Puppet MastersS


Info

Duma unanimously passes Putin's amendments to pension reform bill

Russian State Duma
© Vladimir Fedorenko / SputnikState Duma plenary session
The Russian parliament has approved amendments by Vladimir Putin to the bill providing for a gradual rise in the age of retirement. The changes are expected to soften the impact of the unpopular measure for ordinary citizens.

The nine amendments drafted by President Putin reduce the proposed increase in the retirement age for women, guarantee that pensioners keep all current tax benefits until the reform is fully completed, and offer additional payments to several categories of citizens, such as pensioners living in remote rural areas and representatives of indigenous peoples in northern Russia.

Target

The drive to destroy Kavanaugh is feminist narcissism at its worst

Brett Kavanaugh
© AP Photo/Alex Brandon
The Democratic response to the allegation that three and a half decades ago, Supreme Court nominee Judge Brett Kavanaugh assaulted a girl at a teenage beer party bears many hallmarks of campus culture, from the admonition that "survivors" should always be believed to the claim that the veracity of the accusation matters less than the history of white-male privilege.

But the most significant import from academic feminism is the idea that a long-ago incident of adolescent sexual misbehavior (assuming that the assault happened as described, which Kavanaugh has categorically denied) should trump a lifetime record of serious legal thought and government service.

Now The New Yorker is charging that Kavanaugh exposed himself to a Yale classmate at a party, ramping up outrage to the point that feminists are demanding that the hearings they wanted be canceled - though The New York Times regarded the latest allegation as too flimsy to publish.

The feminist nostrum that the personal is political is being weaponized to subordinate the public realm of ideas to the private realm of sexual relations - all, ironically, in the service of a highly political end: preventing a judicial conservative from being seated on the high court.

Info

Liberal political bias: Google staff plotted ways to combat Trump's travel ban

Google
© Armin Durgut/Global Look Press
News that Google staff brainstormed over tweaking its search engine algorithms to counter Trump's travel ban is part of an "ongoing problem" of liberal bias in big tech, the editor of a media watchdog has told RT.

In what she described as a "poisonous connection" between liberal political bias and Silicon Valley's biggest tech firms, Carrie Sheffield, national editor of the conservative-leaning Accuracy in Media (AIM), called it "chilling" that politically conservative voices were being silenced.

"There is a dearth of conservative and libertarian thought that is openly expressed in Silicon Valley and is quite often suppressed," she claimed citing data from the Lincoln Network, a conservative organization based in Silicon Valley.

Author and journalist Eric Burrows argues that the Google discussions represented a wider effort by social media companies to control the way all users used their platform.

Chess

Erdogan: Turkey will continue buying gas from Iran despite US sanctions

Turkey oil pipelines
© Umit Bektas / ReutersAnkara, Turkey
Ankara plans to stay committed to its long-term energy-supply deal with Tehran despite Washington's threats to punish countries that do business with Iran, Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said.

"We need to be realistic... Am I supposed to let people freeze in winter?... Nobody should be offended. How can I heat my people's homes if we stop purchasing Iran's natural gas?" Erdogan said in an exclusive interview with Reuters.

He said that there were similar situations with Iranian gas imports during the presidency of Barack Obama. At the moment, Turkey is buying 50 percent of its gas from Russia, with the rest imported from Azerbaijan, Iran, Iraq and Algeria.

Comment: Also see:


Chess

About time! Senate Judiciary schedules Kavanaugh vote for Friday

Brett Kavanaugh
© Joshua Roberts / ReutersUS Supreme Court nominee judge Brett Kavanaugh is sworn in during a Senate Judiciary Committee confirmation hearing, September 4, 2018
The Senate Judiciary Committee has scheduled a vote on the nomination of Brett Kavanaugh to the US Supreme Court for Friday, a day after it is supposed to hear from both Kavanaugh and the woman accusing him of sexual misconduct.

On Thursday, the committee is supposed to hear from both the judge and Christine Blasey Ford, a California professor who says Kavanaugh attempted to rape her at a high school party sometime in the summer of 1982. It is not clear whether Ford will show up to testify, however.

The vote was initially scheduled for Monday the 24th, until Senator Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) agreed to postpone it for the sake of hearing from Ford. Democrats on the committee, as well as Ford's attorneys, demanded a FBI investigation into her claims. They also wanted to further postpone the hearing so Ford could drive from California to Washington, as she was reportedly afraid of airplanes, and that Kavanaugh testify ahead of Ford, which is at best unusual.

Comment: Also see:


Bad Guys

US arrests Chinese national reportedly serving as an 'agent of Beijing'

US embassy Beijing China
© Thomas Peter / ReutersGuards at the entrance to the US embassy in Beijing, China, April 5, 2018
In a move likely to hit relations already soured by a bitter trade war and election interference accusations, the US has now arrested a Chinese national it accuses of working as an unregistered foreign agent.

Ji Chaoqun, 27, was arrested in Chicago on Tuesday. The Chinese national is suspected of working "at the direction of a high-level intelligence officer in the Jiangsu Province Ministry of State Security," the complaint against him claims. The intelligence officer allegedly asked him to provide information on engineers and scientists, including US defense contractors, who might be of interest to the ministry. Ji reportedly collected information on eight such individuals, including his fellow Chinese nationals working in the US. Ji reportedly collected information on eight such individuals, including his fellow Chinese nationals working in the US.

Comment: The New York Times reports that one of Ji Chaoqun's handlers was also arrested.
Mr. Ji's handler at a regional arm of China's Ministry of State Security, which collects domestic and foreign intelligence, was also arrested, according to an F.B.I. affidavit. The officer, identified only as Intelligence Officer A, was arrested sometime before April. It is not clear where he was arrested or by whom. [...]

"They just wanted me to purchase some documents on their behalf," Mr. Ji told the F.B.I. of his handlers, adding that they had told him that making the payments for the reports from China would be too onerous.

The F.B.I. contends that the M.S.S. was "testing Ji's skills as a potential asset by tasking him to purchase these background check reports."

Mr. Ji emailed the files to his handler and called them "midterm test questions."

He also asked an engineer to provide him with technical information from an unnamed aircraft engine supplier, a defense contractor that does aviation research for the military. He then provided the information to the Chinese government.

After graduating in 2015, Mr. Ji enlisted in the Army Reserves in the spring of 2016 under a program that allows immigrants to qualify for American citizenship in exchange for serving in the military.

As part of his application, Mr. Ji lied about his contacts with Chinese intelligence officials, according to court documents.
Also see:


Attention

Iran terror attack: Is a Saudi-Iran war in the offing?

attack Iran Military parade
© Morteza jaberian / Agence France-Presse / File
A military parade was attacked in Iran's southwestern city of Ahvaz on Saturday, killing nearly 30 people.

It is interesting that many countries still feel the need to organize military parades to commemorate national days. This is a very old practice, and the fact that it still continues in the 21st century tells us that little has changed since the 19th century with regard to relations between states.

For countries like China and Russia, military parades are particularly important, as they offer an occasion to display how powerful and disciplined their armed forces are. France's Bastille Day parade is well-known, even though it is harder in their case to understand why and to whom the French still need to show their military power. These are not the only examples of course, as many other countries preserve this martial tradition. We have to admit that military parades do not only help to dissuade foreign powers, but they are a domestic political instrument as well. Thanks to military parades, the governments show their people how tough and effective their security forces are.

Iran's Khuzestan region, where the attack occurred, is mainly populated by Iran's Arabic speaking minority. The province is home to Abadan, which is the country's main oil field. The very same region played a crucial role in the beginning and during the Iran-Iraq war in the 1980s. As a matter of fact, the military parade was commemorating the start of that bloody war, which, in a way, proves that Iran's perception on regional relations and national interests has not changed much since those days.

Newspaper

Cypriot journalist confesses he too was conned by Bill Browder

Sergej Magnitsky
Sergej Magnitsky
Before getting down to brass tacks, let me say that I loathe penning articles like this; loathe writing about myself or in the first person, because a reporter should report the news, not be the news. Yet I grudgingly make this exception because, ironically, it happens to be newsworthy. To cut to the chase, it concerns Anglo-American financier Bill Browder and the Sergei Magnitsky affair. I, like others in the news business I'd venture to guess, feel led astray by Browder.

This is no excuse. I didn't do my due diligence, and take full responsibility for erroneous information printed under my name. For that, I apologize to readers. I refer to two articles of mine published in a Cypriot publication, dated December 25, 2015 and January 6, 2016.

Browder's basic story, as he has told it time and again, goes like this: in June 2007, Russian police officers raided the Moscow offices of Browder's firm Hermitage, confiscating company seals, certificates of incorporation, and computers.

Browder says the owners and directors of Hermitage-owned companies were subsequently changed, using these seized documents. Corrupt courts were used to create fake debts for these companies, which allowed for the taxes they had previously paid to the Russian Treasury to be refunded to what were now re-registered companies. The funds stolen from the Russian state were then laundered through banks and shell companies.

The scheme is said to have been planned earlier in Cyprus by Russian law enforcement and tax officials in cahoots with criminal elements. All this was supposedly discovered by Magnitsky, whom Browder had tasked with investigating what happened. When Magnitsky reported the fraud, some of the nefarious characters involved had him arrested and jailed. He refused to retract, and died while in pre-trial detention.

Comment: Kudos to Hazou for speaking up and acting like a responsible adult. He's one of the only journalists with the integrity to do so. Browder, on the other hand, is nothing a sick con man with absolutely no redeeming qualities. There's a special place in hell for slanderers like him.

See also:


Black Magic

The terrorist attack in Iran was likely a US/Israeli regime-sponsored operation

Iran attack
On Saturday, a terrorist attack at a military parade in Ahvaz, Iran killed at least 29 individuals, around five dozen others injured, many seriously, military personnel and innocent civilians targeted.

Mostly civilians were harmed, including women and children, the death toll likely to rise.

The terrorist attack was reportedly carried out from outside the parade perimeter - from a park overlooking the observation platform.

According to Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) spokesman General Abolfazl Shekarchi, four terrorists were involved in the incident, affiliated with the anti-Iranian (Arab separatist) Al-Ahwaz group, three killed, the other arrested but died of his wounds.

Both Ahwaz and ISIS claimed responsibility for the attack. Shekarchi said terrorists involved were trained by the US (the CIA and/or special forces) and Israel's Mossad in two Persian Gulf states, likely Saudi Arabia and the UAE if the report is accurate - both countries militantly hostile toward Iran, along with Washington and Israel.

Comment: See also:


Propaganda

Failing New York Times hides facts, uses unreliable sources in new hit piece on Kavanaugh

kavanaugh
© White House / public domain
A New York Times article scrutinizing inside jokes in the 1983 yearbook of Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's Georgetown Preparatory School hid multiple problems with its claims, including that it was sourced to a rabidly anti-Trump politician in Maryland and his associate.

The article reveals inside jokes about a friend of Kavanaugh and his classmates named Renate Schroeder Dolphin. The classmates are featured in a picture with a caption "Renate Alumnius," which the Times' named and anonymous sources argue is bragging about sex. The classmates strenuously insist that the reference was nothing of the kind and that none of the men had sexual relations with the friend. They say that they attended each other's dances and prep school functions and maintained the friendship throughout the next several decades.

The original article published online on Monday night was quickly scrubbed of a reference to a "Mr. Madaleno." The Times uses full names on first references to sources and titles on second references, though it was the first time his name was mentioned in the article. The claim of sexual braggadocio is sourced earlier in the article to one named and one anonymous individual who claims to fear retribution. NewsDiffs, a site that tracks changes to articles at the New York Times, caught the rapid deletion of his name. Reporters Kate Kelly and David Enrich did not explain why it was removed.