Puppet Masters
The Berlin Wall
In the aftermath of World War II, Europe was divided between East and West. On one side the Soviet Union (SU) and its Communist allies and on the other the United States and its Capitalist partners.
The Soviets faced a formidable task in rebuilding their sector having lost tens of millions of soldiers and civilians and facing great scarcities of resources without aid from the wealthy West. North America sought to roll-back the post war agreements and proceeded to subvert the East by promising higher living standards, greater cultural and personal freedom. The East resorted to greater control and sacrifice in order to reconstruct their economies. The unequal contest between East and West in terms of personal consumption was contested by the more radical social investments in national public health, educational and social programs.
The West succeeded in attracting professionals, skilled workers and important cultural figures by offering attractive economic and individual incentive which the East could not or would not match.
In order to contain the 'brain drain' the East adopted repressive measures including building what was later referred to as the Berlin Wall. Despite physical obstacles Easterners fled across and under the Wall.
While Bolton remains stubbornly attached to leveling clichéd digs about Iran's "malign" and "murderous" "mullahs," Zarif highlighted his opponents "delusional" aversion to change with a #10YearChallenge tweet.
The challenge is the latest unavoidable internet craze sweeping social media, asking users to compare a photo of themselves with one from ten years ago. While usually serving to emphasize how things have changed, the two articles screencapped in the Tweet suggest that Bolton's desire to inflict large scale violence on Iran is one thing we can always count on.
The comparison is in keeping with Zarif's tweet last week which called Bolton's "pure obsession" with Iran "the behavior of [a] persistently failing psychotic stalker."
Despite Bolton's recent claim that the Trump administration is "not pursuing a policy of regime change" in Iran, he has not been shy about showcasing his personal opinion on the matter.
Comment: Persistent! Perpetual! Immutable! - Bolt's message is just as insulting and outrageous now as it was 10 years ago.
The Donald Trump administration conducted a preliminary internal assessment of its Iran "maximum pressure" policy this month and determined that it is not working, according to a new report.The Trump administration's "maximum pressure" policy isn't working because it seeks extraordinary Iranian concessions in exchange for little or nothing, and the administration has already proven to Iran that it can't be trusted to honor existing agreements. Trump and Pompeo have paired extremely ambitious demands with reduced leverage and almost no international support. In practice, the administration's campaign is very far from bringing "maximum pressure" to bear. The administration's policy would better be described as one of "pie in the sky."
Comment: Israeli demands are the drivers for US policy, for which Bolton and Pompeo are merely bad-mouthed delivery boys.
According to the 2018 edition of The Economist Intelligence Unit's Democracy Index, the U.S. doesn't even make the list of top 20 - its demonstrably "flawed democracy" notching it the 25th spot.
The ranking is based on 60 indicators spanning five interrelated categories: electoral process and pluralism; civil liberties; the functioning of government; political participation; and political culture. Each category gets a 0-10 score, with the final score being the average of those five.
Topping out the index are Norway, Iceland, Sweden, New Zealand, and Denmark. They are each declared "full democracies," as their scores, all above 9.22, were easily above the 8.2 threshold. With a final score of 7.96, the United States, in contrast, earned the "flawed democracy" label. The country's highest score was 8.22, which it earned back in 2006 and again in 2008.
North America still holds the claim for the highest average score of any region, but that's thanks to Canada's 9.15, which landed it the number 6 spot overall. Twenty countries (12 percent) were designated as full democracies, 14 of which are located in Western Europe.
Time magazine of all places reported recently about the many efforts the FBI took related to Hillary exoneration and then the Trump framing. These corrupt and criminal actions have taken a desperate toll on the current members of the FBI -
In normal times, the televisions are humming at the FBI's 56 field offices nationwide, piping in the latest news as agents work their investigations. But these days, some agents say, the TVs are often off to avoid the crush of bad stories about the FBI itself. The bureau, which is used to making headlines for nabbing crooks, has been grabbing the spotlight for unwanted reasons: fired leaders, texts between lovers and, most of all, attacks by President Trump. "I don't care what channel it's on," says Tom O'Connor, a veteran investigator in Washington who leads the FBI Agents Association. "All you hear is negative stuff about the FBI ... It gets depressing."Of course the employees of the FBI are in a funk, their fearless and corrupt leaders, as well as leaders in Obama's corrupt DOJ, went to extravagant links to exonerate the obvious criminal actions of Hillary Clinton, and then to do all they could to prevent candidate Trump from winning an election. Then once the election was won by President Trump, they went to unheard of depths of deceit and corruption to attempt to remove him from office.
The Texas Republican told BlazeTV's "Capitol Hill Brief" this week that public statements by Democrats on the State of the Union are rhetorical smoke and mirrors.
The California Democrat claimed security concerns prompted her to request a delay in his Jan. 29 speech to the nation. She later shifted her position to a matter of principle, given that Secret Service agents would be required to work the event and then receive back pay at a later date.
The writer behind "Win Bigly: Persuasion in a World Where Facts Don't Matter" says Mr. Trump is creatively unshackled by Mrs. Pelosi's attempts to snub him a Jan. 29 venue in the House. Mr. Adams, who was one of the first social commenters to predict the billionaire's elector success, put it succinctly Thursday: "They just released the Kraken."
Likened to an amalgamation between unstoppable sea monster and master showman, Mr. Trump will be able to craft the event in a way that accentuates his skills in Mr. Adams' view.
The company's board of directors approved a $31 million pay package for 2018 that includes cash and stock awards, according to a public filing. That's 5% more than the banker received last year.
JPMorgan is one of the first banks to disclose approved executive compensation for last year. In 2017, Dimon was among the highest paid CEOs in corporate America with a $29.5 million pay package.
Dimon's compensation includes a base salary of $1.5 million and a $29.5 million bonus, which includes $5 million in cash and $24.5 million in stock awards.
All these contradictory announcements have come from the White House in the last month or so, indicating some combination of the current occupant of the White House's lack of experience in foreign policy, or lack of control of his own administration. Nobody in the Middle East believes Trump. Only President Erdogan confirmed the serious intention of the US to withdraw from Syria but was knocked down by Trump's threat to "cripple the Turkish economy if Turkey attacks the Kurds". But soon after Trump's threat to Erdogan, he again changed his mind and suddenly announced a new plan for a buffer zone "to protect the Kurds", Turkey's worse enemies in the Levant. Trump is signaling a high degree of confusion about his intention to stay or leave Syria.
It doesn't matter if the world doesn't understand what Trump's plan is. There is no point in trying to analyse and predict the next step because Trump himself doesn't seem to know what to do next. He wakes up with one decision and seems to change it hours later or the following day.
Nevertheless, Trump's continuously changing plans are not preventing his adversary the Iranian General Qassem Soleimani - the head of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps in the al Quds Brigade responsible for supporting all movements of the oppressed peoples in the world, mainly the Lebanese Hezbollah, Iraqi, Palestinian and Afghan groups, but others as well - from making plans to counter Trump in Syria and Iraq.
The DOJ issued formal requests on January 7 to "interrogate six former diplomats & staff at Ecuador's London embassy following Guardian's fabricated story of Assange-Manafort meetings," the whistleblowing organization tweeted Thursday.
The interviews scheduled by Ecuador's Attorney General's office are to take place on Friday in Quito, Ecuador.
Comment: The Democrats are grasping at straws in their attempts to 'get Trump'.
- Actual Fake News: The Guardian/Politico Psy-op Against Wikileaks
- Five weeks after fake Guardian Assange/Manafort 'scoop', no evidence, just stonewalling
- Guardian's reputation in 'total shambles' after forger revealed to be co-author of Assange smear
- Guardian stealth edits junk report to save their ass after Assange-Manafort fiction crumbles















Comment: You build a wall when you have something to lose. You build a road when you have something to gain.