Puppet Masters
Watching World Vision infomercials educating the west to the want and misery suffered by millions of children in the third world, I wasn't alone in asking adults "why"? When I enjoyed all the comforts of food security, electricity and running water, why were these other children living in poverty? I know that I was not the only bewildered child to receive the shallow response that I did from family and teachers when I was told that this "simply is the way it is". At best, we privileged few in the 1st world could hope that $1/day would alleviate their pain, but really there was no great solution.
Later in life, as my closest friends found themselves enmeshed in university political science and economic programs, the innocent curiosity that recognized injustice for what it was not only died under the weight of materialist theories of human nature which their parents paid good money to feed them, but upon leaving school, those same friends actually became witting accomplices in that very system which their youthful hearts recognized as wrong so many years earlier. Since humanity was intrinsically selfish and our economic system so immutable, the best we could hope for was success in life and enjoy being on the receiving end of destiny.
Again, I know that I'm not alone in this experience, as tens of millions of citizens took to the streets all around the world on September 27 to march for the earth, repulsed by corrupt consumerism and celebrating the advent of a Green New Deal.

National Security Agency (NSA) whistleblower Edward Snowden – who leaked classified material on the agency’s sweeping mass surveillance programs in 2013 – slammed the officials for what he said “may be the largest overnight violation of privacy in history.”
In an open letter to Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, Barr and his British and Australian counterparts will argue that law enforcement requires access to encrypted applications, effectively asking the company to hand over the keys to the private communications of 300 million daily WhatsApp users, as well as 1.5 billion who log into Facebook every day. The letter is dated Friday, but an advance copy was seen by the New York Times.
"Companies should not deliberately design their systems to preclude any form of access to content, even for preventing or investigating the most serious crimes," the officials wrote.
Though the Facebook-owned messenger WhatsApp is already protected by end-to-end encryption, the open letter will also urge the company to delay rolling out similar features for its other chat platforms, Facebook Messenger and Instagram Direct, asking for access akin to a phone wiretap.
Comment: One way or another, governments will find ways to access any and all information wanted, whether legally or illegally. See also:
- Snake-oil alert: Encryption doesn't prevent mass-snooping
- U.S. may outlaw messaging encryption used by WhatsApp, iMessage and Others - Report
- 'Five Eyes' security alliance: Law enforcement must have backdoor access to encrypted material
- NSA caught illegally collecting Americans' phone data...yet again!
- Government surveillance of American citizens goes far beyond what you are being told
We have recently been witnessing events of considerable importance in the Middle East, almost on a daily basis. The tensions between Washington and Tehran are fueled above all by the Trump administration's need to placate most of the US deep state, wedded to neoconservativism, who march in lockstep with Trump's financiers from Wahhabi Saudi Arabia and Israel.

Inauguration of the new ASEAN Secretariat Building in Jakarta, Indonesia, August 8, 2019.
"Our concept is not to create new blocs along the model of Europe or the North Atlantic after the Second World War," Putin said on Thursday, during the debates at the 16th Valdai Discussion Forum in Sochi.
Asked about the possibility of a new military alliance in Asia - presumably referring to US efforts for some kind of Indo-Pacific partnership against the rising influence of China - the Russian president said that the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) is working for the needs of the region just fine.
Comment: See also:
- Putin, Xi & Abe: Greater Eurasia Coming Together in Russian Far East
- Hong Kong protests: Fading foreign tantrum, not genuine revolution
- WTO lowers global outlook again amid trade conflicts and volatility
- Washington's and NATO's criminal wars and government austerity policies at the heart of European & US migration turmoil

A protest in support of President Martin Vizcarra in Lima, Peru. September 30, 2019.
"As a hemisphere, we are defined by our commitment to democratic principles, including the separation of powers, the rule of law, transparency and accountability in governance and the fight against corruption," said the spokesman, consulted for the political situation of the Andean country, in an email sent to Reuters.
Comment: Peru has been in turmoil for several days now, but has gone unnoticed in the US except for this banal statement. RT reported on October 1:
The slow-burning political crisis in Peru reached the boiling point after Vizcarra dissolved the opposition-controlled parliament on Monday and called for a new general election in January.And on October 2:
"May this exceptional measure allow citizens to finally express themselves and decide the country's future at the polls," he said in a televised address.
Vizcarra previously threatened to dissolve parliament if the opposition continues to block his anti-graft bills. The president finally decided to make the move after lawmakers voted to replace almost all Constitutional Court judges despite his objections.
While Vizcarra insists that his actions are completely legal, parliament declared them to be unconstitutional and "a threat to democracy." Lawmakers then voted to remove Vizcarra from office and swore in Vice President Mercedes Araoz as acting president of Peru.
Vizcarra has made it clear that he will not step down. Shortly after dissolving the parliament, he met with the chiefs of the army, navy, air force, and police, with all of them affirming their loyalty to him as president.
"Martin Vizcarra is the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces and the National Police of Peru," the military later said in a statement.
At the same time, rallies were held in various cities in support of Vizcarra and his move to dissolve parliament.
Not everyone is cheering him on, though. Several prominent figures, like former Interior Minister Fernando Rospigliosi and veteran politician Lourdes Flores, blasted Vizcarra's actions as a "coup d'etat."
During his election campaign, Martin Vizcarra championed the fight against corruption, which has plagued the nation for decades. His predecessor, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, was forced to resign last year over allegations of graft and vote-buying.
Vizcarra's primary opponents come from the Popular Force (FP) party, whose leader, Keiko Fujimori, is currently being held as part of a corruption investigation. She is the daughter of former President Alberto Fujimori, who is serving jail time for corruption and embezzlement.
Unlike in Venezuela, where opposition leader Juan Guaido enjoys full backing from Washington, the US had previously refrained from taking a side in Peru's burgeoning struggle. Vizcarra's government ironically threw support behind Guaido in January, soon after he declared himself "interim president" of Venezuela.
Some online couldn't resist drawing comparisons between the two embattled countries. "It will be very fun to listen to Vizcarra, the Lima Group and the [Organization of American States] explaining why the interim president of Mercedes Araoz in Peŕu is not valid but that of Guaidó in Venezuela is," one user tweeted.
"The interim Vizcarra dissolves the Congress and the Congress suspends the interim Vizcarra. Guaido will have to take care of Peru," another commenter joked, while a third asked "Did Guaidó proclaim himself President of Peru yet?"
With Washington finally taking notice of Peru's crisis, however, some noted the country may soon find itself in bigger trouble, and become another victim of US-imposed "democracy" abroad. Previous initiatives yielded outcomes such as Iraq and Libya, where the floodgates of violence and extremism were smashed open by American bombing campaigns - or Syria, where US support for "moderate rebels" prolonged a bloody conflict by years and helped to tear the country apart - all in the name of "democratic institutions."
Autumn of 2020 - the time when the US will choose their president - is nearing and there is no dying down of Russiagate, it seems. So NBC's Keir Simmons, who came to Moscow to moderate the Energy Week forum, tried to get some information on the everlasting issue.
"Is Russia as [special prosecutor] Robert Mueller alleged attempting to influence the 2020 election in the US?" Simmons, a UK journalist who works as a foreign correspondent for the US broadcaster, wondered.
Comment: What a pity the western media has become so tone deaf that an RT host has to explain that Putin was being humorous.

Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), House intelligence chairman, hold a press conference about the impeachment inquiry of President Trump, at the Capitol in Washington on Oct. 2, 2019.
You are not to be faulted if you think a formal inquest is under way and that legal process has been issued. The misimpression is completely understandable if you have been taking in media coverage — in particular, reporting on a haughty Sept. 27 letter from House Democrats, presuming to direct Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, on pain of citation for obstruction, to cooperate in their demands to depose State Department officials and review various records.
The letter is signed by not one but three committee chairmen. Remember your elementary math, though: Zero is still zero even when multiplied by three.
What is portrayed as an "impeachment inquiry" is actually just a made-for-cable-TV political soap opera. The House of Representatives is not conducting a formal impeachment inquiry. To the contrary, congressional Democrats are conducting the 2020 political campaign.
The House has not voted as a body to authorize an impeachment inquiry. What we have are partisan theatrics, proceeding under the ipse dixit of Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). It raises the profile, but not the legitimacy, of the same "impeachment inquiry" House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler (D-N.Y.) previously tried to abracadabra into being without a committee vote.
While restricting American companies from doing business with the world's largest telecommunications equipment vendor, the US has also been trying to convince other countries that Huawei's equipment could be used by Beijing for spying, an allegation that the firm and the Chinese government deny.
Here is a list of European countries who are still reluctant to make technological development a victim of US policy.
"The FBI obtains the best intelligence to combat threats through information provided by the public. If you have information that can help the FBI, visit us," the three ads launched on September 11 urge in English. They are accompanied by stock photos with trite captions in Russian.
"Time to build Bridges," says one, over a drawing of a man crossing a bridge.
"Isn't it time to make your move?" says another, showing a very unlikely arrangement of figures on a chessboard.
The third was presumably supposed to say "For your future and the future of your family!" but managed to mis-spell "future" (twice), "your" and "family," and misplaced a comma to boot.
The ministry proposes amending Russia's tax legislation to make leading multinational tech companies pay taxes to those countries where their users reside. The measure would allow the avoidance of budget losses and would make tax distribution more fair, the ministry said in a recently published document on taxation policies for 2021-2022 as cited by RBC business outlet.











Comment: See also: Climate rip off: Follow the money trail as well as The Misanthropic Bankers Behind The Green New Deal