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Sen. Josh Hawley calls on Fauci to resign after e-mail dump, demands full investigation

HawleyFauci
© Getty ImagesSenator Josh Hawley • Dr. Anthony Fauci
Sen. Josh Hawley (R-MO) on Friday called on White House senior medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci to resign and also demanded a full congressional investigation into the recently-released trove of his emails, as well as the origins of COVID-19. "Anthony Fauci's recently released emails and investigative reporting about #COVID19 origins are shocking. The time has come for Fauci to resign and for a full congressional investigation into the origins of #COVID19 - and into any and all efforts to prevent a full accounting.

"The public deserves to know if persons within the US govt tried to stop a full investigation into #COVID origins, as recently reported. And Congress must also find out to what extent Fauci's NIAID was involved in financing research at the Wuhan Institute of Virology."

Comment: The presidential perspective on flip-flop Fauci from barely-there Biden:

President Biden on Friday said he's "very confident" in his chief medical adviser, Dr. Anthony Fauci, despite the release of emails that exposed Fauci's knowledge of and efforts to tamp down the Wuhan "lab leak" theory to explain the COVID-19 pandemic's origin.

Peter Daszak, head of the EcoHealth Alliance, which used a $3.4 million US grant to do research at the Wuhan lab, wrote to Fauci in April 2020 that he was thankful that Fauci was publicly knocking the possibility of a lab leak. Daszak wrote:
"From my perspective, your comments are brave, and coming from your trusted voice, will help dispel the myths being spun around the virus' origins."
Fauci replied, "Many thanks for your kind note."

But in January 2020, Fauci was warned by virus researcher Kristian Anderson of the Scripps Research lab in La Jolla, Calif., that COVID-19 had "unusual features."
"The unusual features of the virus make up a really small part of the genome (<0.1%) so one has to look really closely at all the sequences to see that some of the features (potentially) look engineered."
In April 2020, Fauci emailed George Gao, head of the Chinese CDC, that "All is well despite some crazy people in this world."



Headphones

Norway summons US embassy official over spying claims

3 agencies
© re-alliance/AP/P. SemanskyUS security agencies command centers
The Norwegian government summoned a US embassy official on Thursday over spying reports.

Danish broadcaster DR revealed on Sunday that Danish spies collaborated with their US counterparts to eavesdrop on political leaders and officials in Germany, France, Sweden and Norway.

Those targeted reportedly included German Chancellor Angela Merkel, then German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier and former German opposition leader Peer Steinbrück.

The revelation came to light from a 2014 internal investigation by the Danish Defense Intelligence Service (FE) on its cooperation with US National Security Agency (NSA). DR spoke to anonymous intelligence figures privy to that report. They reportedly collaborated between 2012 and 2014.


Comment: See also:


Star of David

Israel's 'change government' means the oppression of Palestinians is certain to get a whole lot WORSE

lod man palestinian protest hebrom
© REUTERS/Mussa QawasmaA protest against Israeli settlements near Hebron in the Israeli-occupied West Bank June 4, 2021.
Israel's on the cusp of seeing a new coalition government that's been dubbed the "change bloc". If that conjures notions of progress, think again.

Superficially, change is afoot. If the proposed coalition secures parliamentary support in the coming days, then Benjamin Netanyahu and his Likud party will be out of power. Netanyahu is the longest-serving prime minister - 12 straight years in office and 15 in total - since the inception of the Israeli state in 1948. He has defined Israeli politics for over a quarter of a century. So, indeed, any new face in power will seem like a big change.

Also, among the putative new administration is an Arab party, Ra'am, which professes conservative Islamist beliefs. The inclusion of Palestinians in a governing coalition - albeit with a tiny representation - may seem to herald a more progressive era for Israel's Arab population, which accounts for a fifth of the total in the Jewish state.

Comment:


Attention

Best of the Web: The Lab-leak theory: Inside the battle to uncover COVID-19's origins

virus covid
Throughout 2020, the notion that the novel coronavirus leaked from a lab was off-limits. Those who dared to push for transparency say toxic politics and hidden agendas kept us in the dark.

I. A Group Called DRASTIC

Gilles Demaneuf is a data scientist with the Bank of New Zealand in Auckland. He was diagnosed with Asperger's Syndrome ten years ago, and believes it gives him a professional advantage. "I'm very good at finding patterns in data, when other people see nothing," he says.

Early last spring, as cities worldwide were shutting down to halt the spread of COVID-19, Demaneuf, 52, began reading up on the origins of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes the disease. The prevailing theory was that it had jumped from bats to some other species before making the leap to humans at a market in China, where some of the earliest cases appeared in late 2019. The Huanan wholesale market, in the city of Wuhan, is a complex of markets selling seafood, meat, fruit, and vegetables. A handful of vendors sold live wild animals — a possible source of the virus.

Comment: Vanity Fair's article, informative as it is, is also notable for its careful omission of the viral research being done on U.S. soil, specifically at Ft. Detrick. Why would that be? The Daily Caller provides the tl:dr on this sordid coverup:
A U.S. government official reportedly ordered his employees not to publicly acknowledge American connections to and funding of the Wuhan Institute of Virology (WIV), the site implicated in a potential lab-leak coronavirus origin theory.

Christopher Park did not want to open the "Pandora's Box" of U.S. funding for gain-of-function research, according to a Thursday Vanity Fair report. The U.S. government indirectly funded gain-of-function at WIV through grants to the nonprofit group EcoHealth Alliance. That funding was not subject to a Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) review board that could have rejected the grant, because the sub-agency that awarded grants did not alert the review board.

Park, the director of the State Department's Biological Policy Staff in the Bureau of International Security and Nonproliferation, reportedly told his employees not to say anything publicly in reference to that funding, an individual who attended the meeting where he gave his order reportedly told Vanity Fair. The individual reportedly described his comments as "so nakedly against transparency" as to be "shocking and disturbing."

Park's comments "smelled like a cover-up," according to Thomas DiNanno, former acting assistant secretary of the State Department's Bureau of Arms Control, Verification and Compliance. Park had pushed for the U.S. to resume funding gain-of-function research in 2017, according to Vanity Fair.

"I am skeptical that people genuinely felt they were being discouraged from presenting facts," Park told Vanity Fair. It "is making an enormous and unjustifiable leap ... to suggest that research of that kind [meant] that something untoward is going on," he continued.

EcoHealth Alliance distributed $600,000 in U.S. taxpayer dollars to WIV between 2014 and 2019 for the purpose of studying bat-based coronaviruses. The money was granted to EcoHealth by the National Institute for Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID), the National Institutes of Health sub-agency led by White House senior medical adviser Dr. Anthony Fauci.

The money was distributed during a government moratorium on gain-of-function research.

"If you ban gain-of-function research, you ban all of virology," an NIH official reportedly said. "Ever since the moratorium, everyone's gone wink-wink and just done gain-of-function research anyway."

The WIV also received $559,000 from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), according to the report.

Park was not the only government official to oppose pursuing the lab-leak hypothesis, however. DiNanno told Vanity Fair that an intelligence analyst struggled to find a report written by officials working at a Department of Energy lab. DiNanno told the outlet he viewed the report as being intentionally buried within the classified collections system. Department of Energy officials then attempted to block State Department officials from meeting with the report's authors, DiNanno alleged.

Acting Undersecretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Chris Ford repeatedly downplayed the lab-leak hypothesis to DiNanno and other researchers. He also wrote a memo arguing that officials should not view the Chinese People's Liberation Army's "involvement in classified virus research [a]s intrinsically problematic, since the U.S. Army has been deeply involved in virus research in the United States for many years."

Ford told Vanity Fair that he was trying to avoid "stuff that makes us look like the crackpot brigade."

During President Joe Biden's term, however, the lab-leak theory has received new attention from a less hostile media. Aaron Blake, a Washington Post reporter, blamed the Trump administration for not pushing hard for the release of intelligence promoting the lab-leak theory. He argued that the administration invited "caution and skepticism" because of the way "Trump handled such things."

Biden ordered the intelligence community to provide an assessment of the origins of COVID-19 within 90 days on May 26.



Blue Planet

EU's attempt to sanction and isolate Hungary is an insult to the entire idea of a European community

Orban
© AFP / ARIS OIKONOMOUHungary's Prime Minister Viktor Orban at the European Union Summit in Brussels.
A Hungarian legal challenge rejected by the EU Court of Justice is part of a long train of EU attempts to stifle Hungary's independent voice by hypocritically invoking European liberalism.

The Hungarian government of Prime Minister Viktor Orban has lost a suit at the EU's Court of Justice challenging the legality of a 2018 motion by the European Parliament calling for investigation of Budapest's alleged violations of the EU's rule of law, that could lead to sanctions and to reduced voting rights for Hungary within the EU.

The formal investigative process in Article 7 of the EU's Lisbon Treaty is triggered when a member state is accused of violating "human dignity, freedom, democracy, equality, the rule of law and respect for human rights, including the rights of persons belonging to minorities." But it is manifestly a strategically vague clause, twisted to serve the undemocratic goal of stifling Hungary's right to democratic dissent.

Hungarian Justice Minister Judit Varga, who blasted the decision as "completely unacceptable and shocking," earlier in the week called the years-long EU campaign against Hungary on the claimed rule-of-law violations as "hypocritical," taking the bloc away from a moment that "should be dedicated to building alliances, so that common efforts enable us to leave behind the coronavirus."

The 2018 European Parliament resolution invoking Article 7 collects a years-long spate of partisan EU-sanctioning attempts against Hungary for supposedly violating the EU's rule of law in, among other areas, migration, the judiciary, and treatment of NGOs and minorities. But the resolution is really just an elaborate way of griping about Hungary having a unified, democratically elected government that has taken its mandate seriously in refusing to condone irregular migration, putting restrictions on foreign-funded NGOs, and holding national consultations on the link between irregular migration and violent extremism.

Info

US FinCen about to control global financial data

Fincen and cryptos
Washington is about to control the data of all financial transactions in the world. With the objective of combating financial crimes, the American government is about to pass a law that greatly expands the inspection power of financial regulatory agencies, which will have the freedom to use new technologies that allow them to supervise operations outside American territory. In practice, this could create a scenario of global data enforcement, in which all individuals and organizations would be subject to US agencies.

In early 2021, the US Congress overturned the presidential veto on a last year's bill that called for new measures to combat money laundering. This law provides new technologies and financial resources to FinCen (Financial Crimes Enforcement Network), an agency under the US Department of the Treasury, which regulates and monitors suspicious financial transactions globally. The project has corporate transparency at its core, which requires all companies to reveal their owners and beneficiaries in the new FinCEN registry, creating a comprehensive data control system.

If this project is put into practice, events such as massive data leaks, as happened last year, could become more and more common. In 2020, FinCen unveiled more than 2,000 money laundering financial transaction documents across multiple countries. In all, illegal transactions amounted to 2 trillion dollars. While the benefit of uncovering illicit schemes is positive, the invasive US policy to monitor transactions in other countries can be a major problem and a real attack on the sovereignty of countries where there are supposedly happening illegal transactions.

Comment: So under cover of trying to prevent and/or prosecute digital money laundering, crimes, etc. the US government has just found another pretense from which more control and financial restriction may be exercised - on an international scale.


Brick Wall

'Woketopia recipe': AOC's solution for surging violence is to STOP BUILDING JAILS, but crime-wary critics aren't buying it

Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
© Reuters / Jeenah MoonCongresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is shown speaking at an April press conference in New York.
US Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-New York) thinks she has cracked the code on how to reduce violent crime in America: quit building jails. Social media users were left puzzling over her logic.

"If we want to reduce violent crime, if we want to reduce the number of people in our jails, the answer is to stop building more of them," Ocasio-Cortez said on Thursday at a press conference in New York.


Comment: More astounding logic from everyone's favorite congresswoman.

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Folder

Former US Treasury official sentenced to six months in prison for leaking documents

natalie edwards treasury department
Former senior Treasury official Natalie Mayflower Sours Edwards on Thursday was sentenced to six months in prison for giving thousands of confidential reports related to special prosecutor Robert Mueller's Russian collusion investigation to multiple news outlets around the world.

Edwards, who worked for the Treasury Department's Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), was charged in 2018 with leaking confidential financial reports to media outlets like BuzzFeed News. Edwards's actions were discovered when agents from the Treasury Inspector General's office detected "a pattern" of unauthorized media disclosures beginning in October 2017.

U.S. District Court Judge Gregory Woods granted prosecutors' request that Edwards be given the minimum sentence of six months, Politico reports. Edwards's attorney, Stephanie Carvlin, had asked for a "time served" sentence, Politico notes, appearing to refer to the day Edwards spent in custody following her arrest in 2018.

Comment: See also:


Beaker

Ex-CDC director Redfield says he received death threats from fellow scientists over COVID-19 theory

Former CDC Director Robert Redfield
© New York Times/Pool
Former Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Director Robert Redfield says he received death threats from fellow scientists after saying he believed the coronavirus originated in a lab.

In an interview with Vanity Fair, Redfield opened up about the backlash he received after telling CNN in March that he supports the lab theory, which has gained new attention in recent weeks, while most health experts believed COVID-19 was originally passed from animals to humans.

He said he was "threatened and ostracized because I proposed another hypothesis."

Comment: This is unsurprising given the ruthlessness with which the lab leak theory has been suppressed. Why would anyone think scientists are somehow above giving death threats?

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Eye 1

Fauci calls on China to release medical records of Wuhan researchers

Fauci
© APDr. Anthony Fauci
Anthony Fauci is calling on China to release medical records of researchers at a laboratory in Wuhan, China, that reportedly became sick with COVID-19-like symptoms prior to the pandemic.

In an interview with the Financial Times published Friday, Fauci said the records could help resolve the debate over the origins of the virus, particularly if it was the result of a laboratory leak.

"I would like to see the medical records of the three people who are reported to have got sick in 2019," Fauci told the news outlet. "Did they really get sick, and if so, what did they get sick with?"

Comment: More from Breitbart:
Former President Donald Trump demanded Thursday China pay ten trillion dollars in reparations to the United States for coronavirus deaths and destruction, as the country spent $13 trillion battling the virus.

"China should pay Ten Trillion Dollars to America, and the World, for the death and destruction they have caused!" Trump wrote.

"Now everyone, even the so-called 'enemy,' are beginning to say that President Trump was right about the China Virus coming from the Wuhan Lab. The correspondence between Dr. Fauci and China speaks too loudly for anyone to ignore," he continued.

According to the Committee for Responsible Government, the United States' taxpayers have spent $13 trillion fighting the flu from China.

As of June 3, 595,779 American citizens have died from the Chinese coronavirus.

The United States currently owes China, according to the U.S. Treasury Department in June of 2020, $1.07 trillion in debt obligations.

The Chinese Communist Party has not taken responsibility for the coronavirus pandemic that killed millions around the world.