Puppet MastersS


Propaganda

How far the Grey Lady has fallen: The New York Times runs cover for Biden's CIA director, Jeffrey Epstein

CIA epstein william burns
© Chris Kleponis/Abaca/Bloomberg via Getty Images) (Photo by Rick Friedman/Rick Friedman Photography/Corbis via Getty ImagesCIA Director William Burns and Jeffrey Epstein
A recent report from The Wall Street Journal revealed that President Joe Biden's CIA director William Burns met with the international sleazebag of mystery Jeffrey Epstein in 2014. So, what does The New York Times do based on that report? "The Gray Lady" published a glossy profile of Burns that ran cover for both America's top spook as well as Epstein.

In late April, The Journal reported that Burns met with Epstein three times in 2014. Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to procuring a minor for prostitution and received a lenient punishment. That raised the question, how and why did Burns — who was deputy secretary of state at the time — meet with Epstein?

CIA spokeswoman Tammy Kupperman Thorp defended the meetings. "The director did not know anything about him, other than that he was introduced as an expert in the financial services sector and offered general advice on the transition to the private sector," she told The Journal. "They had no relationship."

Comment: Epstein was the epicenter of influence operations for both the CIA and Mossad. He had dirt on everyone.


Bad Guys

FBI stonewalls Congress over informant file alleging Biden took bribes as vice president

james comer biden bribery files fbi
© REUTERS/ Craig HudsonHouse Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) issued a legally binding subpoena last week requiring the FBI to turn over the file by noon Wednesday.
The FBI has refused to give Congress an informant file alleging that President Biden took bribes while he was vice president, The Post has learned — setting up a possible showdown over access to the information.

House Oversight Committee Chairman James Comer (R-Ky.) issued a legally binding subpoena last week requiring the FBI to turn over the file by noon Wednesday, but the bureau instead replied with a six-page letter raising various objections.

"Information from confidential human sources is unverified and, by definition, incomplete," wrote FBI acting assistant director for congressional affairs Christopher Dunham, who also argued that informant reports must also be kept private to protect sources.

"As is clear from the name itself, confidentiality is definitional to the FBI's Confidential Human Source program," Dunham wrote. "Confidential human sources often provide information to the FBI at great risk to themselves and their loved ones. The information they provide also can create significant risks to others who may be referenced in their reporting."

Comment:


Info

Kremlin explains why it no longer speaks to Western media

dmitry preskov
© Pavel Bednyakov / SputnikFILE PHOTO: Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov speaks to journalists in Moscow, April 24, 2023. Kremlin says its conditions for extending deal brokered by the UN and Turkey had not been fulfilled.
Dealing with people who won't tell the truth is pointless, presidential spokesman Peskov has said.

Russian President Vladimir Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov stopped giving interviews to Western outlets a year ago because they distorted his words every time, he revealed on Wednesday.

In a wide-ranging interview with the Bosnian Serb outlet ATV, Peskov was asked why major Western outlets such as AP only had archive photos or video of him. He explained that he cut them off because "they would not tell the truth."

Megaphone

Key takeaways from Trump's CNN town hall

trump townhall
Former President Donald Trump on Wednesday presented his vision for the country as he fielded questions from voters and a CNN moderator for a town hall in New Hampshire.

Trump, the frontrunner for the Republican presidential nomination in 2024, shared what he'd do if he is reelected in 2024 to address what his campaign calls the "Biden decline" currently taking place in the United States.

Republicans and undeclared voters were at the event, held at Saint Anselm College. It marked Trump's first appearance on CNN since before he became president in 2016, and was also the first major televised event of the 2024 presidential campaign.

Comment: See also:


Bizarro Earth

Is WHO a front organization for the takeover of US government?

WHO logo
Analysts warn that the ratification of the World Health Organization's (WHO) pandemic treaty and amendments to the International Health Regulations could strip away sovereignty from nation-states and place public health decision-making power in the hands of the WHO and its director-general.

Editor's note: This is part one of a two-part series on how the World Health Organization's proposed pandemic treaty and amendments to the International Health Regulations could strip nations and people of their health decision-making sovereignty.

The World Health Organization's (WHO) World Health Assembly (WHA) will convene May 21-30 in Geneva, Switzerland, to discuss the proposed "pandemic treaty" and amendments to the International Health Regulations (IHR).

Many analysts have warned that the ratification of either or both of these instruments would diminish or completely strip away sovereignty from nation-states and place public health decision-making power in the hands of the WHO and its director-general.

Details around how this might happen in the U.S., however, are difficult to pinpoint — partly because of the secrecy surrounding negotiations and partly because of the complex combination of domestic and international law that would have to come into play in order to strip U.S. sovereignty.

Eagle

Best of the Web: The extreme center: How the neocons went woke

Nuland Bush Clinton
No lessens, no consequences

The Iraq war was spearheaded by a remarkably small group of people. It has become politically untenable to justify that overt disaster and some of the key architects of that war have, much belatedly, come to acknowledge as much. As late as 2013 Max Boot was still arguing there was No Need to Repent for the Iraq War. He had changed his tune by 2018, writing in his book The Corrosion of Conservatism: Why I Left the Right, "I regret advocating the invasion and feel guilty about all the lives lost." Boot claims, "It was a chastening lesson in the limits of American power," yet in the same book complains that the modern conservative movement is "permeated with" racism, extremism and isolationism.

David Frum now describes the invasion as "a grave and costly error" and gives a thoroughly equivocal mea culpa. Robert Kagan says that the war "didn't go exactly the way we wanted it to" and that "many aspects of the war" were "unfortunate." Bill Kristol acknowledges that Iraq was "very difficult" and that "many things were done badly," but concludes, "I'm inclined not to think it was [a mistake]." Since the inauguration of Trump, Kristol has changed his mind on trans rights, on gays, on abortion — but not on the catastrophe that led to over a hundred thousand civilian deaths. He told Jewish Insider: "Ironically, I'd say I've changed or rethought my views more on domestic policy issues... Foreign policy, I haven't really changed my views. And I've been critical of Biden for the withdrawal from Afghanistan."

Despite the repeated disasters in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and elsewhere, these figures remain as combative as ever. In 2018 Kristol told Vox, "the fact that the public is, quote, "war-weary"... those instincts have be challenged." He told the Al Franken podcast that the Iraq intervention "didn't destabilize the entire Middle East, I wish it had destabilized some of those places more."

Chess

Andrey Sushentsov: The EU's 'new' Eastern members are now running the bloc

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki.
Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki.
Badly thought-out expansion has cost Germany its previous leadership of the organization and left the tail wagging the dog

The Ukrainian crisis is giving rise to new strategic shifts. Alongside the shift away from a US-dominated world order, the conflict shows the emergence of a new balance of power in Europe that eludes the comprehension of Western analysts.

At the heart of the new strategic situation in Europe is an "inflation of the influence" of Eastern European states that was unimaginable thirty years ago.

In its current form, the European Union, whose development - both economic and political - has been driven for almost seventy years by the countries of Western Europe, has essentially lost its sovereignty. At the beginning of the 1990s, at the height of post-Cold War integration plans, there was a real possibility of forming a full European confederation: Western European countries were thinking about their own defense policy, separate from the US, and were planning to go down the road of creating some form of United States of Europe. This would have greatly strengthened Western European autonomy, not only vis-à-vis the Americans but also in regards to Russia and China. This unique opportunity was never seized.

Bad Guys

Serbia's President reveals West pressuring them to sanction Russia

President Aleksandar Vucic
FILE PHOTO: President Aleksandar Vucic
The West has not given up on steamrolling Serbia into imposing sanctions on Russia, the country's president, Aleksandar Vucic, has revealed. However, he said Belgrade has so far been able to resist the pressure.

Speaking to Serbia's Happy TV channel on Monday, Vucic said that "whoever comes [to Belgrade feels their] first obligation is to explain to me that I am a jerk who did not introduce sanctions."

The Serbian head of state acknowledged that he had already gotten used to constant "pressure [and] ultimatums" from Western representatives.

Comment: See also: Serbia: eight killed in second mass shooting in days, President pledges to seize all firearms


Pirates

US transfers first round of stolen Russian assets into 'Ukraine reconstruction fund'

Attorney general
The United States has for the first time transferred millions seized from a Russian oligarch to a fund for rebuilding Ukraine, the Justice Department announced Wednesday.

Some $5.4 million seized from Russian tycoon Konstantin Malofeyev was handed over to the State Department to be used to "remediate the harms of Russia's unjust war," Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement.

Malofeyev, who built his fortune in banking, telecommunications and media, was indicted in April 2022 for violating sanctions related to the 2014 Russian-backed secession war in Ukraine's Donbas region and its takeover of Crimea.

Comment: Nations and their businesses across the planet will be taking note that, should they fall afoul of the ever expanding list of US sanctions, their assets will be stolen. This doesn't bode well for the already ailing US economy:


No Entry

Brexit? UK postpones deadline for ditching EU laws

brexit eu london uk
© Getty
The government has ditched its plan for thousands of EU-era laws to expire automatically at the end of the year.

The plan - dubbed a post-Brexit bonfire - would see laws that were copied over to the UK after Brexit vanish, unless specifically kept or replaced.

Critics of the bill had voiced concern that it could lead to important legislation falling away by accident.

But the climbdown is likely to trigger anger from Brexit-backing Conservative MPs and members of the House of Lords.

Comment: A recent move to allow animal testing, in accordance with EU standards, seems to reflect the diminishing influence of the UK on the EU, and that, if it wants any chance of doing business, it's likely going to have concede to the EU blocs requirements. But then, Brexit was a farce from the outset, and it was clear that, whatever the outcome, the intention of allowing the referendum wasn't to allow citizens to claw back some semblance of democracy: UK lifts ban on animal testing for make up products, ships in 1000 beagles for medical research experiments