Puppet MastersS


Star of David

Best of the Web: House Democrats pull bill equating criticism of Israel with anti-Semitism after 'full-scale brawl' erupts over Ilhan Omar

Ilhan Omar
© WikimediaIlhan Omar
Divides among House Democrats exploded today beginning in a closed door session this morning where lawmakers argued with party leadership over a resolution to denounce anti-Semitism, an apparent move to condemn Rep. Ilhan Omar.

According to the Washington Post the meeting descended into a "full-scale brawl" when representatives, primarily from the Congressional Black Caucus called to cancel the vote, and in an unexpected turn, was delayed indefinitely by early evening. One source in the room said Rep. Jan Schakowsky demanded (D-IL), "Everyone stop tweeting!" as decorum fell.

The Post spoke with several lawmakers who opposed sanctioning one of their own members, while at the same time ignoring anti-Semitic comments from GOP officials. Some raised that Democrats never produced legislation to denounce the White House - comments in likely reference to President Donald Trump's statement about "good people on both sides" in the wake of the Charlottesville march in 2017 where a white nationalist killed a protester:

Comment: Wow, just wow. In the space of just 10 days, both French and US authorities have freaked out over 'anti-anti-semitism' and seriously considered passing legislation banning criticism of Israel.

Given the concurrent 'anti-anti-semitism' crisis in the UK, it is no doubt being considered there too.

What a remarkable succession of events.


Bad Guys

Trump changes course, says he now agrees '100%' with keeping US troops in Syria

US troops Syria
Two months after declaring all U.S. troops are leaving Syria, President Donald Trump wrote to members of Congress that he now agrees "100%" with keeping a military presence in Syria.

A bipartisan group of Senators and Representatives wrote to Trump on Feb. 22, applauding his decision to keep a small residual force in Syria.

"We support a small American stabilizing force in Syria," the group wrote, adding that a force "which includes a small contingent of American troops and ground forces from our European allies, is essential to ensure stability and prevent the return of ISIS."

Comment: CENTCOM has also made it loud and clear that the US will have 'boots on the ground' in Syria. Sputnik reports:
The US continues to withdraw American forces from Syria while developing plans for a residual force intended to help locals battle an evolving guerrilla campaign by the Daesh*, the commander of CENTCOM told Congress on Thursday.

"As the D-ISIS [Daesh in Arabic] campaign in Syria transitions from liberating terrain to enabling local security forces and addressing the ISIS clandestine insurgency, we will continue our deliberate withdrawal of forces and capabilities as directed by the president - but also retain a residual force on the ground to continue our mission and safeguard our interests," the commander of US Central Command (CENTCOM) General Joseph Votel told Congress said.

This comes after President Donald Trump has ordered a withdrawal of about 2,000 US combat troops from Syria following the recapture of territory previously controlled by the Daesh terror group.

However, Trump has also agreed to leave a residual force behind. US officials have said a continued American presence is needed to protect Kurdish-led and US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces from a threatened incursion by Turkey.



Bad Guys

Reports: Colombia prevented general from storming Venezuelan border with 200 exiled soldiers

Juan Guaido
© AP Photo/Fernando LlanoJuan Guaidó
Late last month, as U.S. officials joined Venezuelan opposition leader Juan Guaido near a bridge in Colombia to send desperately needed aid to the masses and challenge the rule of Nicolas Maduro, some 200 exiled soldiers were checking their weapons and planning to clear the way for the convoy.

Led by retired General Cliver Alcala, who has been living in Colombia, they were going to drive back the Venezuelan national guardsmen blocking the aid on the other side. The plan was stopped by the Colombian government, which learned of it late and feared violent clashes at a highly public event it promised would be peaceful.

Almost no provisions got in that day and hopes that military commanders would abandon Maduro have so far been dashed. Even though Guaido is back in Caracas, recognized by 50 nations as the legitimate leader of Venezuela, the impromptu taking up of arms shows that the push to remove Maduro -- hailed by the U.S. as inevitable -- is growing increasingly chaotic and risky.

Chess

EU negotiators give UK 48-hour deadline to come up with new plan for Irish backstop

French Europe minister Nathalie Loiseau
© TwitterFrench Europe minister Nathalie Loiseau
Frustrated EU officials have urged UK Brexit negotiators to table a workable solution to the Irish backstop by Friday if they want a breakthrough in talks.

The UK is currently seeking changes to the withdrawal agreement to make it more palatable to Brexiteer MPs ahead of a crunch vote next week.

But speaking on Thursday morning French Europe minister Natalie Loiseau said there had been "no precise proposals" from the UK and that the EU side was still waiting.

Attention

Google discusses 'steering' the conservative movement in leaked audio

google deplorables
© Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Google's senior director of U.S. public policy, Adam Kovacevich appeared to describe the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) as a "sideshow Circus," in a leaked audio recording in which he also argued that Google should remain a sponsor of the conference to "steer" the conservative movement "away from nationalistic and incendiary comments."

The comments came to light in leaked audio files allegedly of a company-wide meeting at Google, part of which is now exclusively reported by Breitbart News. Another part of the transcript was released last Friday on Tucker Carlson Tonight, while further snippets revealing Google's funding of establishment conservative think-tanks were published by the left-leaning tech magazine Wired in December.

The alleged meeting took place in the wake of Google's sponsorship of CPAC in 2018, which triggered an internal rebellion from left-wing employees of the tech giant. Breitbart News exclusively reported on the revolt at the time, in which radical left-wingers inside Google accused CPAC of "ethno-nationalism" and "hate."

Google has not denied the authenticity of the leaked material.

Calculator

At Washington and Riyadh's request, EU eats own report exposing US and Saudi terrorist money-laundering operations

us terror financing cartoon
© Unknown
The governments of the EU member states have 'unanimously' rejected a blacklist of countries that have failed to tackle money laundering and terrorism financing. The paper cited four US territories and was slammed by Washington.

The Council of the European Union has "unanimously decided to reject" the list of "high-risk third countries" - a paper that would require banks and financial institutions operating in Europe to "be more vigilant and to carry out extra checks in the context of transactions" involving these nations.

The document in question was drafted by the European Commission and was supposed to identify the nations that "have strategic deficiencies in their anti-money laundering and terrorist financing regimes," which could thus pose "significant threats" to the bloc's financial system.

Surprisingly, as many as four US territories - American Samoa, Guam, Puerto Rico, and the US Virgin Islands - found themselves on the list. They were put there alongside about two dozen - mostly Asian and African - nations, including those suffering from acute political and economic turmoil as well as armed conflicts, such as Syria, Yemen or Libya.

Comment: 'Name us, and we'll punish you.'

That's the 'rules-based international democratic order' for you folks.


Network

Germany won't ban Huawei & ready to oppose US pressure - economy minister

huawei
© Reuters / Aly Song
Germany does not intend to prevent Chinese tech giant Huawei from developing 5G networks, the country's economy minister said, adding that the EU stands ready to defend its interests, should a trade war with Washington escalate.

Berlin will not pre-emptively ban any specific companies from bidding for contracts to develop the country's next generation 5G mobile network, despite immense pressure from the United States to ostracize Huawei, Peter Altmaier said on Thursday evening, during a debate on ZDF television.

"No, we will not want to exclude any company," he stressed, explaining that the government is capable of implementing enough safeguards to protect Germany's future networks.

Comment: Perhaps Germany remembers that it was the US NSA that tapped Merkel's office, because there's no evidence China has done nor does it intend to do anything of the sort. This is just another shameful example of when the US can't compete with a country, it uses smears and sanctions.

See also:


Eye 1

Justin Trudeau's latest scandal shows us the perils of 'woke' governance

Justin Trudeau
The scandal that has engulfed Justin Trudeau's government in recent weeks is, in many ways, a very Canadian affair: It involves no sex, violence or even allegations of personal enrichment. Rather, it centers on the question of whether the Prime Minister and his representatives improperly pressured his ex-minister of justice-a former Indigenous chief named Jody Wilson-Raybould-to back off the criminal prosecution of a well-connected Quebec-based engineering firm that has been charged with fraud and corruption.

To be clear, no one is alleging that Trudeau and his minions flat-out ordered Wilson-Raybould to reverse her decision in the case. In true Canadian style, the badgering of the former justice minister seems to have been a largely passive aggressive exercise, with a succession of public figures reminding her about all the many, many jobs that might be lost in (politically sensitive) Quebec if she didn't reconsider her decision. And when she stuck to her principles and failed to relent, the PM removed her from her justice-ministry post, and pushed in a newcomer named David Lametti who - quelle surprise - seems quite open to revisiting Wilson-Raybould's original decision. As dry as all this must sound to non-Canadians, the scandal (which doesn't have a name yet) has become a huge deal in my country. And the latest polling suggests it has done severe damage to the Liberal brand in the run-up to this year's national election.

All governments eventually become enmeshed in some kind of scandal, of course. But Justin Trudeau's Liberals are unlike their predecessors in one crucial respect: They have created the first national government anywhere that has explicitly presented itself as a political vessel of ultra-progressive social-justice mantras such as intersectionality and #MeToo. And there is evidence to suggest that this scandal has been all the more damaging to the Liberals precisely because their grubby treatment of a principled indigenous woman is so obviously at odds with the pious social-justice posturing that, until just a few weeks ago, often made the Liberals sound more like an activist organization or undergraduate student society than a G7 government.

Comment: "One of Trudeau's great political gifts is that he is extremely photogenic." One of? How about the only thing he's good at - through no effort of his own. Otherwise, idealogues like him are dangerous to society and country. See also:


Snakes in Suits

Trudeau and Raybould: Apologies, arrogance and the SNC Lavalin scandal

SNC Lavalin
On the left is Jody-Wilson Raybould, the Minister of Justice who apparently stood up to intimidation and veiled threats from the PMO in regards to letting slide a criminal case being pursued against engineering giant SNC-Lavalin.
Justin Trudeau dropped by the National Press Gallery on Thursday morning to issue a non-apology apology before planning to fly to Iqaluit where he'd express regret for government mistreatment of Inuit during TB epidemics between the 1940s and '60s. Canada's prime minister is a champion of issuing fulsome apologies when they are formal and historical and don't involve his own behaviour. He tearfully apologized to former students of Newfoundland and Labrador residential schools for the horrific treatment they experienced. He apologized for Canada not allowing entry to the MS St Louis in 1939. He apologized for the turning away of the Japanese vessel Komagata Maru in 1914. Trudeau's sweeping mea culpas became so ubiquitous the BBC asked: "Does Justin Trudeau apologize too much?"


Comment: The answer is yes, and to a pathological degree that the apologies have no meaning or value anymore.


No one was asking that question Thursday. There had been rumours a show of contrition from the PM would be the PMO's latest gambit to quell the month-long controversy over serious allegations the government interfered with a criminal prosecution and exerted pressure on then attorney general Jody Wilson-Raybould for partisan ends. That didn't happen. Instead Trudeau doubled down on his probity while confirming some of Wilson-Raybould's bombshell testimony.

Comment: Overall, Trudeau shows himself time and time again to be someone incapable of leading by example and is simply all talk. The SNC-Lavalin scandal only highlights this further. For more on this scandal, see also: And who can resist listening to Jordan Peterson's take on Trudeau:




Handcuffs

Pakistan takes control of 182 religious schools in crackdown against Islamic militants

Islamic religious school
Students study the Koran at a religious school run by a religious scholar and leader of the political party Jamiat Ulam-e Islam at Akora Khattak.
Pakistan's government says it has taken control of 182 religious schools and detained more than 100 people as part of its crackdown against Islamist militants.

Provincial authorities have "taken in their control management and administration of 182 seminaries (madaris)," the Interior Ministry said in a March 7 statement, referring to religious schools.

"Law enforcement agencies have taken 121 people under preventive detention as of today," the statement said.