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Wed, 03 Nov 2021
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Attention

Dems are ditching their party in droves; conservatives should pay attention

DoNotResuscitate
© Pinterest
Two thousand years ago, St. Paul found himself blinded by a bright light on the road to Damascus. The dramatic experience led him to stop persecuting his opponents and to take up new beliefs. Today, many former leftists are taking their first steps on their own road to Damascus, and the right is not doing nearly enough to capitalize on this unprecedented mass exit from the left.

It all began just a few short weeks ago when gay New York hairdresser Brandon Straka posted a hard-hitting video explaining why he is no longer a Democrat or a liberal. Since then, his #WalkAway Campaign Facebook group has attracted more than 172,000 members. A multitude of videos from other WalkAways have been posted online.

Make no mistake, the left has been greatly rattled by all this. The left's treatment of the #WalkAway Campaign mirrors the way it reacted to the Tea Party movement. First, it ignored it, hoping it would go away. Then it moved on to minimizing and attempting ridicule, which it has done with #WalkAway. Steven Colbert and others claimed that the #WalkAway Campaign is just run by Russian bots.

Having seen that fail, the next step was to try to co-opt it with its own movement.

Comment: Actions, reactions and consequences. Intention may not match the outcome.


Star of David

More of the same: Israel approves 1000+ new illegal settlement units in occupied West Bank

Occupied territory
© UPI/Debbie Hill
A Palestinian stands on his property overlooking the Israeli settlement Har Homa, West Bank, February 18, 2011.
Israeli authorities have approved over 1,000 new illegal settlement units in the occupied West Bank, sparking condemnation from both Palestinian and international officials.

The Higher Planning Committee of the Civil Administration, the Israeli agency responsible for enforcing the government's policies in the occupied Palestinian territory, announced the approvals earlier this week.

According to settlement watchdog Peace Now, the majority of the new housing units, around 96%, were approved in "isolated" settlements that the group says would "likely need to evacuate within the framework of a two-state agreement."

Comment: 'Strong opposition' to Israel's illegal settlements has not realized necessary action to thwart these efforts at land grab and population dissemination, nor has it protected the Palestinian population and their communities. Saeb Erekat is right. The international community treats 'Israel as a state above the law'.


Attention

Bolton warned US prepared to hit Syria with greater force than previously exercised

USS Porter Missile launch
© AP/Ford Williams/US Navy
USS Porter launches a Tomahawk land attack missile in the Mediterranean Sea.
National Security Adviser John Bolton has reportedly said that Washington is prepared to take strong military action against Syria if Damascus uses chemical weapons.

According to Bloomberg's anonymous sources, at a Thursday meeting in Geneva, Bolton told Russian Secretary of the Security Council Nikolai Patrushev that America is prepared to respond with greater force than it has used in Syria before. The information came after US officials claimed they possess information that Assad might be planning a chemical weapons attack in the northwestern province of Idlib, people familiar with the discussions say.

President Trump has ordered two strikes on Syria before, following similar circumstances and said that Assad must be punished for the alleged use of chemical weapons. The first air strike was conducted in April 2017, with the US reacting to allegations of the usage of chemical weapons by the Syrian government. President Assad denied all the allegations, letting UN experts analyze the incident.

Comment: Closed loop? Create the terrorists, locate them, provide chemical weapons, activate them and then blame and attack Syria for their discharge. Self-fulfillment accomplished by calculated false circumstances that pre-determine opportunities to dictate an outcome.


Attention

South Africa: 'Trump's land reform tweet serves 'to polarize the debate'

S Africa scene
© CC by 2.0/South African Tourism
South African Foreign Minister Lindiwe Sisulu has stated she met with US Charge d'Affaires Jessye Lapenn on August 23 after Donald Trump's tweet on the country's land policy.

Lindiwe Sisulu told the US diplomat to convey that South Africa "is disappointed about Washington's failure to use available diplomatic channels." She stated that the country is working on solution for the land issue, noting that "Trump's tweet serves only to polarize the debate."

On August 22, the US president posted a tweet, saying that he would be ordering US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to keep an eye on the country.
"I have asked Secretary of State Mike Pompeo to closely study the South Africa land and farm seizures and expropriations and the large scale killing of farmers. South African Government is now seizing land from white farmers," he wrote.
The tweet has sparked condemnation from the South African government, who has promised to solve the matter through diplomatic channels.

In December, the African National Congress (ANC), South Africa's ruling party, ratified a resolution granting lands for redistribution in favor of black South Africans without compensation.

Comment: See also:


Bad Guys

Trump administration 'redirecting' $200 million in aid from West Bank and Gaza

Palestinian demonstrators on the border between Gaza and Israel
© Ibraheem Abu Mustafa / Reuters
Palestinian demonstrators on the border between Gaza and Israel
The Trump administration is "redirecting" $200 million in economic aid earmarked for Palestinians in the West Bank and Gaza to projects elsewhere, the State Department has informed Congress.

"At the direction of President Trump, we have undertaken a review of US assistance to the Palestinian Authority and in the West Bank and Gaza to ensure these funds are spent in accordance with US national interests and provide value to the US taxpayer," a State Department official said on Friday.

More than $200 million originally designated for programs in the Palestinian territories "will now address high-priority projects elsewhere," said the unnamed official, according to Reuters.


Comment: One of the 'high priority projects' could be bribing countries to keep Iran under sanctions.


Arrow Down

How America's wars have helped create massive debt, with little strategic benefit to offset the costs

military usa
When Defense Secretary James N. Mattis spoke at the 2018 Center for the National Interest Distinguished Service Award dinner in late July, he outlined a foreign policy strategy for the United States that focused on the resurgence of great-power competition. Mattis also warned that the United States could endanger itself from within. Specifically, he stated that the growing national debt amounts to a form of "inter-generational theft" that Congress must address.

The solvency of the United States and the balance between commitments and power has been an abiding theme of foreign policy realists. In his book, U.S. Foreign Policy: Shield of the Republic, the dean of American realist thinkers, Walter Lippmann, observed in 1943:
No one would seriously suppose that he had a fiscal policy if he did not consider together expenditure and revenue, outgo and income, liabilities and assets. But in foreign relations we have habitually in our minds divorced the discussion of our war aims, our peace aims, our ideals, our interests, our commitments, from the discussion of our armaments, our strategic position, our potential allies and our probable enemies. No policy could emerge from such a discussion. For what settles practical controversy is the knowledge that ends and means have to be balanced: an agreement has eventually to be reached when men admit that they must pay for what they want and that they must want only what they are willing to pay for.
In 1987, Samuel Huntington wrote an essay in Foreign Affairs called "Coping With the Lippmann Gap." He reiterated that America was incurring commitments abroad that it was not willing to pay for at home. Such warnings have gone largely unheeded.

Instead, since the end of the Bill Clinton presidency - when the United States ran a budget surplus - the debt level has been rising steadily. It jumped from $10.6 trillion during the George W. Bush administration to $19.9 trillion under Barack Obama. Though Donald Trump said in 2017 that he would eliminate the debt "over a period of eight years," he has gone silent on the issue even as he presides over a debt that is expected to exceed $21 trillion. Goldman Sachs recently stated that the fiscal outlook for the United States is "not good" and predicts that debt as a percentage of the gross national product will rise from its current 4.1 percent to 7 percent by 2028.

Eye 2

South Africa's Julius Malema proclaims Trump right, we're coming for white farmers

South African politician Julius Malema
© Gianluigi Guercia / Agence France-Presse / Getty
Julius Malema
Radical South African politician Julius Malema confirmed President Donald Trump's concerns Thursday, declaring defiantly that the point of the country's proposed new "expropriation without compensation" policy would be to take land from white farmers.

"Through land expropriation, we are forcing white people to share the land which was gained through a crime against the humanity of black and African people," Malema said in a press conference, referring to the racist land policies of colonialism and apartheid.

On Wednesday evening, President Donald Trump's tweeted that he had directed Secretary of State Mike Pompeo "to closely study the South Africa land and farm seizures and expropriations and the large scale killing of farmers."

Comment:


Cheesecake

Dining diplomacy? Erdogan invites 'dearest friend' Putin to meet at Istanbul fish restaurant

putin erdogan
© Tolga Bozoglu / Reuters
Russia's Vladimir Putin and Turkey's Recep Tayyip Erdogan may soon be discussing the S-400 anti-air systems deal while eating fish or lobsters, as Putin has been reminded of an arrangement to meet at a certain Istanbul restaurant.

An invitation from Erdogan, delivered to Putin by Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Çavusoglu on Friday, said: "Your dearest friend, Mr. Erdogan, has asked to convene his greetings and best wishes, he is hoping for your visit to Istanbul in the near future. You have an arrangement to go to a fish restaurant." Cavusoglu was addressing the Russian leader at a high-profile meeting in Moscow.

The 'fish restaurant' story goes back all the way to the BRICS summit in July. Back then Putin reminded his Turkish counterpart that once Erdogan invited him to dine at a fish restaurant. When Erdogan stressed that the invitation still stands, the Russian president pointed out that the issue with meat exports to Turkey must first be sorted out.

Comment: Russia and Turkey's growing closeness has Washington on edge. The ramifications go in many directions, none of them positive for the Empire.


Map

Guess what? Donald Trump is (mostly) right about South Africa

south africa land
© Wikus de Wet / AFP / Getty
President Donald Trump's comments on South Africa on Wednesday evening burst the bubble of political correctness that has long shielded that country's leaders from responsibility for self-destructive policies that have hurt black and white South Africans alike.

Critics cried "racist" when Trump tweeted that he had told Secretary of State Mike Pompeo "to closely study the South Africa land and farm seizures and expropriations and the large scale killing of farmers."

The term "large scale" could be misconstrued: there are no mass graves of farmers. But the tweet was otherwise correct - and overdue.

Trump touched on two separate issues. The first is South Africa's new policy of land reform.

Under colonialism and apartheid, black people were expropriated, while white farmers developed a thriving agricultural economy.

In 1996, South Africa's new constitution provided for the restitution of lands that had been unjustly taken in the past, as well as for a more equal racial distribution of land in future. It rejected "arbitrary" expropriation, preferring a "willing buyer, willing seller" approach.

Comment: See also:


Light Saber

Sun Tzu and the art of fighting an East-West trade war

Sun Tzu statue Art of War
© iStock
Sun Tzu's "The Art of War" could be game-changer in the Trade War.
It will be long, it will be nasty and Trump would be foolish to underestimate Xi and the resolve of China

Imagine the Chinese leadership out of the public eye for nearly two weeks - virtually holed up, immersed in a secret debate. That is exactly what just happened at Beidaihe, the beach resort in eastern Hebei province.

While there might be James Bond-ish conspiracy theories out there for this annual ritual, there are no doubts about the key theme of discussions: The US-China trade war.

The second-largest world economy under President Xi Jinping is deep into the long march towards superpower status. The previous geopolitical and geoeconomic status quo is dead.

Xi has made it abundantly clear that for China to just become a "responsible stakeholder" in the post-Cold War US-controlled liberal international order is not enough.