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Mon, 08 Nov 2021
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Pense expects boots on the thermosphere by 2020

Mike Pence

U.S. Vice President Mike Pence
The White House says it is pushing ahead with plans to establish a new U.S. space force, but the first steps will stop short of creating a sixth branch of the military as touted earlier this year by President Donald Trump.

The White House does not foresee the creation of an independent space force before 2020, Vice President Mike Pence told a space conference in Washington on October 23. Pence is head of the National Space Council, a government body that was revived last year to draw up plans for the space force envisioned by Trump.

Pence said the president will soon ask Congress to gather military and civilians working on space security into a unified command, similar to the military's special forces.

Pirates

NeoCon Bill Kristol uses Orwell's criticism on nationalism against Trump, leaves out anti-Zionism references

George Orwell
In taking on Donald Trump today, Bill Kristol has been tweeting about the dangers of nationalism, and quoting George Orwell's great essay of 1945, "Notes on Nationalism."
"By 'nationalism' I mean first of all the habit of assuming that human beings can be classified like insects and that whole blocks of millions and tens of millions of people can be confidently labeled 'good' or 'bad.'" - George Orwell, "Notes on Nationalism," 1945
A lot of people have been retweeting Kristol, including many Zionists. They should be careful quoting from this essay. Orwell several times criticizes Zionism and the idea of Jewish superiority in his effort to counter nationalist thinking in English politics. He writes (in the essay published in Polemic in Oct. 1945):
Nationalism, in the extended sense in which I am using the word, includes such movements and tendencies as Communism, political Catholicism, Zionism, Antisemitism, Trotskyism and Pacifism.

Comment: Nationalism was a problem in Nazi Germany because it took tribal organization to the level of atrocity. Today, the divisions of tribalism emanating largely from privileged 'victimhood' (which bears much similarity to Zionism itself) disguise the oppression of the United States on the global level.


X

Bolton: We're sticking to it, US to file INF Treaty withdrawal

BoltonHuntsman
© Sergei Karpukhin/Reuters
US National Security Adviser John Bolton (l) and US ambassador to Russia Jon Huntsman (r) in Moscow, October 23, 2018.
Washington is determined to withdraw from the INF arms control treaty no matter what, but has not done so yet, US national security adviser John Bolton said after meetings with the Russian leadership in Moscow.

"There's a new strategic reality out there," Bolton told reporters, describing the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty as a "bilateral treaty in a multipolar ballistic missile world," that does not apply to countries like China, Iran or North Korea.

The US estimates that anywhere from a third to a half of all Chinese missile capability would be in violation of the INF, were Beijing a party to the treaty, Bolton added.


Comment: Treaties between two nuclear entities leave all other super powers with unlimited capabilities. All in or all out. See also:


Arrow Down

Trump: Saudi's handling of Khashoggi murder was 'a total fiasco'

Trump
© Reuters/Leah Mills
US President Donald Trump scolded Saudi Arabia for journalist Jamal Khashoggi's murder and badly executed cover-up, calling it a "total fiasco from day one," while still hedging on condemning the Saudi government.

Trump has been under tremendous pressure both at home and internationally to issue a stark rebuke to Riyadh over the murder of the Washington Post columnist inside the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul.

Three weeks after the journalist disappeared, the details of his killing are still murky and the cause of his death is unknown. Saudi officials have come up with shaky explanations for Khashoggi's demise, first stating that he was killed accidentally in a fistfight and then alleging a "rogue operation" unbeknownst to the Saudi rulers.

"There should have never been an execution or a cover-up, because it should have never happened," Trump told reporters on Tuesday. "I would say it was a total fiasco from day one."


Comment: What is clear is that the Saudis thought they were untouchable...and maybe they are. They weren't counting on condemnation nor investigation.


Snakes in Suits

Did it my way (over and over again): Obama gives self-referential speech in Nevada to rally supporters

Obaminal
© AFP/Ethan Miller
Former US President Barack Obama, speaking in Nevada
After President Trump delivered a fiery rally to supporters in Nevada on Saturday, former President Barack Obama addressed a smaller crowd nearby. During his more muted speech, Obama referred to himself no fewer than 92 times.

Making an appearance at the University of Las Vegas to stump for Democratic Congressional candidate Jacky Rosen on Monday, Obama told the crowd "I got a lot to say," and followed through on that promise over the following 40 minutes.

Obama targeted the current occupant of the White House from the get-go, and tried to take credit for the US' roaring economy and low unemployment figures, regularly cited by Trump as proof of the success of his "Make America Great Again" agenda.


Comment: No one comes close to praising Obama like he does. (Nor wants to!)


Passport

21 Saudis to lose US visas over Khashoggi murder, Pompeo says SA still important ally

Saudi Arabia consulate Turkey
© Reuters/Murad Sezer
Saudi Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey
The US will punish those responsible for killing journalist Jamal Khashoggi by revoking visas and possibly imposing Global Magnitsky Act sanctions, but Saudi Arabia remains an important ally, said Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Twenty-one Saudi citizens will have their US visas revoked or be declared ineligible for them as part of the response, the State Department said on Tuesday. In a short press conference, Pompeo said the US was "exploring" the option of imposing sanctions as well.

"These penalties will not be the last word on the matter from the United States," the US top diplomat said. "We're making very clear that the US does not tolerate this kind of ruthless action to silence Mr. Khashoggi, a journalist, through violence."

The Saudi journalist who had permanent residence in the US was last seen entering the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, Turkey at the beginning of October. For two weeks, Riyadh denied Turkish accusations that Khashoggi was killed inside the consulate, only to admit he died "in a fistfight" with several government officials who were reportedly sent to persuade him to return.

Khashoggi was an outspoken critic of the current ruling faction at the Saudi court, led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, while championing many of the kingdom's policies such as the partition of Syria in his Washington Post columns. Notably, the Post has demanded sanctions not against Saudi Arabia as such, but against "MBS and his cutthroats."

Comment: Will the US enact its legal obligations under the Global Magnitsky Act? We know the Saudis can be 'cut throat' if accused and defamed.


Magnify

You've been found out! NYT gushes over mystery US op to eliminate Russian meddling

Cyber Command
© Fotolia
With November's midterm elections drawing nearer, the Gray Lady has reassured Americans that US Cyber Command has contacted individual "Russian operatives," to personally warn them against any meddling attempts.

The Russian trolls who allegedly used insincere tweets to influence the multi-billion dollar 2016 presidential election have apparently been put on notice, with Cyber Command contacting "individual Russian operatives" to inform them that Uncle Sam has "identified them" and is "tracking their work," the New York Times reported, citing anonymous officials who say they were briefed on the operation.

The Russians in question were "not directly threatened" by Cyber Command, the Times' anonymous sources stressed, adding that the possibility of being targeted by US sanctions would likely act as an effective deterrent.

Comment: NYT - more of the same newsfusion of innuendo and unsupported accusations. A booster shot for public perception.


Stock Down

Trump threatens a cut in federal aid to California claiming 'lousy management' of water, wildfires

Forest fire
© Reuters
US President Donald Trump is taking California to task for the management of its forests and dams, blaming red tape for the devastating forest fires and drought plaguing the bluest of blue states, and threatening to withhold aid.

Speaking at a White House address on Tuesday, Trump was shocked that Californians weren't using the water contained by their dams to put out the fires and irrigate their fields. "We have so much water they could actually water some of it," he said in disbelief.

About half (48 percent) of California's land is currently experiencing drought conditions, which - combined with high temperatures and strong winds - are largely to blame for the record-setting rash of fires in the state, according to state fire chiefs.

Trump, a proud climate change skeptic, attributes the fires to "lousy management." He has repeatedly said the forests are too dense and need to be thinned - a problem the logging industry would be happy to help with.

Comment: The balance between controlling water and fire currently leaves Californians dammed if they do, dammed if they don't. Precision management for the size of its territory and mountainous terrain is dubious at best. Heavy rain years produce an overgrowth in vegetation that dry out and become extra tinder for an upcoming drought year. And, in drought years, most CA dams have greatly reduced water capacities just to service the public. Los Angeles, with its mega-population, receives its water by canal from the Sierra Nevada mountains. And, adding confusion to the mix, its regular climate patterns are changing. Certainly there may be options, currently not considered or implemented, that could prove useful.


Bad Guys

US is fueling terrorism in China

Chinese police
The West's human rights racket has once again mobilized - this time supposedly in support of China's Uyghur minority centered primarily in the nation's northwestern region of Xinjiang, China.

Headlines and reports have been published claiming that up to a million mostly Uyghurs have been detained in what the West is claiming are "internment camps." As others have pointed out, it is impossible to independently verify these claims as no evidence is provided and organizations like Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and Uyghur-specific organizations like the World Uyghur Congress lack all credibility and have been repeatedly exposed leveraging rights advocacy to advance the agenda of Western special interests.

Pistol

Russians not ready for large-scale possession of guns - security chief

Russia guns
© Sputnik / Igor Zarembo
Russian society isn't ready for large-scale possession of firearms, as people tend to use guns "without justification" in stressful situations, Russian National Guard Commander Viktor Zolotov said.

The National Guard is "opposed to the wide distribution of guns. Our society isn't yet ready for this - both economically and psychologically," Zolotov said as cited by RIA Novosti.