Puppet Masters
"I made a mistake, and all I know to do is to admit it, tell the truth, and let the chips fall where they may," wrote the lawmaker in a newsletter reported by the Richmond Times-Dispatch. "If you follow my newsletter or have written to me to ask about my votes, you know that I do my best to read and research every bill I vote on. But I did not read a bill I agreed to co-patron and that wasn't smart or typical. I will work harder and be better for it."
Adams then vaguely referenced some of the controversy swirling around the bill she co-sponsored along with fellow Democrat Del. Kathy Tran (Fairfax) and tried to explain why she backed the radical bill without having read it.

Senator Kamala Harris launches her campaign for President of the United States at a rally in her hometown of Oakland, Calif., January 27, 2019.
"I believe the solution, and I actually feel very strongly about this, is that we need to have Medicare for all," Harris said in response to an audience member's question about health care. "That's just the bottom line."
Since she made the comments, a number of her fellow Democrats have come out to say that they disagree.
"It would take a mighty transition to move from where we are to that," said Senator Dick Durbin. "What most of us said we would support is a Medicare-type plan - a not-for-profit public plan that is available for everyone. I think that's a good first step."
"I'm not going to say you have to give it up," Senator Tim Kaine, the 2016 Democratic vice-presidential nominee, said of private insurance. "I think the idea is to offer a nonprofit insurance plan as an option."
According to the official, the sale of the nation's gold began with the shipment of 3 tons on January 26, following the export last year of $900 million in unrefined gold to Turkey.
The source denied Moscow's involvement in the operation after rumors circulated this week that mysterious Russian-operated airplanes arrived in the country and planned to leave with Venezuelan gold on board. That is incorrect, according to the official.
Caracas reportedly needs cash for imports of basic products that it sells to the population at subsidized prices. A possible explanation for the payment for the gold in euros is US sanctions, which restrict Venezuela's use of the dollar.
Google has transferred the funds it was ordered to pay following an administrative case in Russia, a spokesman for the Russian media watchdog, Roscomnadzor, confirmed on Friday.
According to a new Russian law, which took effect last year, operators of internet search engines must exclude results for websites, blocked in Russia. Such content includes blocked websites, extremist materials, child pornography, advertising of illegal drugs and other off-limits stuff.
Former Israeli military chief Benny Gantz, head of the new Hosen L'Yisrael party (Resilience for Israel), is making strides in his election campaign, with polls placing him at a near tie with Netanyahu - something no other candidate or party has managed to do in recent years.
Following Gantz's first public speech in Tel Aviv earlier this week, Haaretz reported that if elections were held now, Gantz would receive 21 to 24 Knesset seats - eight seats up from the previous poll predictions.
In a poll conducted by Israel's Channel 12 news station asking who voters wanted as Prime Minister, 36% of those polled said Netanyahu while 35% said Gantz.
Leaders of the centrist Yesh Atid party (There is a Future) are reportedly considering forming a joint center ticket with Gantz's party following the ex-military chief's spike in the polls.
The historical significance of the Beck's suit against the DNC and former DNC Chair Debbie Wasserman-Schultz cannot be overstated, as it confronts the heart of the actual election-rigging from which the entire Russiagate scandal was constructed to deflect. Despite this - or because of it - the lawsuit has gained remarkably sparse corporate media coverage.
The suit has forced the DNC's counsel to admit a number of shocking stances, including statements suggesting that the party had every right to choose candidates in back rooms, and even that election-rigging is protected by the first amendment. DNC counsel had the gall to argue:
"... To recognize any of the causes of action that Plaintiffs allege based on their animating theory would run directly contrary to long-standing Supreme Court precedent recognizing the central and critical First Amendment rights enjoyed by political parties, especially when it comes to selecting the party's nominee for public office."
With substantial support from both parties, the Senate on January 31 voted 68-23 in favor of a nonbinding amendment stating that the Senate believed that Islamic militant groups in both countries continue to pose a "serious threat" to U.S. security.
The amendment acknowledges that progress has been made in the fight against Islamic State and Al-Qaeda insurgents in both countries. But it said the region could be destabilized should "a precipitous withdrawal" occur without measures taken to secure the gains, likely creating a vacuum that could be filled by Iran or Russia.
Comment: Who destabilized the region in the first place? The U.S. and Israel.
The legislation called on the U.S. administration to verify conditions have been met for the militant groups' "enduring defeat" before any significant withdrawal of troops takes place in Syria or Afghanistan.
The bill was drafted by Republican Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, who has rarely spoken out against Trump or his policies.
Many members of the US Congress are greatly concerned by supposed 'Russian meddling' in American affairs. But what do they think about Washington openly getting behind the opposition in Venezuela? In a video, published on his website, the Grayzone Project, Blumenthal asked lawmakers just that.
The politicians were visibly caught off guard by pretty simple and straightforward questions. Several lawmakers couldn't provide a definitive answer to whether the US public support for opposition leader Juan Guaido could be considered 'meddling' in a foreign nation's affairs.
"Haven't thought about that," a baffled lawmaker was heard saying when asked how he would react if Russia recognized House Speaker Nancy Pelosi as president of the US.
Washington did something similar to that last week, when President Donald Trump recognized the speaker of Venezuela's opposition-controlled parliament, Guaido, as the legitimate leader of the country.

Destroyed buildings from previous clashes are seen in Mosul, Iraq, January 10, 2018.
The defence minister, Christopher Pyne, described the deaths as "deeply regrettable" but said the 12-month investigation into the strike on 13 June 2017 could not come to a conclusion over who was at fault.
The deaths occurred during joint operations between Iraqi and allied forces to take back Mosul from Isis, which had designated the city the Iraqi capital of its so-called caliphate.
"After a thorough investigation conducted by the Australian Defence Force it's been determined that between six and 18 civilians were killed in a Coalition air strike and that an Australian platform may have been part of that air strike, may have been responsible," Pyne told the Nine Network.
"It's impossible to definitively say whether it was an Australian missile that caused the deaths, but I can say that it's deeply regrettable.
"Obviously we do everything we can to avoid a civilian casualty. The Isis fighters, there were seven who were using heavy weapons to attack the Iraqi forces in Mosul.
Comment: When the U.S.-led coalition kills civilians, it is always an accident and deeply regrettable, even if it was deliberate. When the coalition's enemies (Russia, Syria, Hezbollah) kill civilians, it is always intentional, even when it didn't happen.

Mexico's President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador speaks during the presentation of his new economic program for the northern border zone, in Tijuana, Mexico, Jan. 6, 2019.
The night before Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaidó declared himself interim president, U.S. Vice President Mike Pence personally called him up and pledged the support of the U.S. government should he try to seize power.
Sure enough, on January 23, before a large opposition demonstration, Guaidó declared himself interim president of the South American country and set in motion a coup plot that had been in the works for weeks. The United States had once again waded into dangerous water with its latest effort to engage in regime change in Venezuela.
However, it was not just the United States involved in the conspiracy to oust the democratically elected government of Nicolas Maduro. Shortly after Guaidó's declaration, in what suggested a certain degree of coordination, a series of countries immediately came out with statements publicly backing him.












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