Puppet Masters
On Wednesday, Dutch citizens participated in the referendum on ratification of the EU-Ukraine association deal. According to the Dutch RTL Nieuws broadcaster, 61.1 percent of the Dutch voted against the ratification, while the turnout was 32.2 percent.
"I would like to remind everyone that the true target of the people, who have organized the referendum — is not the association agreement between Ukraine and the European Union. It is an attack on the European unity, an attack on the European values' spreading. The discussion that has been launched shortly before the referendum highlights it," Poroshenko said following the referendum.

This picture taken on Jan. 31, 2014, and released by the United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), shows residents of the besieged Palestinian camp of Yarmouk, queuing to receive food supplies, in Damascus, Syria.
In an interview with Sputnik, Thanos Dokos, Director General of the Hellenic Foundation for European and Foreign Policy, said that Greece could get physical in its attempts to deport the so-called "irregular migrants"- those who did not meet the requisite criteria for asylum status.
The interview came after the controversial deal brokered between the EU and Turkey to return "irregular migrants" from Greece to Turkey came into force on April 4.
Comment: How will local authorities move the refugees to Turkey without the use of force? It's a good question - will this become an escalation of the 'crisis' that fascist locals can use to further their agenda?
Further reading:
It's the 1930s all over again ... whether we look right or left, whether we point east or west, hate, ethno-centrism and sectarianism seem to be the order of the day - this new rationale we ought to abide to if not to stand being called an apologist and a hypocrite.
Europe's refugee crisis is a means to furthering the elite's fascist agenda

Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte casts his vote for the consultative referendum on the association between Ukraine and the European Union.
Sixty-one percent voted against the Netherlands ratifying the treaty, which would strengthen economic and political ties between the 28-nation bloc and Kiev, an exit poll conducted by the Ipsos center shows. Some 38 percent of the voters supported the move, the exit poll has shown. If the turnout surpasses the 30 percent threshold, making the "no" vote valid, the government will reconsider ratifying the treaty, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte has said.
"It's clear that 'No' have won by an overwhelming margin, the question is only if turnout is sufficient," Rutte stated. "If the turnout is above 30 percent with such a large margin of victory for the 'No' camp then my sense is that ratification simply can't go ahead."

German Chancellor Angela Merkel looks out of her car window as she arrives for an EU summit at the EU Council building in Brussels on Monday, March 7, 2016
In an interview with Sputnik, Engels argued that problems like populism, high unemployment, growing influx of migrants, asymmetric and economic wars as well as the decline of traditional values had already existed in the 1st century BC. Exactly these things have become major challenges for Europe in recent decades.
"Over the past few decades, corruption, social naivety and general political apathy of European citizens have sharply increased. Here you can also see clear analogies to the late Roman Republic, where citizens were even ready to accept an authoritarian government — due to poverty, unemployment, loss of values and the civil war — if this was the only way their belongings could be protected," the expert argued.
Comment: The similarities go even further than that. What's remarkable is that the environment itself also became less stable as Rome became more totalitarian. Scarcity and greed brought on famine, crop failures, then 'fire in the sky', unusually powerful earthquakes and devastating plague.
The seat of empire today is not in Europe but in the US, but Europe is undoubtedly feeling the effects of collapse just as strongly.
On his social network page Turchynov wrote that fighting with a country like Ukraine, Russia would not last four days.
Recall that in July last year, the chairman of the State Duma Naryshkin noted that Russia is not involved in the conflict in Ukraine. According to him, there are no Russian troops on the territory of Donbass, regardless of what the Kiev authorities are trying hard to convince the world community.
In March 2016, Petro Poroshenko said that during the armed conflict ten thousand Ukrainians died in the Donbass. The press secretary of the Russian president, Dmitry Peskov, said that there is no reason to trust information on victims from Kiev.
According to official figures from the Office of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, in the south-eastern Ukraine, 9 thousand 167 people have been killed in two years. Almost 22 thousand were injured. These figures include "civilians, Ukrainian soldiers, and members of armed groups."
Translated from Russian TV Zvezda by Tom Winter
Comment: The translator notes, "The interesting thing about this item is not the Turchinov boast, but the plain implication of it: In taking the bait from Naryshkin with this countering boast, Turchinov admits that Russia is not, and has not been, at war with Ukraine. Not what Poroshenko has been telling the West!"
The meeting on Tuesday was attended by the chiefs of General Staff of the Armed Forces of Azerbaijan and Armenia, Najmaddin Sadigov and Yuri Khatchaturov. "At the meeting an agreement was reached on ending military operations on the contact line of forces of Azerbaijan and Armenia," the ministry said in a statement.
The situation along the line of contact in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone deteriorated dramatically overnight to April 2 when fierce clashes began. The parties to the conflict accused each other of violating the truce. The Armenian and Azerbaijani defense ministries announced cessation of combat operations in Nagorno-Karabakh from 11:00 a.m. (0800GMT) Moscow time on April 5.
Comment: For background on this conflict, see:
- Armenia vs Azerbaijan, East vs West: Nagorno-Karabakh crisis and the NATO-Israeli connection
- Armenian-Azeri tensions: Why they're happening, and who benefits

Broken windows of the terminal at Brussels airport are seen during a ceremony following bomb attacks in Brussels in Zaventem, Belgium, March 23, 2016.
The attacker, whose name was not mentioned, had the job from 2009 to 2010.
He "worked for a period of one month for a cleaning company which was contracted by the European Parliament at the time," spokesman Jaume Duch Guillot said in a statement.
According to an EU official, the terrorist is Najim Laachraoui, 25, who, according to prosecutors, blew himself up in Belgian airport.
Comment: The man identified as Laachraoui was wearing a glove, most likely to avoid leaving fingerprints in the airport. (Incidentally, the Bakraoui brothers reportedly worked as janitors at the airport.) If so, he didn't intend to die that way. The third man, who was identified as Faisal Cheffou, was later arrested, but then let go. Was he or someone else responsible for remotely detonating explosive devices (in which case, Laachraoui and Bakraoui were dupes and victims of the attack)? Why was he released? Where is he now, and what did he have to say about Laachraoui and Bakraoui, with whom he was walking in the airport?
Once spotted, an individual name must be found with whom there were linkages in the past or today. This requires a huge, well fed, and extremely well managed database.
Is America the World's Worst Girlfriend?
Stand-up comic Louis CK recently did this bit where he characterized America as "the world's worst girlfriend":
The bit is really funny and perceptive. But in actuality, the average American would respond with, "We're bombing Yemen? What's Yemen?" While the average American foreign policy official wouldn't cite 9/11, but would feign innocence. "We're not! That war belongs to Saudi Arabia. Whaaatt? I didn't do anything!""America is like a terrible girlfriend to the rest of the world. If someone hurts America, she remembers it forever. But if she does anything bad, she's like: 'Whaaatt? I didn't do anything!' America, why do you keep bombing those people in Yemen? 'Because nine-eleven, okay. Nine-eleven. So shut up!'"
These veils of ignorance and deception parted ever so slightly recently, when, after a whole year, the war on Yemen finally received some major coverage in the mainstream media. A March 29 Associated Press "Big Story" exposed mainstream readers to the war's horrific human toll. The article, titled "An infant's 5-month life points to hunger's spread in Yemen," frames the story by delving into one of the war's innumerable tragedies.
Comment: Art imitates life:
The dollar today is no longer backed by gold. That has been so since Nixon unilaterally abrogated the 1944 Bretton Woods Treaty and took the dollar off its statutory gold backing to float free in August, 1971. He did so at the insistence of then Under Treasury Secretary Paul Volcker and Volcker's patron, David Rockefeller at Chase Manhattan Bank. Nixon took that desperate measure, simply said, because the Federal Reserve vaults of reserve gold were disappearing as France, Germany and other trading partners of the United States demanded gold in exchange for their accumulated trade dollars, as was allowed under the Bretton Woods rules.











Comment: In the same breath Poroshenko can claim the Dutch have 'violated European values' (of 'freedom and democracy') and then claim that it doesn't matter what they vote for. Sounds like he's already met the EU's political standards.