Puppet Masters
In conversation with podcast host Joe Rogan, Dorsey and his chief legal officer Vijaya Gadde fielded questions and criticisms regarding widespread accusations of the company catering to liberal viewpoints.
"Probably our team having a lack of context into actually what's happening" Dorsey explained. "We would fully admit we probably were way too aggressive when we first saw this as well, and made mistakes."
The whole pretense behind the bold Indian incursion into Pakistani airspace was to bomb terror training camps belonging to Jaish-e-Mohammad, a response to the group's Feb. 14 suicide bombing of a bus carrying Indian paramilitary police reserve officers, which killed 40.
India had vowed a swift and fierce response while denouncing Pakistan seeming tolerance of the terror group on its soil. But now Reuters is questioning India's narrative after examining new high-resolution satellite images of the site near Balakot in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of northeast Pakistan:
High-resolution satellite images reviewed by Reuters show that a religious school run by Jaish-e-Mohammad (JeM) in northeastern Pakistan appears to be still standing days after India claimed its warplanes had hit the Islamist group's training camp on the site and killed a large number of militants.
Comment: See also:
- Coverage of India-Pakistan crisis by mainstream media is strangely objective. What's going on?
- "Surgical strike 2.0" or big Bollywood spectacle?
- Indian media publishes 'minute-by-minute' account of India & Pakistan's aerial dogfight
- NewsReal #28: Trump 'Literally Hitler' in Deep State 2016 Election Do-Over, Intrigue Behind India-Pakistan Clash
General Curtis Scaparrotti, the head of EUCOM and the supreme NATO commander in Europe, faced the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday, focusing on the scary - yet elusive - "Russian aggression." While the US still dominates, the Russian "threat" is growing steadily, the official claimed without offering any proof.
To fix that, his command needs more of everything - troops, planes, ships... and naturally, cash.
Comment: For more details on Scaparrotti's appeal for cash - and if you can stomach it...
Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee on Tuesday, General Curtis Scaparrotti argued that the US maintains global military superiority, but cited "evolving Russian capabilities" as a threat to that dominance, challenging the US "ability to operate uncontested in all domains."
Scaparrotti, who as the head of EUCOM is also the supreme NATO commander in Europe, claimed without evidence that the Russian military posture is "increasingly aggressive" and sought aid from Congress to bolster EUCOM's "assigned and rotational forces."
In addition to more troops, ships, spies and everything but the kitchen sink, Scaparrotti revealed that EUCOM has requested two more destroyers from the US Navy, and maybe also an aircraft carrier, in order to counter what he said were the expanding capabilities of the Russian fleet.
The US currently has four destroyers stationed in Rota, Spain. One of them, the USS Donald Cook, recently ventured into the Black Sea to "promote stability" by posing as a live target for Russian coastal defense missiles.
Washington needs to upgrade its naval capabilities in order "to remain dominant in the maritime domain, and particularly undersea," Scaparrotti told senators.
Scaparrotti's gloom and doom pronouncements are par for the course, however - he sang the same tune last year. The US has been bolstering its troop presence in Europe since 2015, using allegations of "Russian aggression" in Ukraine as pretext. Just last month, the 1st Cavalry and 1st Infantry divisions were sent to Eastern Europe, as part of the ongoing effort dubbed "Atlantic Resolve."
Not surprisingly, the general's shopping list comes ahead of the proposed 2020 US military budget, which is expected to be announced next week and is rumored to be in the range of $750 billion, up from $716 billion allocated for 2019. Meanwhile, Russia has been gradually reducing military spending to devote more funds to infrastructure, education and social programs.
With the US national debt exceeding $22 trillion, however, the Pentagon is looking to save a few pennies here and there, so it is unclear how much Scaparrotti may eventually get. Last month, a report emerged that the Navy was considering retiring the aircraft carrier USS Harry Truman in 2024, decades ahead of its expected end of life, in order to divert money into the new Ford-class supercarrier project.
It was the Truman that ventured north of the Arctic circle in October last year - as part of massive NATO wargames on Russia's doorstep - the first US carrier to do so since the Cold War.
On the actually alarming subject of the Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) treaty expiring in less than six months, Scaparrotti had little to say. Asked how EUCOM was preparing for the end of the INF, the general told senators that the US informed NATO allies that plans would be made in cooperation with them.
"So, I don't know that we have a plan today," he said. "I know that we are working on what we think that plan might be."
US President Donald Trump has repeatedly complained that only a handful of NATO members were spending the agreed-upon two percent of their GDP on the military. Alarmed that the president might take the US out of NATO, the Democrats have spearheaded an effort in the US Congress to pass a bill in January banning such a move, but also demanding NATO allies boost their military spending.
This professional legal opinion by Ms. Bracho explains why Guaidó was able to return to Venezuela without being arrested. To summarize, and in the interests of explaining a document (below) which contained some phrases that were difficult to precisely translate in the language of Venezuela's constitutional legal framework, given my time constraints and not being a Venezuelan lawyer, I can nevertheless explain what is being said:
Guaidó is wanted for questioning, but there is not an arrest order against him. He violated a court order not to leave the country while the investigation is pending, but he also appealed this order and 'jammed' the legal process in so doing, so that his otherwise unlawful exit from the country actually placed him in a grey-zone. That means that in the interim, the courts may decide not to issue an arrest warrant based upon his departure from the country. While the courts generally frown on flagrant cases of not acknowledging a court order (prohibition), the courts should generally tend to use the least amount of coercion against a person who is being accused, or is wanted for questioning in a process which could lead to being accused. The latter case actually applies to Guaidó who has not yet been accused.
Comment: This weighed and considered response on the part of the Venezuelan government and judiciary is exactly what the reactive and mindless empire to the north was not counting on. Step by reasonable step Venezuela may get out of the trap set on them by those that would seek to plunder its resources and crush their sovereignty.
Le Pen shared the gruesome images in December 2015, a few weeks after ISIS jihadists killed 130 people in attacks in Paris - and after a French journalist drew a comparison between the jihadist group and her party. Her move sparked widespread condemnation in France.
Comment: Whatever happened to the French valuing political expression a la 'Je suis Charlie'? And what about that first part of France's national motto...'Liberté, égalité, fraternité'? Most French people are likely more outraged at the actions of ISIS rather than Le Pen's criticism toward it.

Russian Economic Development Minister Maksim Oreshkin (right) was interrupted by parliament speaker Vyacheslav Volodin (left).
The interruption, which veteran legislator Vladimir Zhirinovsky suggested was the first of its kind in the lower parliament house since Putin came to power almost 20 years ago, also highlighted concerns about the state of the economy early in what could be his final term.
Duma chairman Vyacheslav Volodin, Putin's tough-talking former deputy chief of staff, criticized Oreshkin's report on the country's economic prospects, suggesting he came unprepared and was being too vague.
Comment: Ignore RFE/RL's tabloid spin about squabbles between Putin's 'ruling elite'. The issue here is Putin has a relatively short period to implement his "Great Society" economic vision for Russia, and he is a get-it-done kind of guy. Sounds like Oreshkin has been dragging his feet and deserved the rebuke... especially so if he thinks he has what it takes to be the president of Russia.
"Nobody will be able to disturb the peace of Venezuela," Maduro promised, in his first public comments after the opposition leader Guaido returned to Venezuela on Monday and immediately called on his supporters keep up the heat against the government.
Comment: As we read on, lest we forget that Macron's France, where he enjoys a meager 30% approval rating, has entered its 16th week of protests, thanks in large part to his neo-liberal policies which are fast destroying the livelihoods of his citizens.
Dear Europe, Brexit is a lesson for all of us: it's time for renewal Emmanuel Macron
Citizens of Europe, if I am taking the liberty of addressing you directly, it is not only in the name of the history and values that unite us, but because time is of the essence. A few weeks from now the European elections will be decisive for the future of our continent.
Never since the second world war has Europe been so essential. Yet never has Europe been in such danger. Brexit stands as the symbol of that. It symbolises the crisis of a Europe that has failed to respond to its peoples' need for protection from the major shocks of the modern world. It also symbolises the European trap. The trap lies not in being part of the European Union; the trap is in the lie and the irresponsibility that can destroy it. Who told the British people the truth about their post-Brexit future? Who spoke to them about losing access to the EU market? Who mentioned the risks to peace in Ireland of restoring the border? Retreating into nationalism offers nothing; it is rejection without an alternative. And this is the trap that threatens the whole of Europe: the anger mongers, backed by fake news, promise anything and everything.
Comment: So in short: Macron wants to help rule over Europe - when he barely has the support of his own country - with centralized, undemocratic, bureaucratic bodies; to replace traditional European culture with his own distorted vision of the world; and he's terrified of the populists who are rising in power, who actually represent the people, and who, with a fair vote, would eventually oust him.
- In bizarre WW1 centenary speech, Macron claims nationalism is evil because it 'erases moral values'
- Yellow Vests Rise Against Neo-liberal King Macron
- France discovers 'Jupiter' Macron isn't a leader but a petulant boy-king
- NewsReal #26: Globalization vs Nationalism - The Hidden Causes of The Yellow Vest Protests in France
- NewsReal: Will Globalists' War on Nationalism Lead to Bloody Revolution?
- NewsReal: Révolution Jaune? France Revolts Against Macron
Three sources familiar with the matter told CNN that Trump demanded former chief of staff John Kelly and White House counsel Don McGahn approve clearances for his daughter.
Presidents have the authority to grant security clearances, but most instances fall on the White House personnel security office, which makes its determination after the FBI has completed a background check of the individual.
The CNN reports comes after the New York Times reported last week that Trump ordered Kelly to grant Jared Kushner, his son-in-law, a top security clearance even though intelligence officials expressed concerns.
The secretive agency hasn't used the controversial system - the descendant of the 'Stellar Wind' metadata collection program exposed by NSA contractor Edward Snowden in 2013 - in months, according to Luke Murry, national security adviser to House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who told the Lawfare podcast that the administration wouldn't even bother renewing its congressional authority for the program when it expires at the end of the year.
The NSA program - which reportedly had never thwarted a single terrorist attack - was essentially mothballed last June, according to Murry. Which, many believe, would only indicate the agency has been busy with something else for the last eight months.














Comment: The entire show is available here: