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Can't take a joke: Twitter suspends clearly marked AOC parody account for being "fake and misleading"

Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
© Reuters / Jeenah Moon
Twitter, it seems, has no sense of humor. An Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez parody account, clearly marked as such and boasting 85,000 followers, has been banned along with its creator, reportedly for being "fake and misleading."

Twitter permanently suspended both Mike Morrison's personal Twitter account and his Ocasio-Cortez parody account @AOCPress without warning, apparently accusing Morrison of violating its policy on fake accounts even though the AOC parody had been clearly marked as a parody in both its account name and its bio.


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Sherlock

Devin Nunes: Joseph Mifsud, the Clinton 'dirt' tipster, has ties to State Department

mifsud papadopoulos dossier
Joseph Mifsud and George Papadopoulos
Rep. Devin Nunes, R-Calif., said Maltese academic Joseph Mifsud - the man who told former Trump campaign adviser George Papadopoulos the Russians had thousands of Hillary Clinton's emails - likely has links to "U.S., British, and Italian intelligence services" and the State Department where Clinton served as the country's top diplomat.

Mifsud, a London-based professor and former Maltese diplomat, has long been suspected of deep ties to Russian intelligence. He is an elusive figure who has stayed out of the spotlight and is the subject of a letter Nunes, the House Intelligence Committee ranking member, sent to U.S. intelligence agencies and the State Department on Friday seeking relevant documents.

Nunes told Fox News on Sunday there were many questions that arose from special counsel Robert Mueller's report on Russian interference in the 2016 election, which his letter said "omits any mention of a wide range of contacts Mifsud had with Western political institutions and individuals," that still need to be answered.

Crusader

'The Management of Savagery': 'Trump is protecting Al-Qaeda franchise' according to Max Blumenthal's new book

Members of al Qaeda's Nusra Front
© Reuters / Khalil AshawiMembers of al Qaeda's Nusra Front hang the Nusra flag in a central square in the northwestern city of Ariha, May 29, 2015
The US has fueled the rise of terrorist groups around the world, and even provides support to jihadists when their interests align, journalist Max Blumenthal, who wrote a book on the explosive topic, told RT's Lee Camp.

Speaking with the host of Redacted Tonight, Blumenthal detailed the cynical realities of Washington's so-called war against terrorism. In Syria, for example, the US provided weapons to countless extremist groups in an attempt to overthrow President Bashar Assad. As Blumenthal noted, most of the US-backed "31 flavors of Wahhabism" eventually partnered with Al-Qaeda or Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) and are now in full control of Syria's Idlib province.
"Donald Trump, while he goes and blames [Democratic Congresswoman] Ilhan Omar for 9/11... Donald Trump is protecting the largest franchise of Al-Qaeda in this province."

TV

Trump aide sparks fury for tweeting old video from Ukraine & presenting it as current Hamas strikes

ukraine bombing
© YouTube / news about Ukraine
Donald Trump's senior campaign adviser has been slammed for spreading "misinformation" online, after posting a four-year-old video of military action in Ukraine and claiming it was evidence of Hamas rocket launches against Israel.

"650 Rockets being fired into Israel from Gaza in an attempt to overwhelm Israels Iron Dome: 173 intercepts, 4 people killed, and 28 wounded," Katrina Pierson wrote in a tweet, with a video showing a barrage of rockets fired into the sky.

While Pierson wanted to attack Congresswoman Ilhan Omar (D-MN) who defended Palestinians during a recent confrontation with Israel, she was immediately slammed online for spearheading a false narrative. The video she posted, the twiteratti pointed out, actually came from Ukraine and was recorded in 2015 at the height of the conflict in Donbass.

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Bizarro Earth

US warships sail through disputed South China Sea as Trump talks trade war escalation with Beijing, again

USS McCampbell
© ReutersFILE PHOTO: The Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyer USS McCampbell in the South China Sea, January 15, 2019.
Two US warships have sailed through the South China Sea, a move that has angered Beijing. The naval maneuver comes a day after Donald Trump threatened China with more tariffs as part of an ongoing trade war.

The US military has confirmed that two of its warships sailed near islands claimed by Beijing in the South China Sea on Monday. China says the waterway is part of its territorial waters, while Washington insists that the sea is open to international transit under the principle of "freedom of navigation."

The US guided-missile destroyers 'Preble' and 'Chung Hoon' traveled within 12 nautical miles of Gaven and Johnson Reefs in the Spratly Islands, Reuters reported.

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Whistle

How Attorney General Barr could change the federal culture of corruption in 60 days

william barr
© Greg Nash
I'm in my 30th year of covering national news and I've learned a hard truth about the federal government under numerous administrations. It's a culture where truth-telling is frowned upon; coverup is rewarded and encouraged.

That helps answer a question many have recently asked about the FBI and our intelligence community: Why haven't more whistleblowers come forward?

Several months ago, an FBI source told me that numerous whistleblowers had gone to members of Congress with information about the FBI and the Trump-Russia scandal, only to have congressional leaders turn their names over to the Department of Justice. True or not, this was the word on the street, and it had a chilling impact on other would-be whistleblowers.

The fact is, insiders know that things rarely turn out well for the whistleblowers. They and their families are targeted, attacked and smeared. They lose their jobs or chance to advance. Their health suffers. Their personal lives fall apart.

Meantime, they look over their shoulders and see that their truth-telling changed nothing. The guilty parties usually stay in their cushy jobs or are allowed to quietly retire with full benefits. Sometimes they're promoted.

So it's no surprise that, even though I believe the federal government is populated with mostly good people, they tend to keep their mouths shut and go along. After all, why come forward if your actions aren't going to fix anything and the only result will be that your life is ruined?

There's a simple yet dramatic way to change this longstanding culture, one that everyone should be able to get behind: A new whistleblower amnesty program.

It could start with the Department of Justice and intelligence community. Attorney General William Barr could set it up quickly, before the establishment has time to mount a full-force lobbying campaign to stop it. Here are two potential aspects:

Amnesty period

Establish a 60-day amnesty period of time for anyone in the intel community to come forward and admit their own wrongdoing or blow the whistle on others.

Offer anonymity, legal representation and job security for the whistleblowers. Any whistleblowers whose names become known would fall under a new group of protected federal employees with independent overseers ensuring they do not suffer retaliation. In the alternative, a mutually beneficial separation could be negotiated.

Someone confessing to his or her own wrongdoing generally would be guaranteed immunity from administrative punishment or prosecution. The seriousness of the offense or crime would be weighed against factors, such as the information he or she provides about broader wrongdoing, and a mutually beneficial resolution for the individual and government would be negotiated.

Intermediaries

Establish trusted intermediaries through which the whistleblowers would work. "Trusted" means intermediaries trusted by the whistleblowers, not necessarily by the establishment figures whose policies and processes would be challenged. (The agency inspectors general are not universally trusted, and often are seen by insiders as part of the establishment protecting the agencies they oversee.)

Several ideas for intermediaries come to mind: the Obama-appointed Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction John Sopko (who continues to serve under President Trump); the Project on Government Oversight, headed by Danielle Brian; attorney Victoria Toensing, who long has worked with whistleblowers; and Marcel Reid and Michael McCray of the National Whistleblower Center. There are many more possibilities; these are simply a few examples showing that it is possible to find resources likely to be considered trustworthy by various whistleblowers.

Those who do not come forward during the amnesty period, but who are implicated in wrongdoing, would face the full force of administrative action or prosecution.

For those who believe there is little wrongdoing and corruption inside the Department of Justice and our intelligence communities, this process would be speedy and nimble.

However, if there are more problems than we think, we should be prepared for a giant purge. If the idea works, it could become a model for rooting out problems within all federal agencies.

Such a process would change the longstanding federal culture that overlooks or encourages corruption, and lead to cleaner, more effective governing.

Logically, there should be few legitimate objections. All should be able to get behind a relatively simple plan to root out corruption and wrongdoing in our federal agencies.

But they probably won't.

Bizarro Earth

Best of the Web: Babies, children and pregnant women among 25 killed and 140 Palestinians wounded in 2nd day of Israel's attack on Gaza

Gaza airstrike
© Omar El-Qattaa/APA ImagesPalestinians inspect the remains of a building following an Israeli airstrike, in Gaza city on May 5, 2019. Israeli warplanes hit the building on Saturday where Anadolu Agency’s office is located.

Comment: Update (May 6): A ceasefire has been agreed upon by Israel and Hamas, so the fighting will temporarily be stopped. Trump is fully capitulating to the Israeli side, warning the people of Gaza that "these terrorist acts against Israel will bring you nothing but more misery". At the moment the idea of an extended ceasefire seems unlikely. Between Trump and Netanyahu, there is nothing stopping the Israelis from firing more missiles into the already war-torn Gaza. It's hard to imagine what Trump could do to make the life of Palestinians more miserable.


Grey smoke and fire plumes erupted for the second day in Gaza and nearby Israeli communities after a cross-fire of deadly rocket strikes launched by both Israeli military and Gaza militants.

Gaza's Health Ministry reported that the death toll in Gaza from Israeli airstrikes was 25. That number includes a Saturday night toll of four when three residential buildings were destroyed in the east of Gaza: two men, a pregnant mother, Falastin Abu Arar, and her 14-month-old infant Seba Abu Arar were killed. The Ministry of Health said a second infant was killed Sunday.

The Israeli assaults were met by Palestinian resistance factions launching more than 500 rockets towards Israeli settlements, killing four people, according to Israeli media outlets.

Comment: Mondoweiss provides further detail on the situation:
One of the worst flare ups in violence across the Israeli-Gaza borders continued to escalate on Sunday, as Israeli air forces pounded more than 300 sites in the Gaza Strip, while Hamas forces in Gaza fired hundreds of rockets into Israeli territory.

As of Sunday afternoon, reports from the Palestinian Health Ministry in Gaza indicated that 25 Palestinians, including a four-month and 14-month-old girl, two pregnant women, and a 12-year-old boy were killed in the strikes.

The ministry added that over 150 Palestinians, including several children, were injured during the Israeli airstrikes.

At least four Israelis have been killed by rocket fire from Gaza.
Gaza airstrike
© Omar El-Qattaa/APA ImagesPalestinians inspect the remains of a building following an Israeli airstrike, in Gaza city on May 5, 2019. Israeli warplanes hit the building on Saturday where Anadolu Agency’s office is located.
Palestinians in Gaza have been claiming that Israeli forces have overwhelmingly targeted civilian buildings, leading to fears that the situation could spiral farther out of control than any other flare up in recent months.

Despite several of the dead being identified as civilians, and videos circulating on social media showing residential buildings being bombed, Israeli forces and officials have maintained that they are striking "terror targets."

The Israeli army has published a series of infographics and statements on Twitter over the weekend, claiming to have hit over 320 "terror sites," including tunnels, rocket launch sites, and weapon storage facilities.

They highlighted the targeted killing of an alleged Hamas operative responsible for transferring Iranian money into Gaza that was used to help "fund their rocket fire at Israelis."

Palestinian media reported that the killing of the man, identified as Ahmed al-Khodary, was Israel's first targeted assassination of a high profile official in Gaza since 2014.

In regards to the killing of 37-year-old pregnant woman Falastine Abu Arar and her 14-month old niece Saba, the Israeli army denied its role in their death, instead blaming a misfiring of a Palestinian rocket.

One of the buildings destroyed by Israel was home to the Gaza bureau of the Turkish state-run Anadolu news agency.

"We call on the international community to act swiftly in order to ease tensions that have increased due to Israel's disproportionate actions in the region," the Turkish Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Buriej refugee camp
© Mahmoud Khattab/APA ImagesRelatives mourn during the funeral of Palestinian Fawzi Bawadi, 23, who was killed in an Israeli airstrike, in al-Buriej refugee camp in the central Gaza Strip on May 5, 2019.
Netanyahu promises 'massive strikes'

As the death toll continued to climb on Sunday, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu ordered the continuation of "massive" airstrikes on Gaza following a meeting with his security cabinet.

Netanyahu also ordered reinforcements of ground troops, including "tanks, artillery and infantry forces" along the Israeli land borders with Gaza, stoking fears of a possible ground invasion.

"Hamas is responsible not only for its attacks against Israel, but also for the Islamic Jihad's attacks, and it is paying a very heavy price for it," Netanyahu said.

Meanwhile, officials of the different armed factions in Gaza vowed to "extend" their response, should the Israeli airstrikes continue.

al-Yarmouk gaza
© Bashar Taleb/APA ImagesA ball of fire and smoke is seen following an Israeli airstrike that hit al-Yarmouk football stadium in Gaza city on May 5, 2019.
Shaky ceasefire talks

At around 11:30 pm local time on Sunday, Haaretz, citing diplomatic sources, reported that the UN along with Egypt and Qatar had presented a cease fire proposal to the Israelis.

Several media outlets reported that ceasefire negotiations were being held with Palestinian officials in Egypt.

"A Hamas source says great efforts have been made in recent hours to achieve calm. The decision is in Israel's hands, the source was cited as saying by the Al-Miyadin television channel," Haaretz reported before midnight

By midnight local time, the Times of Israel reported that Hamas leadership had approved the cease fire proposal, set to go into effect at midnight.

Israeli officials have yet to confirm if they have accepted the cease fire.

UN Special Coordinator for the Middle East Peace Process Nickolay Mladenov called for calm in a statement, saying "continuing down the current path of escalation will quickly undo what has been achieved and destroy the chances for long-term solutions to the crisis."

"This endless cycle of violence must end, and efforts must accelerate to realise a political solution to the crisis in Gaza," he said.

The Guardian quoted Jeremy Stoner, the Middle East regional director for Save the Children as saying "we may have entered the most serious stage in this crisis since the 2014 Gaza war."

"We echo the UN special coordinator for the Middle East peace process call on all parties to immediately de-escalate the situation," Stoner said.

How it began

The latest tensions come amid an already volatile situation in Gaza, following the year-long Great March of Return protests on the border and several similar flare-ups over the past few months.

Amid fears of violent anniversary Great March of Return protests at the end of March, Israeli and Hamas officials struck a deal: Hamas would control protests and stop rocket fire in exchange for an easing of the siege, expanding the fishing zone off Gaza's coast, and allowing Qatari aid money into the territory.

But just days after expanding the fishing zone to 15 nautical miles, Israel scaled it back down on April 30th, citing alleged rocket fire.

Days later, on Friday, Israeli forces killed four Palestinians in a single day: two during Great March of Return protests on the borders, and two in an airstrike targeting a Hamas military post.

Al Jazeera reported that prior to the the barrage of rocket fire coming out of Gaza, Israeli forces conducted a drone attack that left three Palestinians injured.

Israeli forces maintain their strikes have been "retaliatory" in nature.
Yumna Patel is a multimedia journalist based in Bethlehem, Palestine. Follow her on Twitter at @yumna_patel
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Vader

Top Russian MP: Bolton's battle cry shows US is preparing for 'military scenario' in Iran

navy
© Global Look / U.S. Navy
A top Russian MP has warned of an escalation in the US conflict with Iran after Washington announced that it is sending a carrier strike group and bomber task force to the Middle East 'to send a clear message' to Tehran.

"We can't be idle, we must beat the alarm and take a stand against such behavior from Washington in all international organizations, especially in BRICS," Leonid Slutsky said, after the deployment of the naval force was announced by US National Security Advisor John Bolton.

Though Bolton insisted that the US "is not seeking war with the Iranian regime," he warned that the carrier group that will soon arrive in the Persian Gulf is "fully prepared to respond to any attack" by Tehran.

Slutsky, head of the State Duma Committee on International Affairs, said that Bolton had failed to provide a clear explanation for the move, despite calling Tehran a threat.

Network

Caracas hopes to skirt US sanctions via financial cooperation with Russia & China

chess knights
Venezuela is seeking closer cooperation with Moscow and Beijing with a view to creating a new system of banking transactions to dodge US financial sanctions, according to the country's foreign minister, Jorge Arreaza.

"We are looking for alternative ways of cooperating with Russia, China and other friendly nations in order to evade the American blockade," Arreaza said during a press conference at the Venezuelan Embassy in Moscow.

The minister stressed that the Bolivarian Republic hopes to create new alternative routes for changing monetary assets to replace those under the control of Washington. He admitted that such methods of cooperation would not materialize overnight.

Earlier this year, the White House introduced economic and financial restrictions against Venezuela. The penalties, which included cutting the country's access to US dollars, target the its mining sector and sales of crude, which are crucial for the struggling Venezuelan economy. Oil revenues account for about 98 percent of its export earnings.

Bullseye

Venezuelan FM Arreaza: Bid to overthrow Maduro's govt was orchestrated by CIA

cia emblem
© Reuters / Larry Downing
American intelligence had orchestrated efforts to overthrow Maduro's government, Venezuela's foreign minister said as opposition leader Guaido failed to kick-start the military uprising.

Jorge Arreaza made the point as he was speaking at the press conference following the talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov.
This was a whole joint plan by [the] CIA and Venezuelan opposition to overthrow Maduro's government and get their hands on the natural resources of Venezuela.
Venezuela's top diplomat made it clear Caracas will not hesitate to deploy its full military capacity should Washington decide to intervene the country. "We are ready not only to resist and fight but to win and eliminate any army no matter how strong it is," the minister said.