Puppet Masters
Back in the days before internet I was the kid in the locker room phoning in athlete times and results to the local newspapers before the deadline for the next day's edition.
I loved the faster track events like the 440-yard sprint and the half-mile distances. I always thought the most challenging track event was the high-hurdles. This combined speed and endurance, with precision coordination and athleticism on the jumps. One mistake in mid-air could result in a disastrous crash on a cinder track and a bloody injury.
The head of Kaspersky Lab refuted the cyber-espionage allegations saying that the company has never been involved in spying for the Russian intelligence, Reuters reported on Thursday. He also added that he would move Moscow-based Kaspersky Lab out of the country if he ever received such a demand.
CEO Eugene Kaspersky stated that his company is under attack by the US media and the US government which are spreading lies about the Russian cyber-security giant, acknowledging that these attacks will do harm to the firm.
Today, with the kind permission of Phil Butler, I am posting the full text of my contribution to his book "Putin's Praetorians: Confessions of the Top Kremlin Trolls". There are a couple of reasons for that. The main one is that I strongly believe that this book deserves a much bigger visibility than it has received (this is also why, exceptionally, I am placing this post in the top "analyses" category and not elsewhere).
Please read my review here to see why I feel so strongly about this book. Frankly, I am rather shocked by the very little amount of reviews this book as generated. I don't even know if somebody besides Russia Insider has bothered writing a review of it or not, but even if somebody has, it is still a crying shame that this most interesting volume has been so far ignored by the alternative media including the one friendly to Russia. So by posting my own contribution here I want to bring back this book to the "front page", so to speak, of our community.
Tbilisi believes that the approval is a big win. The Javelin has long been at the top of the country's wish list since 2008 when Georgia attacked South Ossetia and Russian peacekeepers, triggering a war with Russia, which it lost. Until the State Department's approval, the US had been reluctant to encourage Georgian adventurism and escalate tensions with Russia by selling the system. That attitude appears to have changed. The efforts to boost military cooperation with Tbilisi have intensified under the Trump administration. The visit of Vice President Mike Pence in August was seen in Tbilisi as a meaningful gesture toward Georgia.
While she supposedly convinced her husband to sell that now infamous plane, they then bought an even more expensive one. Its record of logged miles are hidden from the public, according to the Federal Aviation Administration.
The company hired by McCaskill to operate the plane, a 2009 Pilatus PC-12/47E, wrote to the FAA earlier this year in April to ask that tracking information on the plane be blocked from the public, according to email records obtained by the Washington Free Beacon through a Freedom of Information Act request.McCaskill's campaign spokeswoman Meira Bernstein said the request to hide the plane records was made by Aero Charter, not her boss.
"The plane is regularly chartered out to other users, and my understanding is that Aero Charter made this decision to protect the privacy and security of users," Bernstein said. "Claire has been completely transparent about her use of the plane and no taxpayer or campaign dollars are ever used for the plane."
Voters take these things seriously. When it was revealed how HHS Secretary Tom Price took advantage of his position to leave taxpayers with thousands of dollars in airfare, the backlash was so fierce he was quickly pressured to resign.
Now as the Syrian war draws to a close, the start of a new Middle East order is taking form.
Via The Strategic Culture Foundation...
In the Middle East and beyond, we are witnessing a series of high-level political meetings between dozens of nations involved directly or indirectly in the Syrian situation. It is crucial to understand all this in order to understand the direction in which the region is going and what the new regional order is.With the liberation of Abu Kamal on the Iraqi border, the last Syrian town controlled by ISIS, the Syrian Arab Army (SAA) and its allies have completed the task of eliminating the Caliphate and its control over Syrian cities. ISIS returns to its original dimensions of being a terrorist organization without control of any territory or a city-state proclaimed as its capital.
These are important days, with political conferences about the future of the region and Syria itself occurring from Sochi to Cairo and passing through Riyadh.
Comment: While the situation in Syria is progressively resolving, the empire has yet to throw in the towel and go home. There is no lock on this particular future. However, if this projection turns out to be close to reality, it could be one of the better outcomes.
"The policies of the Clintons brought us the financial recession - through lifting Glass-Steagall, pushing subprime lending, and blocking reforms to Fannie and Freddie. Two friendly names but they're not so friendly. It's time for a 21st century Glass-Steagall and, as part of that, a priority on helping African-American businesses get the credit they need."
Now, as the sitting President, the former populist candidate has become the embodiment of the political establishment he railed against. He has stacked his administration with former bankers from Goldman Sachs; he has placed deeply conflicted Wall Street cronies in key regulatory posts; and he is promising to roll back critical financial reforms. His Treasury Secretary, Steve Mnuchin, has disavowed any intention to reinstate the Glass-Steagall Act.
To the careful observer, it would appear that the American people have, once again, been played for fools by billionaires who no longer need to hide behind a dark political curtain but have simply seized the reins of power for themselves in broad daylight.
According to an investigation by the Intercept, 'Operation Curable' is being led by a counterterrorism unit within London's Metropolitan Police. "The investigation is still ongoing. In addition to this, I can also confirm that it is still under the direction of AC Mark Rowley," a spokesperson said in reply to a Freedom of Information Act request.
The investigation has now been active for more than four years. The force has declined to provide any information about the amount of funds spent or the number of officers working on it, instead insisting that it does not hold records of these details.
The National Union for Journalists (NUJ), the UK's largest journalists' organization, called for the investigation to be halted immediately. Spokesperson Sarah Kavanagh said news reports based on the Snowden documents had exposed unlawful covert surveillance activities in the public interest.
"The media are often the only group in society able to reveal the intelligence and security forces have exceeded their legitimate powers and remit," Kavanagh told the Intercept. "The Met Police should be condemned for keeping journalists under investigation because they worked on the Snowden leaks. The investigation should be halted immediately. Journalism is not a crime."
Comment: Criminal Offense: Never mind the origin, investigate instead the messenger.
Of course, Clinton has first-hand experience of dealing with women who've accused her own husband of sexual assault and rape. She responded at the time by attacking their character and trying to discredit them. And when asked about these women today, she still accuses them of lying, telling a conservative radio host a few days ago that her husband's accusers were "misremembering or misinterpreting history."
"One of the things we're all talking about, today is you name the profession there are now men who stand accused, who have lost their jobs, women are coming forward and taking the power in their own hands to stand up to what's happened to them. I'd love to get your thoughts on what's happening," he prompted.
Clinton had her pro-women empowerment message ready, praising those who've come forward as "courageous" even in the face of possibly facing persecution for doing so.
Comment: You gotta give it to Hillary: somehow, despite her age and repeated humiliating failures, she still manages to get more vile by the day. Now that's an accomplishment.
- White House maids 'afraid to bend over' around sexual predator Bill Clinton, says Linda Tripp
- Bill Clinton facing four sexual assault lawsuits after fresh allegations, says author of books on the Clintons
- Former secret service agent threatens to spill the beans on Clinton's "Lolita Express" trips with pedophile Epstein
Not that the recent phone call with Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte was the first time President Trump questioned Kim's sanity. Last year candidate Trump said Kim was "like a maniac."
Thankfully President Trump indicated that he didn't want to use America's vastly more powerful military against Kim. The president still looks to Beijing for the answer: "I hope China solves the problem. They really have the means because a great degree of their stuff come[s] through China. But if China doesn't do it, we will do it." The president didn't explain what "it" might involve.
Comment: Obviously, the issues have since not resolved and progress, unless behind the scenes, has not been forthcoming, except for Kim's nuclear program. Perhaps China truly doesn't have a magic solution and perhaps Kim is a little bit not crazy.
See also:
- US seriously underestimating North Korea: Why rapprochement is the only solution
- North Korea tests another ballistic missile - Kim Jong-Un celebrates "completion of nuclear force" program















Comment: Further reading: Why is the U.S. attacking Kaspersky? Because they exposed U.S. and Israeli spies behind Stuxnet