppet MastersS


Popcorn

UN declares the Sea of Okhotsk enclave part of Russia's continental shelf

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© RIA NovostiSea of Okhotsk
A United Nations commission has officially recognized the Sea of Okhotsk enclave, off Russia's southeastern coast, as part of the country's continental shelf, the Russian minister of natural resources said Saturday.

Russia will get exclusive rights to the area of 52,000 square kilometers, described by the government as a "real Ali Baba's cave," that contains reserves of valuable minerals and other natural resources.

"This is in fact an accomplished event," Sergei Donskoy told reporters commenting on Friday's decision by the UN Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf which he said cannot be reversed.

Propaganda

Outrage: CIA's inspector general never conducted an investigation on Benghazi

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© ReutersSept. 11, 2012: A protester reacts as the U.S. Consulate in Benghazi is seen in flames.
American personnel on the ground in Benghazi the night of the 2012 terror attack are outraged after learning that the CIA's inspector general never conducted an investigation into what happened -- despite two CIA workers being killed in the attack and despite at least two complaints being filed by CIA employees.

Former Ambassador Chris Stevens, another State official and two ex-Navy SEALs working for the CIA were killed in that attack.

Many in the agency were told, or were under the impression, that an investigation was in the works, but that is not the case.

One person close to the issue told Fox News: "They should be doing an investigation to see what the chief of base in Benghazi and station chief in Tripoli did that night. If they did, they'd find out there were some major mistakes."

This source claimed an investigation would likely uncover a lot of details the public does not know.

Asked why such a probe has not been launched, a CIA spokesman said: "CIA's Office of the Inspector General (OIG) always reviews carefully every matter that is brought to its attention, and takes appropriate action based on a variety of factors."

Eye 1

Bill Gates lobbies for feds to collect data on college graduates' lives

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A study released by the Gates Foundation is promoting a system that would track the careers of college graduates long after they receive their degrees, attacking the National Association for Independent Colleges and Universities for promoting laws that prevent up-close surveillance of students by the government.

The study, titled "College Blackout," argues that the proposed system, the Student Unit Recording System, would allow a more nuanced approach to studying the value of higher education. This requires knowing the life story of every student and tracking information like income after college and major simultaneously. The data already exists, the study argues, though spread out across a number of government institutions, like the Social Security Administration and the IRS.

While private institutions and some states keep these records, the study argues that the federal government should have this information pooled in one place.

What currently prevents such a database is a 2008 law that bans the project. "Without the ban," the study explains, "the Department of Education could use student-level data already collected and stored by schools, states, and the federal government; safeguard it; and link it across schools and to other data sources - a structure known as a student unit record data system."

USA

Obama ladies touch down in China for a weeklong feel-good tourist event amid taxpayer uproar over cost

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© Alexander F. YuanU.S. First Lady Michelle Obama, front left, her daughters Sasha, front right, Malia, right in the back, and Michelle Obama's mother Marian Robinson, left in the back, arrive at Capital International Airport in Beijing, China, Thursday, March 20, 2014
The Obama ladies are in the house - the house of China, that is.

First lady Michelle Obama, her two daughters, Malia and Sasha, and her mother touched down Thursday in China for what's being touted as a weeklong feel-good tourist event, amid increasing murmurs back home about U.S. taxpayers having to foot the bill.

Mrs. Obama is supposed to use her visit for soft diplomacy only, and shy from the more controversial topics that plague U.S.-China relations, namely human rights and economics. No reporters accompanied the family on the trip.

"The nature of her visit is really quite different," deputy national security adviser Ben Rhodes told reporters ahead of the trip. "What the first lady really brings is the power of her own story, the power of American values."

The White House also announced that Mrs. Obama wouldn't field any questions from journalists she encountered in Beijing, which rankled some members of the press and the private sector, given her trip - complete with an entourage of about 70 - was still being paid for with tax dollars.

Mrs. Obama is due to meet with her Chinese counterpart, first lady Peng Liyuan, on Friday. Her travel mates will also head with her to the western historic city of Xi'an and the southern community of Chengdu, the latter of which is home to the nation's famed panda bear reserves.

Bulb

Illinois to follow California's lead with 'Millionaire Tax' referendum

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Illinois Speaker of the House Michael Madigan
Michael Madigan, the all-powerful Speaker of the Illinois House of Representatives, announced Thursday that he would direct the Democrat-controlled state legislature to place a referendum on the November ballot that would raise taxes on millionaires by three percent. The measure is similar to a referendum that California Gov. Jerry Brown convinced voters to pass in November 2012, and which helped the state achieve a budget surplus.

Madigan, a Democratic Party boss whom most regard as the true ruler of the state--surpassing Democrat Gov. Pat Quinn--would need to convince three-fifths of both houses to pass the tax hike as a constitutional amendment before it could be put to the voters.

However, as Ray Long, Monique Garcia and Maura Zurich of the Chicago Tribune note, "Madigan holds enough Democratic votes that he could muscle the measure through."

Democrats hold supermajorities in both the House and Senate in Illinois, thanks partly to the fact that Madigan redrew the districts after the 2010 Census--and did so without fear of opposition from the governor after Quinn defeated his Republican challenger.

Chart Bar

Millions spent by NASA to fly first and business class with little oversight

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© ABCNASA Administrator Charles Bolden
In 2011, NASA booked a flight for Ames Research Center Director Simon "Pete" Worden to fly first class from Washington D.C. to San Francisco. Cost of the one-way ticket: $14,773, versus the $189 average coach fare. Although the trip is reported in NASA's annual travel disclosure, the agency now says the flight never happened.

Worden, meanwhile, says he did take the flight. He explained by email to Scripps News that the trip "included substantial foreign travel," and that he was authorized to fly first class for medical reasons. Yet, NASA's annual report accounting for its first and business class "premium" flights during 2011 includes no reports of foreign travel for Worden that year.

NASA is trying to resolve many of these kinds of disparities as it sorts out what it calls "widespread" errors in travel disclosures to the General Services Administration of its premium travel, according to Elizabeth Robinson, the space agency's chief financial officer. The errors date back to at least 2009, she said.

"We've identified some cases where there are inaccuracies and we are being very forthright about that and we are addressing those inconsistencies," said NASA communications director David Weaver.

Treasure Chest

Obamacare is definitely not 'as cheap as your cellphone bill' - Obama's nose keeps growing

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© Unknown
One of President Barack Obama's favorite new Obamacare sign-up pitches is that young enrollees, which the law banks on for sustainability, can get health insurance for the price of a monthly cellphone bill. But in reality, premiums are more than a little pricier.

"HealthCare.gov works great now," Obama told Zack Galifianakis Tuesday in a Funny or Die "Between Two Ferns" video. "And millions of Americans have already gotten health insurance plans, and what we want is for people to know that you can get affordable health care - and most young Americans right now, they're not covered."

"And the truth is that they can get coverage all for what it costs you to pay your cell phone bill," Obama said.

As competition heats up in the wireless war between the nation's biggest carriers, prices and options for cellphone plans are spread across a wide range, depending on phone type, data limits, upgrade terms, etc. For comparison's sake, we'll define an average middle-of-the-road plan as consisting of a smartphone, two-year upgrade, unlimited calls, unlimited texts and an average of two gigs of downloadable Internet data per month.

Comment: Psychopathic insurance companies - feeding the insatiable greed:

Insurance companies profit from Obamacare
Average healthcare premiums have soared 39%-56% post Obamacare
Obamacare sticker shock: premiums for young healthy people will jump in 45 states
Health insurance premiums rising faster after Obamacare than in the previous eight years
Obamacare becomes nightmare of higher premiums and deductibles


Coffee

Zuckerberg calls Obama to express 'frustration' over NSA surveillance

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© Unknown
Mark Zuckerberg isn't the first name that comes to mind as a champion of privacy. But the seemingly endless revelations of NSA surveillance programs has inspired Facebook's founder to call up no less than President Obama himself to defend his users from government intrusion.

On Thursday Zuckerberg posted a statement on Facebook calling on the U.S. government to take more measures to respect users' privacy and security. "The US government should be the champion for the internet, not a threat," reads his statement. "I've called President Obama to express my frustration over the damage the government is creating for all of our future. Unfortunately, it seems like it will take a very long time for true full reform."

Though Zuckerberg never explicitly names the NSA in his statement, his comments follow news of NSA programs that have potentially allowed spying on Facebook users for years - particularly the majority of those users outside the United States. The initial stories on the NSA's PRISM program last July cited NSA slides that made Facebook appear to have given direct backdoor access to its servers, a notion Zuckerberg and others have vehemently denied. In October, more revelations pointed to NSA efforts to decrypt or surveil data as it traveled between the data centers of companies like Yahoo! and Google. Yet another program siphoned users' entire contact lists from services like Gmail, Yahoo! Mail, Hotmail and Facebook - NSA documents cited a single day when 82,857 contact lists were taken from Facebook users.

Che Guevara

Putin's quiet, smart Latin America play

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Away from the conflict in Ukraine, Russian President Vladimir Putin is quietly seeking a foothold in Latin America, military officials warn.

To the alarm of lawmakers and Pentagon officials, Putin has begun sending navy ships and long-range bombers to the region for the first time in years.

Russia's defense minister says the country is planning bases in Cuba, Venezuela, and Nicaragua, and just last week, Putin's national security team met to discuss increasing military ties in the region.

"They're on the march," Sen. Joe Donnelly (D-Ind.) said at a Senate hearing earlier this month. "They're working the scenes where we can't work. And they're doing a pretty good job."

Gen. James Kelly, commander of U.S. Southern Command said there has been a "noticeable uptick in Russian power projection and security force personnel" in Latin America.

"It has been over three decades since we last saw this type of high-profile Russian military presence," Kelly said at the March 13 hearing.

Snakes in Suits

Did the U.S. deploy snipers against peaceful Occupy protesters?

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Snipers are commonly used as "false flag" terrorists to disrupt peaceful protests. And see this.

The FBI treated the peaceful protesters at the Occupy protests as terrorists. More here and here.

Was the U.S. government prepared to deploy snipers to disrupt the Occupy protests ... "if necessary"?

TruthDig reported last year:
"Did the FBI ignore, or even abet, a plot to assassinate Occupy Houston leaders?" asks investigative reporter Dave Lindorff at WhoWhatWhy. "What did the Feds know? Whom did they warn? And what did the Houston Police know?"

A Freedom of Information Act request filed by the Washington, D.C.-based Partnership for Civil Justice Fund yielded an FBI document containing knowledge of a plot by an unnamed group or individual to kill "leaders" of the Houston chapter of the nonviolent Occupy Wall Street movement.