Puppet Masters
Over the last decade, Congress's approval ratings have hovered around the mid-teens or low 20s, reflecting the reality that our representatives in Washington, D.C., serve the needs of big donors while throwing an occasional rhetorical bone to the "essential" workers who actually make the country function. Congress's handling of the current crisis of the pandemic is unlikely to improve its ratings.
Working Americans are facing an unprecedented disaster. Before the virus hit, half of them lived paycheck to paycheck and didn't have $400 saved for an emergency. Now they have been ordered to stay home. Many have no income while their rents, utility bills, student loans, and credit card debts are accruing.
After being under effective house arrest for over seven weeks, is this surveillance app, that hasn't even passed the government's own guidelines, the best they can come up with?
'Test, track and trace' is just another meaningless soundbite that is meant to convince us that the Government know what they're doing.
This app won't even produce meaningful data unless infections fall from their present rate of 4,000 a day to under 1,000 and there's no real sign of that happening any time soon, is there? Are you willing to sign up to this app and give away your privacy on that basis? Because I'm not.
Now Hancock has the temerity to say it is your patriotic duty to download his surveillance app. What the hell has being patriotic got to do with a medical app?
Those involved in the effort expect to have six to eight of the vaccines being tested make it to subsequent rounds of trials, the official said. Officials hope to have three to four vaccines make it through final testing and be made available, but that depends on how the testing and clinical trials proceed and how successful they are.
"Operation Warp Speed" seeks to quickly ramp up production, organize distribution and determine who gets the first doses of a potential vaccine. The goal -- which may prove impossible to meet -- is to make 100 million doses of the vaccine available by November, 200 million doses by December and 300 million doses by January, a senior administration official has told CNN.
Comment: See also:
- Vaccine roundtable discussion with Andrew Wakefield, Del Bigtree and Bobby Kennedy
- Anti-vax crusader Kennedy accuses Gates' cronies Birx and Redfield - now in charge of Covid vaccine, of lying about HIV
- Bill Gates partners with DARPA & Department of Defense for new DNA nanotech COVID19 vaccine
- Criminal Big-Pharma cartel given oversight of new Covid vaccine
- Immunologist: There has never been a vaccine for coronavirus, and unlikely there will ever be one
- Sooner or later, Americans will have to choose between freedom and a micro-chipped vaccine

President Donald Trump speaks during an Oval Office event to sign a proclamation in honor of World Nurses Day on May 6, 2020.
In a series of tweets on Wednesday, Trump said that because of its success, "the Task Force will continue on indefinitely with its focus on SAFETY & OPENING UP OUR COUNTRY AGAIN. We may add or subtract people to it, as appropriate." He added: "The Task Force will also be very focused on Vaccines & Therapeutics."
The task force to date has included medical professionals focused on battling the pandemic, some of whom have at times offered guidance at odds with Trump's, including on when to ease stay-at-home orders and lockdowns on the economy.
Comment: This is horse-hockey of course. It's no coincidence that the countries with the two highest death tolls - the US and UK - are the two countries that sit atop the 'world order'. It just means they've been 'best' at shifting deaths from other causes into the Covid-19 column...
The British government has drafted a 50-page statement detailing a five-stage plan to lift the lockdown in the UK by October, The Mirror reported, citing unnamed sources in the government.
The plan is reportedly set to be announced on Sunday, come into force on Monday and last until the middle of autumn, despite officials fearing a second wave of coronavirus or an outbreak that could "blow their plan off course".
Comment: Did you catch that? They're saying the lockdown will be eased down to 'more-or-less normal' by October, BUT they reserve the right to maintain it at full-Hitler if and when they get the call from on high to ramp the numbers back up...
"It's a bit of a shambles. Nobody can quite agree what to do and when to do it. Somebody comes up with a bright idea, but the practicalities get in the way", the governmental source noted, cited by Mirror.
Comment: Phony leak intended to suggest 'our difficult decisions', when in fact they know exactly what they want to do and are merely prevaricating over how to sell that to people.
The anonymous official also noted that "we're not South Korea", apparently comparing the British response to the pandemic to that of South Korea's.
Comment: Among other things, this also means Brexit is not happening this year. (Or ever...)
What a jolly convenient phony plague the globalists have to play with.
In January, well before the coronavirus (Covid-19) crisis would result in lockdowns, quarantines and economic devastation in the United States and beyond, the U.S. intelligence community and the Pentagon were working with the National Security Council to create still-classified plans to respond to an imminent pandemic. It has since been alleged that the intelligence and military intelligence communities knew about a likely pandemic in the United States as early as last November, and potentially even before then.
Given this foreknowledge and the numerous simulations conducted in the United States last year regarding global viral pandemic outbreaks, at least six of varying scope and size, it has often been asked - Why did the government not act or prepare if an imminent global pandemic and the shortcomings of any response to such an event were known? Though the answer to this question has frequently been written off as mere "incompetence" in mainstream media circles, it is worth entertaining the possibility that a crisis was allowed to unfold.
Why would the intelligence community or another faction of the U.S. government knowingly allow a crisis such as this to occur? The answer is clear if one looks at history, as times of crisis have often been used by the U.S. government to implement policies that would normally be rejected by the American public, ranging from censorship of the press to mass surveillance networks. Though the government response to the September 11 attacks, like the Patriot Act, may be the most accessible example to many Americans, U.S. government efforts to limit the flow of "dangerous" journalism and surveil the population go back to as early as the First World War. Many of these policies, whether the Patriot Act after 9/11 or WWI-era civilian "spy" networks, did little if anything to protect the homeland, but instead led to increased surveillance and control that persisted long after the crisis that spurred them had ended.
"We went through the worst attack we've ever had in our country. This is really the worst attack we've ever had. This is worse than Pearl Harbor. This is worse than the World Trade Center," Trump said while signing a proclamation in the Oval Office in honor of National Nurses Day.
The U.S. has reported 71,064 coronavirus-related deaths, while 2,403 people died at Pearl Harbor in 1941 and 2,977 people were killed in the 9/11 attacks in 2001.
Comment: Trump got pretty close to the truth when he stated that this 'crisis' didn't have to happen. Unfortunately, he goes off the rails by blaming the virus and China instead of the lockdown hysteria.
In a culture known for complex problems and inherent inefficiencies, the US military would seem ideally suited for the kind of cutting-edge solutions offered by the emergence of computer-driven artificial intelligence (AI).
The US military - like its counterparts in China, Russia, India and elsewhere - has, over the course of the past decade, invested heavily in research and development projects designed to bring AI to the battlefield in support of intelligence collection and analysis, logistical support, autonomous warfighting capabilities, healthcare, and cybersecurity. Indeed, in this computer-driven age, there isn't an aspect of military operations where AI hasn't been investigated as a potential enhancement.
While the US military hasn't ignored AI and its utility, Eric Schmidt, the former CEO of Google, believes it has done so in a highly inefficient manner. And he is convinced he is the man who can best help the US military solve its AI challenges.

In this January 25, 2018 photo, US troops coordinate launching airstrikes and artillery from a small complex in the town of Qaim, Iraq.
Speaking to Arabic-language al-Maalomah news agency, Mohammed Mahdi al-Bayati, a senior leader in the Badr Organization, revealed fresh attempts by Washington and Riyadh to facilitate the return of fugitive Daesh militants to Iraq.
The latest deadly terrorist attacks, which were conducted on Iraqi soil with the US and Saudi backing, were part of a plot to bring Daesh back, he added.
Bayati also noted that renewed US-Saudi support for Daesh is similar to that of 2014, when the Takfiri outfit unleashed a campaign of death and destruction in Iraq and overran vast swathes in lightning attacks.
Comment: After more than 17 years of US "interventionism" in the region, the Iraqis have had enough and can see through the game.
Is the following just a coincidence, or a coordinated attack by US forces and Daesh terrorists?
The uptick in ISIS operations has happened "nearly" simultaneously with Washington's latest string of airstrikes openly targeting PMU forces, which are formally part of the Iraqi security forces.See also:
- Iraq: Official warns of US plot to transfer ISIS terrorists from Syria to Iraq's Al-Anbar region
- The resistance outlines 'potential strikes' on the US should it falter in withdrawing from Iraq
- Looks like the US is trying to reoccupy Iraq
Kim attended the completion of a fertiliser plant, North Korea's official media said on Saturday, the first report of his appearing in public since April 11.
His absence fuelled a flurry of speculation about his health and whereabouts, with a South Korean news outlet reporting Kim was recovering from a cardiovascular procedure while CNN said U.S. officials were monitoring intelligence he was "in grave danger" after surgery.
Comment: This is a good lesson on how rumors about North Korea, and Kim in particular, play themselves out in real time. As if we haven't had the same thing happen over and over again. The moral should be clear: don't believe the products of "Korean whispers"!
Members of South Korea's parliamentary intelligence committee said after a meeting with the National Intelligence Service (NIS) that the reports were "groundless."
"The NIS assesses that at least he did not get any heart-related procedure or surgery," committee member Kim Byung-kee told reporters. "He was normally performing his duties when he was out of the public eye."
"At least there's no heart-related health problem."













Comment: See also: