Puppet Masters
When the death tolls and cases were rising, Beijing was accused of doing nothing and letting people die. When they started to decline, it was lying. Before Wuhan was put under an unprecedented lockdown, China was trying to "save face" by downplaying the health crisis. When the lockdown was imposed, it was a massive violation of human rights and a power grab.
When Chinese citizens and overseas Chinese criticised Beijing, it was proof the central government had lost all legitimacy and trust. But when they celebrated the epidemic being put under control, they were stage actors or brainwashed.
The following is a video from 2014 in which a journalist on public access television about six years ago, reviews aspects of a publicly available document which the Rockefeller Foundation produced in around 2010. While the journalist's method of explaining things is less than desirable, (he is clearly a bit dramatic in terms of his presentation) though the material in itself, speaks for itself. Let's not focus on how he presents things, but rather the content of his presentation in this interview. You can see the interviewer also becomes annoyed with his explanatory method.
Cuomo came out swinging against the president this week, accusing him of declaring himself "King Trump" and trashing the work of "our founding fathers" in a series of fiery media appearances that could easily be mistaken for a campaign challenge.
"The only way the situation gets worse is if the president creates a constitutional crisis," Cuomo vowed on Morning Joe on Tuesday, referring to the nationwide coronavirus epidemic and attendant economic depression. "If he says to me 'I declare [the economy] open' and that is a public health risk or it's reckless with the people of my state, I will oppose it."
You will have a constitutional crisis like you haven't seen in decades.
In a lengthy video recorded in advance - but of course - and released on Tuesday, Obama deployed his trademark rhetorical gifts to make his support for Biden a nostalgia ride into the eight years the duo was in the White House together.
Even then, Obama gave Biden what amounted to a backhanded compliment, saying he would "surround himself with good people - experts, scientists, military officials, who actually know how to run the government."
In a list of directives released Wednesday, enforceable under the Disaster Management Act, 2005, the government banned the sale of liquor, tobacco and gutka. It also said people who spit in public would be fined. (For a summary of the national directives, click here.)
The novel coronavirus, known as SARS-CoV-2, causes a potentially fatal respiratory illness -- Covid-19 -- and spreads primarily through respiratory droplets produced when a person talks, coughs or sneezes.
Miko Peled, the author of "The General's Son: The Journey of an Israeli in Palestine" and "Injustice: The Story of the Holy Land Foundation Five," joined Radio Sputnik's Loud and Clear on Tuesday to discuss the ongoing negotiations between the two politicians and detail why Gantz refused to form his own government.
Peled told hosts Brian Becker and John Kiriakou that when it comes to Israeli politics, there are two things to keep in mind - with the first being that Netanyahu is not going anywhere.
Gove's 17-year-old daughter began showing mild symptoms on April 5, and the family received special permission from Chief Medical Officer Chris Whitty to have her tested the following day, along with orders to stay indoors for a period of 14 days.
The teenager's results later came back negative, but the incident was yet another example of the rich and powerful appearing to jump to the top of the queue while the wider public is told that only the most vulnerable and most at-risk were being tested for the time being.
Before Bill 10 became law on April 2, Alberta's Public Health Act already empowered politicians and bureaucrats to take property away from citizens and organizations, to force citizens to render aid, to conscript people to help deal with an emergency and to enter into any building or property without a warrant. The chief medical officer was already empowered to forcibly quarantine any person who is ill, or any person who is caring for a sick family member.
Before Bill 10, cabinet ministers were already empowered to suspend the operation of provincial laws, in whole or in part, once cabinet declared a public health emergency. But now, cabinet ministers have acquired the additional power of creating and implementing new orders and penalties, simply through ministerial order, without them being discussed, scrutinized, debated or approved by the legislative assembly of Alberta.
"Apple Inc. and Google unveiled a rare partnership to add technology to their smartphone platforms that will alert users if they have come into contact with a person with Covid-19," reads a new report from Bloomberg. "People must opt in to the system, but it has the potential to monitor about a third of the world's population."
"World Health Organization executive director Dr. Michael Ryan said surveillance is part of what's required for life to return to normal in a world without a vaccine. However, civil liberties experts warn that the public has little recourse to challenge these digital exercises of power once the immediate threat has passed," reads a recent VentureBeat article titled "After coronavirus, AI could be central to our new normal".
The Justice Department (DOJ) has weighed in on a dispute between the right to exercise one's religious freedom with local and state official's efforts to contain the spread of the CCP virus. This tension has sparked multiple lawsuits across the country.
As the burgeoning CCP (Chinese Communist Party) virus pandemic continues to reshape American society, many churches and religious institutions have also come up with creative ways to continue with faith-based activities while abiding by social distancing requirements. But in some areas, churches have faced challenges from local and state authorities for their efforts.
The DOJ has argued in a recent statement of interest (pdf) filed in support of a Mississippi church that sued the city and mayor for ticketing congregants during a drive-in service. The department argued in its filing that individual rights under the constitution do not disappear during a public health crisis.
"There is no pandemic exception ... to the fundamental liberties the Constitution safeguards," the DOJ said. "Indeed, 'individual rights secured by the Constitution do not disappear during a public health crisis.'"
"These individual rights, including the protections in the Bill of Rights made applicable to the states through the Fourteenth Amendment, are always in force and restrain government action," it added.















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