Puppet Masters
On July 25, 1945, in the waning moments of World War II, then US President Harry S. Truman jotted the following words in his diary, "We have discovered the most terrible bomb in the history of the world." But not terrible enough to employ them, it seems.
Just weeks later, the United States dropped atomic bombs on the Japanese industrial cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, indiscriminately killing some 200,000 civilians in, literally, a flash. Many others died in the years that followed from radiation poisoning and other associated illnesses. If there is a special place in hell for those who would expose the planet to such horrific weapons, Truman must certainly be there.
The historic tragedy is not without some dark irony. Albert Einstein, whose theory of relativity spearheaded the development of atomic weapons, was worried that Adolf Hitler would acquire the deadly know-how before the West. This prompted him in 1939 to write a letter to Truman's predecessor, Franklin D. Roosevelt, advising him to expedite research into nuclear fission. American scientists, working in the secret Manhattan Project, succeeded beyond Einstein's wildest dreams.
Quoted on the Hungarian government's website, Orban said he could see a danger of fragmentation within the European Union.
"If we are left alone and they do not force islamisation on us, Europe can continue to live as the club of free nations," Orban said, but added that if Brussels forces Hungary "to accept the UN migration pact or the European Commission's decisions so as to make us fit their own Western concessive policies, a breakup [of the EU] cannot be ruled out."
On Wednesday, Orban welcomed recent suggestions by French President Emmanuel Macron about needed reform of the EU and said it could be the "start of a serious debate" about the future of Europe.
Trump declared he wouldn't participate in debates hosted by "Fake News Networks" during the 2020 campaign season, in retaliation for Democrats' announcement they would refuse to allow Fox News to moderate any of their party's debates.
The Democratic National Committee declared Fox News would not "serve as a media partner" for any of its candidates' debates in 2020 following a New Yorker report detailing an "inappropriate relationship" between the Trump administration and Fox.
At the core of the Russiagate narrative is the allegation that the Kremlin "meddled" in the 2016 US presidential election. The word "meddle" is nebulous and could mean almost anything, but Russiagate zealots deploy it in the most ominous ways, as a war-like "attack on America," a kind of "Pearl Harbor." They also imply that such meddling is unprecedented when in fact both the United States and Russia have interfered repeatedly in the other's internal politics, in one way or another, certainly since the 1917 Russian Revolution.
For context, recall that such meddling is an integral part of Cold War and that there have been three Cold Wars between America and Russia during the past one hundred years. The first was from 1917 to 1933, when Washington did not even formally recognize the new Soviet government in Moscow. The second is, of course, the best known, the 40-year Cold War from about 1948 to 1988, when the US and Soviet leaders, Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev, declared it over. And then, by my reckoning, the new, ongoing Cold War began in the late 1990s, when the Clinton administration initiated the expansion of NATO toward Russia's borders and bombed Moscow's longtime Slav and political ally Serbia.
That's approximately 85 years of US-Russian Cold War in a hundred years of relations and, not surprisingly, a lot of meddling on both sides, even leaving aside espionage and spies. The meddling has taken various forms.
I want to take issue with both the suggestion that Steele should get any credit for this claim and the implication that the corroboration of it is in any way a corroboration of Steele. On the matter of Russia's culpability for hacking the DNC emails published by WikiLeaks, Steele was just following the crowd. His vaunted Russian sources clearly gave him no foreknowledge about it, notwithstanding that he'd been poking around for Trump-Russia conspiracy evidence for well over a month by July 22, 2016, when publication of the DNC emails began.
This is worth exploring because it highlights an insidious aspect of the dossier that has gotten too little attention: This opposition-research screed produced by the Clinton campaign did not, through Steele's purportedly well-placed sources, foretell events. Rather, after events occurred, Steele wove them into the Democrats' Trump-Russia conspiracy narrative.
By autumn 2015, the FBI knew that the DNC servers had been hacked and that Russian operatives were surely the culprit. The Times reported as much on December 13, 2016.
Ths long list of recipients includes Julian Assange, the NRA, Michael Flynn, Steve Bannon, George Papadopoulos, and Trump Organization CFO Allen Weisselberg - while Nadler's inquisition is expected to focus on 3 broad areas of interest: allegations of obstruction of justice, public corruption and other abuses of power.
Nadler, meanwhile, has unequivocally stated that he thinks President Trump obstructed justice - telling ABC's George Stephanopoulos on Sunday: "It's very clear that the President obstructed justice."
To that end, the Wall Street Journal Editorial Board has some bad news for Nadler;
Nothing Nadler cites is actually illegal...
Comment: When even the Wall Street Journal starts arguing against your case, maybe you don't really have one?
- House Judiciary panel launches new investigation into Trump upon failure of Russiagate probe
- Hitting back: Trump accuses House Democrats of going 'stone cold CRAZY' with their probes
Ankara's resilience against US pressure over the purchase of the S-400 systems remains rock solid, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan clarified on Wednesday, stressing that Turkey is a sovereign nation which has the right to choose its trade partners and arms suppliers.
"It's done. There can never be a turning back. This would not be ethical, it would be immoral. Nobody should ask us to lick up what we spat," Erdogan told Kanal 24.
We're an independent country, not slaves.The fuss over the Russian deal is now even forcing Turkey to consider upgrading to the next-generation of Russian air defense systems, the S-500, once it enters Russian military service sometime in 2020, Erdogan said.
"We encourage the government to continue dialogue - including follow-up to the national discussions which are currently underway - and urge full investigation of all reported cases of excessive use of force," the former Chilean President said in her annual address to the UN Human Rights council in Geneva. Her speech highlighted how the Yellow Vests' demand for "respectful dialogue" has seemingly been met with over the top violence by the state.
Comment: Uhm, there have been 9 deaths in the Haiti protests. There have been 11 deaths in the French ones.
See also:
- Shocking video shows disabled Yellow Vest protester pepper sprayed in face by French police
- Macron writes op-ed for the UK Guardian: "Dear Europe"...
Minister Datuk Mohamaddin Ketapi reportedly made the claim on Tuesday while speaking to media during a major travel industry trade show in Berlin. When asked whether Malaysia is a safe place for gay travelers, Mohamaddin reportedly responded: "Homosexuality? I think we do not have such a thing in our country. Whether it's safe or not, I cannot answer."
An aide to the minister reportedly said that while Mohamaddin's statement was in line with the government's stance to not recognize the LGBT community, it was his "personal view."
Comment: One would think if there were no homosexuality in Malaysia, they wouldn't have needed a law banning it:
- Indonesian police arrest 141 people in gay party raid; private details leaked online
- Saudi police arrest everyone at 'gay wedding' after video showed two men walking down isle being sprayed with confetti (VIDEO)
- Fake news purveyors busted: There are no 'gay gulags' in Chechnya

Elliott Abrams next to Colombian President Ivan Duque at the border with Venezuela.
The international community must choose sides wisely in the Venezuelan conflict, the curator of US intervention in the Latin American country, special envoy Elliott Abrams, suggested on Tuesday, noting that Washington would not limit itself to economic sanctions just against the Maduro government, but against all who chose to support him.
"Secondary sanctions, it's clearly a possibility," Abrams said at a press conference, warning that a decision to sanction third party countries "would depend on the conduct of the [Venezuelan] regime over time."
Comment: And now John Bolton has threatened all foreign financial institutions that are doing business with Venezuela. RT reports:
"The United States is putting foreign financial institutions on notice that they will face sanctions for being involved in facilitating illegitimate transactions that benefit Nicolas Maduro and his corrupt network," the US National Security Advisor John Bolton said in a statement released by the White House. He was repeating the earlier threat by US special envoy Elliott Abrams.
Washington also reiterated that it "strongly supports" what it called "democratic transition in Venezuela" led by the self-proclaimed 'interim president' Juan Guaido, who has enjoyed consistent support from the US and some of its allies ever since he announced his leadership bid.
The national security adviser also said that the US "is pursuing several new diplomatic and economic initiatives in support of that transition" but did not reveal any specific details.














Comment: If the last round of election debates is any indication, the circus will be even crazier this time. And it's true, the Hill-bot was given the debate questions ahead of time. Some nuggets from the past: