Puppet Masters
In an announcement at the UN General Assembly, he will urge it to heal "the ugly rifts" that are damaging the international fight against coronavirus.
While Trump has denounced the WHO as corrupt and under China's influence, Johnson will announce £340m in UK funding over the next four years, a 30% increase. He will also suggest the body be given greater powers to demand reports on how countries are handling a pandemic.
The proposals will form part of a British vision, drawn up in conjunction with the Gates Foundation, of how future health pandemics could be better controlled, including "zoonotic labs" capable of identifying potentially dangerous pathogens in animals before they transmit to humans.
Last week, Madrid city council announced new restrictions for over one million of the city's inhabitants, introducing localized restrictions on movement amid a surge in new cases of coronavirus.
Comment: Restrictions that even the regional Mayor objected to, instead calling for an end to the emergency measures and for a swift lifting of all lockdown restrictions Madrid's local authorities resist Spanish government's pressure to impose regional lockdown
Dozens of residents were involved in violent clashes with police last week, in what local media dubbed a riot. Eyewitness footage from the scene shows the ferocity of the police response in quelling the disturbances.
Comment: The involvement of the army is a particularly chilling move, although the UK is also thinking of deploying troops to enforce its will:
UK's NHS to enlist ARMY to vaccinate ENTIRE population with coronavirus vaccine, will do a 'dry run' with flu vaccine
This is particular noteworthy because a backlash is building throughout Europe:
- 'Unjustified and irrational': Marseille's Mayor 'astonished' by new French lockdown rules
- Italian mayor outlaws mask-wearing in public without serious need
- UK: 700 Church leaders say NO to another lockdown
- Coming Soon to Your City: Victoria's Totalitarian Response to Covid is Setting a Precedent for Every Wannabe-Dictator
The explosive conclusion Brennan inserted into the report was used to help justify continuing the Trump-Russia "collusion" investigation, which had been launched by the FBI in 2016. It was picked up after the election by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who in the end found no proof that Trump or his campaign conspired with Moscow.
The Obama administration publicly released a declassified version of the report — known as the "Intelligence Community Assessment on Russian Activities and Intentions in Recent Elections (ICA)" — just two weeks before Trump took office, casting a cloud of suspicion over his presidency. Democrats and national media have cited the report to suggest Russia influenced the 2016 outcome and warn that Putin is likely meddling again to reelect Trump.
The ICA is a key focus of U.S. Attorney John Durham's ongoing investigation into the origins of the "collusion" probe. He wants to know if the intelligence findings were juiced for political purposes.
Comment: So...Brennan made two copies of the ICA, the original under CIA classification lock to protect information, potential falsification and the sourcing. The other a redacted reveal has been given privileged access. Whether this report is The Bomb or not, the Top Secret compartmentalization of the contents and denied access, by default, give it incalculable power and keeps 'the threat' alive.
First, Scott Adams — "Dilbert" cartoonist, pundit, and author — argued in his morning podcast that Trump not only had a sense of humor, but that he might be the "greatest stand-up comic in history." In the second event, commentators at a Biden-Harris fundraiser confidently asserted that the president had no sense of humor at all.
So which is it? Is Trump funny or not?
Humor as the Indispensable Tool
As an actor, TED Talk veteran, and public speaker, I've seen firsthand what a powerful a tool a good sense of humor can be. Friedrich Nietzsche (unfunny even by German standards) wrote "that we should call every truth false which was not accompanied by at least one laugh." Making people laugh is often a necessary first step to making them think. If they don't laugh, they won't listen — and they certainly won't pay money to watch you the next time you're in town.
To quote Joe Biden, "That's no joke."
Comment: Need we ask?
Any move by the United States to scale down its diplomatic presence in a country where it has up to 5,000 troops would be widely seen in the region as an escalation of its confrontation with Iran, which Washington blames for missile and bomb attacks. That in turn would open the possibility of military action, with just weeks to go before an election in which President Donald Trump has campaigned on a hard line towards Tehran and its proxies.
Secretary of State Mike Pompeo threatened to close the embassy in a phone call a week ago to President Barham Salih, two Iraqi government sources said. The conversation was initially reported by an Iraqi news website.
By Sunday, Washington had begun preparations to withdraw diplomatic staff if such a decision is taken, those sources and the two Western diplomats said. The concern among the Iraqis is that pulling out diplomats would be followed quickly by military action against forces Washington blamed for attacks.
Comment: Whether it loosens the international fabric or tightens political knots...removal of US troops is long overdue.
Lukashenko, who has faced weeks of large-scale protests following last month's presidential election, which the opposition insists was rigged, has labeled Macron an "immature politician." His words were reported to the state-owned BelTA news agency by his press secretary.
As a "mature politician," the Belarusian president advised his French counterpart "not to get distracted, but instead focus on the internal affairs of France. At least, begin solving the many problems that accumulated in the country," Lukashenko added.
The statement came after Macron said in an interview with Le Journal du Dimanche that "it is clear that Lukashenko must go" because his "authoritarian administration" is unable to accept democracy.
"Judging by his own logic, the French president should've himself resigned two years ago when the Yellow Vests started going out to the streets in Paris," Lukashenko pointed out.
Comment: "Those who live in glass houses should not throw stones" - a timeless truism seldom appropriately applied to one's own circumstances.

Israeli soldiers prevent Palestinian laborers from crossing a fence south of Hebron.
The bill, which was rolled into appropriations bill H.R.7608, passed the House in July 2019; Lowey hopes that fellow Israel-backer Senator Lindsey Graham (R-SC) can push it through the Senate before the end of the session in January.
The Middle East Partnership for Peace Act pledges to "promote joint economic development and finance ventures between Palestinian entrepreneurs and companies and those in the United States and Israel."
With a budget of $50 million a year for five years, it hopes to purchase an end to "the incitement and dehumanization that have plagued both sides of the [Israeli/Palestinian] conflict."
Both sides have accused each other of using heavy artillery amid reports of dozens of deaths, including civilians, and hundreds of people being injured.
The long-simmering conflict in the volatile South Caucasus erupted into the deadliest bouts of fighting in four years on September 27, threatening to draw in regional powers Russia and Turkey.
Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev declared a partial military mobilization on September 28 as Baku said a total of six Azerbaijani civilians, including five members of one family, had been killed and 19 injured since the fighting began.
Authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian separatist enclave inside Azerbaijan, said on September 28 that two civilians and a total of 32 of its fighters were killed in clashes with Azerbaijani forces a day earlier.
Military officials in Stepanakert and Yerevan said on September 28 that 59 servicemen had been killed and more than 200 wounded since Azerbaijan launched what they described as an air and artillery attack.
Armenia's Defense Ministry said in a statement that "intensive fighting continued overnight."
Comment: Azeri footage of troops using mortars, rockets, and grenade launchers:
Armenia says it is braced for a long war.
"We are preparing for a long-term war. Why? Because, I say it again, the main player here is not Azerbaijan but Turkey," Vagarshak Harutyunyan, a senior adviser to Armenia's prime minister told a Latvian YouTube channel on Monday.Erdogan is calling for an end to the Armenian occupation of NKR.
Turkey, a close partner for Baku but a historical foe for Yerevan, is "directly involved" in the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh, an ethnic Armenian-populated landlocked enclave within Azerbaijan. Fierce fighting erupted on the disputed region's borders on Sunday, with both Armenian and Azeri troops using heavy weaponry, large-caliber artillery, and combat aircraft in the clashes.
Harutyunyan, formerly Armenia's Defense Minister, spoke of the universal conscription call-up recently issued in his own country as well as Nagorno-Karabakh, indicating that he wasn't convinced the conflict will end any time soon.The duration of the war will depend on many factors: on how the hostilities will proceed, [and] on the reactions of the international community.The PM's aide has further criticized Turkey, suggesting it is using Azerbaijan and "push[ing] it towards war in order to achieve its geopolitical goals in this region." Ankara "behaves like a regional terminator, and is practically at war with all of its neighbors," Harutyunyan opined.
Kim Kardashian (ethnic Armenian) chimed in on Twitter, probably reaching many who have never even heard of NKR:
See also:
Project Veritas investigators revealed a ballot harvesting scheme here involving clan and political allies and associates of Rep. Ilhan Omar (D.-Minn.) in the first of a series of reports.
"Numbers don't lie. Numbers don't lie. You can see my car is full. All these here are absentees' ballots. Can't you see? Look at all these, my car is full. All these are for Jamal Osman... We got 300 today for Jamal Osman only," said Liban Mohamed in a series of Snapchat videos posted July 1 and July 2 on his own Snapchat profile.
Mohamed said he was collecting the ballots to help his brother win the city's Aug. 11 special election for a vacant Ward 6 city council race — which was held the same day as the primary for Omar's MN-05 congressional seat. Ward 6 is the heart of the city's Somali community and the Omar's political base.
Comment: O'Keefe reports on the initial reaction to the first part of Project Veritas' expose. The rats are running for cover. Well, some of them at least:
UPDATE 28/09/2020: RT reports:
"Ballot harvesting is real, and it has become a big business. Our investigation into this ballot-harvesting ring demonstrates clearly how these unscrupulous operators exploit the elderly and immigrant communities - and have turned the sacred ballot box into a commodities-trading desk," O'Keefe said in a statement.
Trump appeared to agree with this assessment and fired off a tweet calling for an inquiry into the matter.
Omar responded to the tweet with a meme referencing allegations that Trump paid only $750 in federal income taxes in 2016 and 2017. However, she did not address the allegations leveled by Project Veritas.
Ballot harvesting or ballot collecting is the practice of third parties collecting mail-in votes and delivering them to election officials. It is legal in many states to help physically impaired voters cast their ballots. However, it has sparked a series of legal challenges in Minnesota. Earlier this month, the state's Supreme Court ruled that "Minnesotans can still only help deliver and return up to three other voters' absentee ballots under special circumstances," local media reported.
Trump has been warning for weeks that states' plans to use mail-in ballots for November's presidential election could lead to voter fraud - an allegation the Democrats have dismissed.
- North Carolina board of elections members resign after Democrat dominated 'changes' allow easier ballot harvesting
- Pelosi's stimulus bill: Nationwide 'Ballot harvesting' without 'any limit' - what could go wrong with that?
Credible reports have emerged that Turkey is transferring its militant proxies based in northern Syria to Azerbaijan as tensions and skirmishes with Armenia rapidly increase.
Award winning journalist Lindsey Snell, who was once kidnapped by Turkish-backed terrorists in northern Syria and then thrown into a Turkish jail for two months after her escape from Syria, wrote on Twitter that fighters from the Hamza Division had arrived in the Azerbaijani capital of Baku via Turkey.
Earlier this year, the Hamza Division were exposed for holding naked and abused women in prison. They are made up mostly of Arabs and Turkmen, and have become a moveable proxy force for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Comment: This report was published just 2 days before hostilities broke out between Armenia, NKR and Azerbaijan...














Comment: It's notable that, at a time when UK citizens are being promised ever more 'austerity' measures that are successfully tearing the countries social fabric to pieces, Bojo finds some loose change in the public purse to spend on these rather suspect endeavours: